I find it awesome when the digital and “real” worlds intersect for collective benefit, especially in the name of art.
- Two Winston-Salem Arts Institutions
I just had the pleasure of attending a free lecture hosted by
SECCA — The Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art — about select photographic works of our city’s
Arts Council (full disclosure below). Because of technology, a passion for art, and social networking, the experience became amplified. And that sort of thing gives me hope for the world.
Several items from the council’s photography collection were to be on display at a local gallery, and
Michael Christiano, Curator of Education at SECCA (
check them out on WordPress), gave a crash course in photographic appreciation to start the evening off.
In the span of 20 minutes, he covered many of the greats —
Robert Frank,
Edward Weston,
Jerry Uelsmann (my all-time favorite & inspiration) — along with several others, highlighting how the collection’s works being shared were representative of the media’s progression over time. In a larger sense, this collection and these artists aside, it was a notable reflection on how the technology of photography lets us put form to something intangible like memory.
Think of a photo that ever brought a “wow” from your lips.
Kiss Me Like You Promise Me Heaven in Your Lips - © Sion Fullana. All Rights Reserved.
Considering such technology didn’t even exist two centuries ago, it’s rather an amazing jump in human communication that we practically take for granted nowadays, what with cameras in our phones and everywhere else.
But it’s that jump in communication having to do with photography that compels this post. Because of my growing interest/obsession with street photography and iPhoneography (thanks to
Instagram and appreciating the art of
others), I, of course, had to snap the below image with my phone just as the lecture was getting started. The meta-ness of the moment was too great not to indulge:
A photo from my iPhone at a lecture on photography prior to a photography exhibit that I later published via a photo-sharing app. Now you're reading a blog about it.
Naturally, this immediately went up on Instagram.
The evening progressed; the lecture was great; we perused photos and headed home. Later that night,
@lindsyarb — someone I’ve never met except via Instagram — noticed the photo, asking to know more about the event and who hosted. Turns out we’re all in the same city, so I shared SECCA’s details and she signed up for their mailing list.
Did you catch what just happened there?
Through technology, interest in art is shared and fostered — relative to the local community, no less — connections are made, and we actually live through a jump in human communication… not over the centuries, but over wi-fi and social networks in real-time… through a shared appreciation for the creative spirit fostered by photography.
Now that’s art. Or at the very least, I’ve got a little more hope for the world.
Have you ever made a real-world connection via social media? Is there an Arts Council or equivalent in your city, and do you take part? How have you come to be inspired in an artistic fashion, and do you enjoy sharing that with others? Let us hear from you in the comments!
Full disclosure: I work for a company whose parent is also parent to a corporate donor to the Arts Council. This post is not intended to promote either company or this collection, but rather to expound on the general idea of technology as a facilitator for interest in the visual arts.