You Can’t Speed Up the Richness of Slowing Down

You Can’t Speed Up the Richness of Slowing Down

You can’t fast forward art. It can’t be summarized or sped up. It was never meant to be propagandized, monetized and mass-consumed; it should only truly be experienced when you’re standing in front of it. 

Hear the room where it’s placed. Smell the faint aroma of paint and canvas all around you. Listen to the hushed voices wondering about the artists’ intent and motivation. Feel for yourself, deep down: what does this art mean to you?

Living is now in high speed. Technology has added so many things to our lives. It has given us new opportunities for connection, created new platforms to share our uniqueness with the world and introduced us to new friends and acquaintances. But in our haste to each find our differentiator, our unique megaphone, we have fewer connections with the things that make us human; bumping into neighbors at the local grocery, driving to the bank, the post office, the art gallery.

Art offers an experience that we find is becoming increasingly rare: solitude. Even in the privacy of our home, comfortably clad in sweatpants, lounging on our favorite armchair, we are inundated with noise, products, calls-to-action—all clamoring for our bandwidth. Seemingly, there isn’t a place we can go to get away from the din. But in front of art, it all slows down. It has to— that is, if you really want the experience.

See, solitude won’t find you unless you seek it first. There is a worthy peace that comes from a real study of human experience. An introspective consideration of the work an artist so lovingly and viscerally brought to bear upon the world. No captions or witty copy, just heart, soul and the visual representation of one person’s inner life. That’s all art really is, or could aspire to be.

What does this mean to the everyday life? Well, put down your devices for a moment. Find the closest gallery and go stand in front of art. Let it hit you head on and run you over. Slow your pace and discover a richness that is so easily drowned out by the silent, sixty-cycle drone of technological monotony. These are art’s greatest gifts to us. See. Feel. Think. Consider. Repeat.

You can read this post and others on the Emillion Art blog. We'd love to hear from you so please leave a comment.

Stephen C.

Inter-sensory Artist - Owner at Carpenter Hill Studios

6 年

Thank you! The slow degradation of visual art has the explanation you provided. What does it take, to spend just 2 minutes (120 clock seconds) with a work of art. A willful interruption in a day that must be 100% productive (and can't be of course). One must turn aside from a routine or schedule, ferret out a piece of art work, focus the visual cortex, settle the eyes and mind, find a visual stimulation, take those seconds to observe some visual details possibly, suspend judgment to get to an essence of substance that is other to oneself, ... . Return to the schedule, resolving to think about it later. interestingly, I just got information that the average attention span of a college student is 7 minutes. Sensory blindness, deafness, numbness seems now to be an integral part of how we function as human beings. And yet, some who attain to make art, persist in doing so- putting their very lives at the risk of being un-noticed which might be tantamount to being un-alive which might also raise a question about those who don't turn aside and break their schedule. i just invested 18 minutes of my life on this comment and about the same amount of time on the article and thinking about the article.?

Pavol Kajan

Contemporary Artist

6 年

Very true. Thank you for sharing Marlissa.

Very nice article , Marlissa. I have enjoyed every word of it.

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