re: Spring Topic: Collaborative Art Practice
From the participants in the Scribble It Down project:
The idea of sharing my world, my point of view and my perception of it on
one hand, and the ability to expose, be exposed, and collaborate with other
artists from different worlds on the other, seemed amazing to me. Â It was
very interesting to cooperate with strangers, without having a clue about the
final result. Once you’ve set free your personal interpretation, all you could
do was trust the others’ associations. It was some kind of a trust test. Dorit Stern, Israel
A collaborative project such as "Scribble it down" opened
my mind to the possibilities inherent in digital art, and it strengthened
my belief that no one person can claim ownership to it.  Even if I
drew the first image, it circulated and evolved through every other
participant. ……..  This new form of collaborative work is very humbling, and its
results are remained to be seen. Working online offered me the opportunity
to collaborate with fellow artists from faraway, with whom otherwise I would've
never been in contact, allowing a cross-cultural flow of ideas and
perceptions. Gall Orian, Israel
Â
I enjoyed working with artists from around the world. As a painter
and musician who has collaborated with other artists in person, I was curious
about the process of doing so with artists that I had never met, without the
energy of being there together physically. I tried to imbue my offerings with a
sense of physical place and also my own paintings and music.
Brianna Lea Pruette, California