The Artist's Statement
by Beverly Booker
Originally Published Fall 1999
An artist's statement is usually simple and direct. The artist is
sharing her inner thoughts, voice and goals with the judges and viewing
public. Not so simple in reality because we, as individual artists, work
alone in our world of creativity, visual images, responses to
environmental, family, newsworthy and seasonal changes, time constraints,
etc. The list could go on and on.
However, it is necessary to express personal interpretations about your
adventures or experiments with new ideas, shapes, visions, materials and
their possibilities. Tell the public what this current work reflects, your
goals and how you achieved those goals. Invite the viewer to feel the
energy, share the courage and explore the vision with you.
You may be particularly interested in the artist-artwork-viewer
relationship which makes writing the artist's statement easy. Or you may
be more hesitant about writing because you would be sharing a spiritual or
emotional experience, a private vision or goal. In the end, be proud and
let your work stand on it's own. Cherish your own vision but also accept
whatever it is that the viewer sees.
The Exemplary asks artists to include a
statement with each entry. Judges read each statement as they work through
the exhibit giving the judges insight into the thought process and work of
the artist. It doesn't mean the entry will automatically receive an extra
point here or there, but it may just be a deciding factor in helping the
judges understand what is being portrayed by the artist and how well the
artist executed that goal. |