Introduction
Using visual arts in storytelling helps to find in yourself and in the group new viewpoints and interpretations on difficult questions or complex situations or disagreements you wish to address. Expressing and visualizing inner worlds by literary making sense of them in an individual or collective artwork, opens new pathways for exchanging narratives and common understanding. Making art together helps to divert thinking and focus on the present. Making art together helps to slow down, to listen, to contemplate and meditate. This stimulates the emergence of creative flow and resonance, within yourself and in a group. Thus, through collective art making a setting is created to connect with others on a deeper level, engage conversations about life, things that occupy your mind and find ways to express things together. Silence, listening, thoughtful expression, making space in the noise of never-ending news and messages.
Making together induces narratives. It creates space for narrative accountability practices, through slow conversations from heart to heart while drawing, painting, sewing, sawing, weaving, molding, carving or hammering. To the heart of the matter, visualizing the magic of togetherness and shared values. Presenting individual art pieces together or as collective art, or making a community art piece together, is a common journey, where all participants leave a trace, a part of their story. In one common piece differences are made visible. Common work, composed by different hands, different views, different styles, different colours.
Hereafter we will offer you a series of maker’s activities, mostly based on the art traditions of experimental art related to automatism, expressionism, surrealism. Their perception on art is inclusive and based on experiment, fantasy, expression of emotions about life itself. Rather than performing perfect art techniques, artists work on personal inward perception of reality based on spontaneity and self expression of emotions, personal views, dreams, nightmares, folktales.
Automatism in art has been developed by artists related to the Surrealist Movement. In the Manifesto on surrealism, André Breton defined surrealism as … pure psychic automatism ... the dictation of thought in the absence of all control exercised by reason and outside all moral or aesthetic concerns.
Automatic drawing for instance is aiming at drawing without intervening consciously to guide the hand. Like the automatic writing techniques, automatic drawing has a strong influence on expressing your own authentic inner world and therefore is very interesting to use for storytelling - and narrative accountability purposes as an ignite activity, to build confidence in a short time and they will find freedom for expressing one’s voices and perspectives from within. and so that in the making process people feel the resonance of commoning and togetherness.
Max Ernst, a surrealist visual artist would also develop techniques such as Frottage (rubbing), grattage (scraping) and collage techniques. All are related to spontaneity, use of materials at hand and to experiment what happens, when rubbing with a pencil on piece of paper to get the print of a coin, of branches and stones outside to grasp the texture of things. Instead of painting with brushes, he would scrape the paint of, with the backside of the brush or with the painter’s knife. (See picture)
ãSandra Geelhoed (2003), gouache on paper
Rubbing can be defined as a fun and tactile way to discover surroundings of the neighbourhood. And collage are interesting practices to get people involved through art while using materials from everyday circumstances. (for more information look at this website of Tate.
Also Cobra Artists worked as of 1948 in an experimental way with different materials. Back to the basics of materiality, colours (red, yellow, blue), craftsmanship, folktales and children’s art were a source of inspiration to these artists. They made a manifesto, underlining that they would like to contribute to reconstruction of the world after World War II through imagination, fantasy and play. Giving back colour to a world in ruins, painting the world from an inner drive: dreams, stories, fantasy, spontaneous and free from any (art) convention.
Karel Appel underlines how art practice can contribute to expression of experience and therefore tell a story: “My paint is like a rocket, which describes its own space. I try to make the impossible possible. What is happening I cannot foresee, it is a surprise. Painting, like passion, is an emotion full of truth and rings a living sound, like the roar coming from the lion's breast. To paint is to destroy what preceded. I never try to make a painting, but a chunk of life. It is a scream. It is a night. It is like a child. It is a tiger behind bars”. For more information look at website of Museum Cobra (https://cobra-museum.nl/?lang=en)
Using visual art methods should preferably be combined with looking at art works before starting to make art and do collective exercices with art tools. We had the opportunity to work in Museum Cobra for a day, to discover and develop some of the tools beneath. Thanks for Museum Cobra (https://cobra-museum.nl/?lang=en) in Amstelveen to receive us and letting us experiment with a tour, workshops and interventions.