This collage tells a story. I have contemplated it for a few weeks now. I still don’t know what the story is. I know that Judson Stacy Vereen created it, with deliberation. I know that a person birthed this assemblage into the world, and thereby invited conversations about its meaning, attempts to decode its message, and inquiries to determine the artist’s intent (or, possibly, his total lack thereof). I am thinking now that the story of the collage is that it was fashioned by a human. __________ When I was a young man I sat on the Board of Directors of a fledgling small-town museum, a somewhat rag-tag endeavor dedicated to preserving the legacy of local shipwrecks and daring rescues of shipwrecked sailors. The museum was housed in the shell of an historic but-yet-unrestored boathouse and lifesaving station, a building whose inhabitants in the 1800s were the progenitors of what would become the United States Coast Guard. The exhibits told stories of shipwrecks and saviors, especially the greatest lifesaving hero of all, Joshua James (1826 to 1902), a renowned sea captain who with his crew of oarsmen navigated wooden Surf Boats (made by their own hands) through the raging winter waves of coastal New England’s Nor'easter storms, rescuing desperate sailors grounded on treacherous shoals of death and destruction just offshore. At my first Board meeting, the Director of the museum’s Boston Harbor rowing program, a man who was spiritually descended of James, scoffed audibly about modern-day boat builders who use power tools to fashion their hulls. “Those boats have no soul,” he said with disgust, “and their builders are Charlatans.” Everyone on the Board of Directors nodded in agreement. Except me. I held quiet, startled and confused, wondering what possible difference it made to construct a boat with power tools instead of hand tools. What can be wrong with using power tools? Don’t they speed up the boat-building process? Don’t they result in beautiful boats which navigate perfectly and hold fast to the elements? This scene has clung in my memory for decades. I did not understand the moral imperative of hand tools. And, I did not know what everyone else understood but I was missing. Recently I heard a renowned poet's work rendered musically by AI, the poetical lyrics restructured with a credible voice and musical score of haunting sound and tactile beauty. This work was culled from the exhaustive consumption by silicon chips of every human poem and song ever published. Commentators applauded, gushed even. I was left startled, confused. Is this poetry? Is this music? Is this art? It then occurred to me that wooden boat building is an art form. And art is both the object created and the human process of creation. The deepest art, the real stuff, is the courageous, painstaking, decisive act of creating - a combination of intentional mind, visionary eye, and skillful hand. A boat built with hand tools, painstakingly, with love, has human spirit abiding in each nail hammered, each seam and angle joined, in the smooth surfaces of the hand-planed wood. The beauty is outer and inner. The soul of the builder infuses the boat. So back to the Vereen collage. I have no idea what it means. It doesn’t matter. It was created by a human. That is what it means. It was created, not manufactured. That is the point. May the point be not dulled.
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Thanks for your words. Excellent statements and poem. The AI situation is causing hairs to be split thinner and thinner. Boat building is a great example and with this example comes the question is carpentry an art? Does the carpenter know it's creating art? Does the artist know it's doing carpentry? I'm not trying to answer those questions. Is boat building an art? I know if the boat doesn't float it doesn't matter if it's art.
Working as a carpenter daily and trying to find time to work on whatever I call "art" is constantly challenging. Not just finding time, but the mindfuck of which is which? I've made built in units that would pass as art possibly. Again, if the shelves aren't secured proper, everything is crashing down. So the only way to tell the difference for me is, when I start a carpentry project I typically expect some monetary consequence. When I start a creative project (I think I feel more like a creative than an artist) the monetary consequence is of no consequence. I assume any money spent on said project might as well be lit on fire, which is freeing for me. The free feeling is probably what makes it art. But what do I know, I'm just a carpenter.
Excellent! What an effective well written poem about the technology that attempts to usurp the authenticity of art fashioned out of an artist’s confrontation with the world. Attempts that substitute an amalgamation of soulless mechanistic decisions that can MERELY provide a superficial imitation of true Art…Authentic art is art that strives to give meaning to our chaotic universe through the fundamental human endeavor: to impose and create meaning in the formless swirling impressions we confront as we seek to navigate a way forward to a meaningful life.
Impressive!