SciArt Residency Blog Post #6, October 14, 2018

Time to Focus

Yana and my discussions and posts are focusing on a collaborative artwork stemming from Mapping Manhattan (Image #1, Yana and Darcy, collaborative work). As I talked about in the last post, this is Yana’s electron microscopy image of neurons that was not useful for science but became a playground for artistic ideas for both of us. I now need to come up with my next step in our collaboration. The problem is that I have so many ideas and possible approaches that I feel myself shutting down. This is a universal difficulty with creativity. How to home in on the exact approach and media for an artwork, to the exclusion of others. Because I’m a hoarder of ideas and possibilities in art, it is even more difficult.

Here are the questions I am absorbed by right now: Are there more insights and expressions available in this image for me? It will require a certain amount of deconstruction so that some space is created to reenter the work. I didn't realize it would be this problematic. I want to have some idea of both the steps and the outcome so I can relax into the work. Otherwise, the process is aimless and goes down a blind alley very quickly.

So, as artists and scientists how do we decide or choose the specific method to answer a question? Well, I suppose we first need to refine the question. What am I trying to communicate? What problem am I trying to solve? What insight am I trying to uncover? Can I answer these questions in a conscious rational way or do I need to allow my subconscious mind to hit on a solution? Either way, I’m stuck. I enjoy the image the way it is. Is there any room to move beyond what it is now? Is that what we mean by “finished”... no more possibilities…. complete and self-contained? It’s like a small death.

I turn to the section of Leonard Shlain’s, Leonardo's Brain on creativity and insight. The right hemisphere goes on processing long after our conscious, logical left hemisphere has moved on to more immediate pressures. According to current neuroscience, this explains the sudden flash of insight that happens after we stop thinking about a problem consciously and rationally. The solution bubbles up later into consciousness sometime while our left hemisphere is otherwise occupied. The theory is that there are times we need to shut off the language and linear processing such a logical evaluation in our dominant left hemisphere to let the right hemisphere to come up with more creative solutions.

So, I went to my studio today to prepare a large wooden cradle for something… not sure what yet. Then I came back to my computer and played with Mapping Manhattan layered on the wood surface in Photoshop. Here are some results.

Waiting for insight….

“Mapping Manhattan” collaborative work by Yana Zorina and Darcy Elise Johnson, microscopy, digital media

“Mapping Manhattan” collaborative work by Yana Zorina and Darcy Elise Johnson, microscopy, digital media

“Mapping Manhattan on Wood 1” collaborative work by Yana Zorina and Darcy Elise Johnson, microscopy, digital media

“Mapping Manhattan on Wood 1” collaborative work by Yana Zorina and Darcy Elise Johnson, microscopy, digital media

“Mapping Manhattan on Wood 2” collaborative work by Yana Zorina and Darcy Elise Johnson, microscopy, digital media

“Mapping Manhattan on Wood 2” collaborative work by Yana Zorina and Darcy Elise Johnson, microscopy, digital media