Salons and Blogging – developing creativity online
virtual salons,creative blogs,developing creativity,gifted book
Creative relationships, including romances, have inspired many artists, such as Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, Henry Miller and Anais Nin, and Georgia O’Keeffe and Alfred Stieglitz.
[These are explored in a book by Vera John-Steiner, Creative Collaboration]
This scene from the film Sideways (2004) shows the kind of casual meetings – parties, wine tastings, dinners, whatever – that can also stimulate our creative ideas.
Sometimes those meetings become more formalized, such as the Bloomsbury Group in the early 1900s, which included Virginia Woolf, Vita Sackville-West, E. M. Forster, Dora Carrington, Roger Fry and other writers and artists.
In her visually luscious and intellectually stimulating site The Soul Food Cafe, Heather Blakey has a section called Salon du Muse and notes, “Salons are informal gatherings where people talk big talk, talk meant to be listened to and perhaps passionately acted upon. Salons are incubators where ideas are conceived, gestated, and hatched… Salons are the frontiers of social and cultural change… They’ve been flourishing since ancient Greece.”
In her article Zen and the Art of Team Blogging, she talks about a kind of virtual version of a salon, in which participants “are provided with threads, which inspire them to write or complete artwork… They are given ideas, which are sown and planted and worked with.”
Individual blogs can do that too, of course.
Designer Susan Kirkland, for example, in her Graphic Design Forum blog post Separations, talks about the creative pleasures of freelancing, but also a common challenge: “If you get the axe, or you’re canned, fired, sacked, terminated, dismissed, discharged or even euphemistically, laid off; don’t despair because your new found freedom may just be the spark you need to change your life.”
While the old-style literary salon such as the Bloomsbury Group may be impractical for most of us, blogging can be a way to express ourselves, connect and gain support and inspiration.
In my article Gifted Women: Identity and Expression, I note that one of the issues related to being exceptional such as creative, may be social isolation. True peer relationships can be rare and demanding. And for those of us who are highly sensitive and disposed to solitary work, isolation can be both protective and a welcome choice.
So rather than having to sit around in a “smoky drawing room” to benefit from the creative stimulation of a salon, we have blogs – on our own or in a team – which can be a way to say what we want or need to express, and maybe get creatively stimulating responses.
> related pages:
collaboration
writing sites
sites : enhancing creativity
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March 2nd, 2006 at 9:12 am
Love this post, Douglas! I’ve been putting together various places where I can gather souls lately … just for that ‘down time’ to create. I find otherwise it’s hard to make time to do it. Except when there’s no creative agenda in place.
Gratefully, Suzanne Falter-Barns
http://www.blastojoy.com
March 3rd, 2006 at 7:33 pm
I loved your reflection on the paradox of needing connection/stimulation and requiring more isolation than less sensitive/creative people may need. “True peer relationships can be rare and demanding.” And the crucible of loneliness can be the very atmosphere we need in which to create our Self – the most creative and rare gift we can then offer to an Other. Thanks, Cat Robson
May 19th, 2006 at 6:38 am
Douglas, this is fantastic. I’m excited to see others have hit on the idea that blogs can have multiple uses beyond promoting one individual’s work or ideas. We have a creative salon going on with a new theme every two weeks, it’s free and anyone is invited to take part or lurk. In fact, we just put a link up to THIS blog at OUR blog salon! Please feel free to visit us at http://abearnamedhope.blogspot.com
Do what you love and love what you do, all!
Spiritbear
April 15th, 2007 at 12:00 pm
Hello,
We are having a very interesting, somewhat heated, discussion on art, freedom of expression, censorship, abuse issues, etc. at the salon the next couple weeks. Hope some of you will stop by and join in if so moved…
http://www.abearnamedhope.blogspot.com
SpiritBear