Learning from artists at work

      Last month I was artist-in-residence at The Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia developing ideas for an interdisciplinary installation for an exhibition this fall. I am primarily a filmmaker and got to experiment with a very talented studio production team. A rare and precious opportunity indeed.

      Accompanying me was a perfect book, Adam Moss’ “The Work of Art: How something comes from nothing.” The writer, former editor of New York magazine and The New York Times Magazineinterviews 43 creatives on how they make their work, using iconic examples to illuminate their process.

      His aim: “to render the experience of creativity—that is, the frustration, elation, regret, first glimmers, second thoughts, distress and triumph that leads to works of art.” Conversations are augmented with notebook entries, napkin doodles, early sketches, reams of false starts, iPhone photos, lyric fragments and other ephemera illustrating the alchemical process of artistic conjuring.

      Tenacity and resilience abound throughout the beautifully designed compendium. Author Michael Cunningham shares multiple drafts of what became his Pulitzer Prize-winning “The Hours” and we see 39 iterations for a single canvas by Amy Sillman.

      Tony Kushner details free associations, chance happenings, practical constraints, and deep listening to his characters (“I was just taking dictation”) as “Angels in America” develops. The late poet Louise Glück mentions lines appearing in dreams or fragments scribbled during faculty meetings, only to be fleshed out during long walks.

      Cartoonist Roz Chast keeps a shoebox of “idea germs” to draw upon and choreographer Twyla Tharp uses her “sperm bank” of archival videos. Others hack their own systems. Visual artist Kara Walker began one project by drawing with her feet: “I can’t trust this hand not to make something very obvious, that we already know.”

      The late Stephen Sondheim recalled dropping a song from “Company” for its out-of-town tryout and having one week to come up with “Getting Married Today.” Fashion designer Marc Jacobs reiterates the pragmaticism of deadlines: “Time becomes the greatest editor. The only way to get things done is to finish.”

      Backstories by pioneering journalists are quite satisfying. Gay Talese’s meticulous and colorful outlines of his travails of never getting to interview Frank Sinatra for his 1966 Esquire piece “Frank Sinatra Has a Cold” sheds light on what it takes to produce exemplary feature writing.

      Excerpts from Wesley Morris’ discursive “My Mustache, My Self” 2020 essay in The New York Times on Black identity and masculinity elucidates why he has been awarded two Pulitzer Prizes in criticism. Fun too are his snippets culled from notes written in the dark while viewing films.

      Architectural inspirations are also provided. Frank Gehry’s initial scribble for the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao opens the book, and in later pages Elizabeth Diller describes the conception of her firm’s Blur Building, which was inspired by mist. Like others in the book, she affirms the importance of doodling, as it “imprints something in my brain.”

      As a filmmaker, I was particularly heartened to read Andrew Jarecki reminding us that, despite the value of storyboarding, “the footage suggested its own path” and Sofia Coppola’s advice: “… when you have an instinct to do something, you shouldn’t doubt yourself—go with it.”

      Other photographers, chefs, puzzle masters, songwriters, radio hosts, sculptors and graphic designers complement the treasure-trove. And the appendix is chock-a-block full of glorious artifacts from Bob Dylan, Sylvia Plath, Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman and other aesthetic forbearers.

      The culminating chapter is Suzan-Lori Parks discussing “Plays for the Plague Year.” Unlike her Tony award-winning “Topdog/Underdog,” which was written in three days, this episodic theatrical work began during Covid lockdowns and took over two years to come into being. Despite the struggle, she is grateful: “But we are lucky enough to do what we enjoy right? Even if it is hard.”

      As for my residency at The Fabric Workshop and Museum, each day brought new possibilities to explore with my production collaborators. All the while, stories from “The Work of Art” encouraged me to contribute to a collaborative environment of play, creative investigation and trusting the process.

John R. Killacky

John R. Killacky is a former Vermont state representative from South Burlington and is the author of “because art: commentary, critique, & conversation.”

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