We're inspired by The Great Discontent, a triannual publication focused on creators and the many phases of creativity.
Image via The Great Discontent website
WÆRK Blog
On elevating empathy, humans, and nature - in business and civics - through culture
We're inspired by The Great Discontent, a triannual publication focused on creators and the many phases of creativity.
Image via The Great Discontent website
Part Three of our series on Art, Technology and the Internet of Things continues to highlight ways in which inclusion of the arts (or the artistic point-of-view) within the Internet of Things can address technology's shortfalls.
Collaboration as Means to Avoid Miscommunication
As its ability to convey nuance is limited, our increasing use of technology has contributed to fissures due to misunderstandings and fractured interactions between people. As the arts and culture are the original means through which we communicate complex ideas, increasing their presence within technology may provide access to diverse perspectives, advance understanding, and strengthen the sense of community throughout the worldwide web.
Collaboration as Means to Discourage Feelings of Isolation
The online world has exponentially expanded the social circle of the average individual, yet many of us feel alienated, despite maintaining hundreds of friends and attracting dozens of followers. The arts and culture can help us to build authentic connections, in a world filled with those that are superficial.
Creativity and imaginativeness are not the exclusive provenance of artists. However, it is artists who traffic in the certain uncertainties of life, and whose work has the ability to heal, connect and decipher matters of heart and soul. Our talismans, the song, the scene, the sonnet can successfully cure, strengthen and guide us through adversity and uncertainty in ways that the sciences and technology cannot.
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"The first publication of its kind, Compassion Journal offers a comprehensive view of compassion in its many forms — including how compassion is expressed in the arts and literature, the latest in the science of compassion, and the gift of compassion in the daily lives of people all over the world."
Last Wednesday, we began a four-part series on "Art, Technology and the Internet of Things". This installment, Part Two, highlights ways in which inclusion of the arts (or the artistic point-of-view) within the Internet of Things can address technology's societal shortfalls.
Collaboration as a Means to Lengthen Shortened Attention Spans
In our era of iThings, the “i” may well stand for “immediate” or “instant”, instead of “Internet”. We expect to attain everything we want, on demand, and patience is longer considered a virtue. Society is suffering for our shrinking attention spans in ways that we may not yet fully understand. These unrealistic expectations of perpetual immediacy may be tempered by arts-tech partnerships. For example:
Collaboration as Means to Make Sense of the Proliferation of Information
We are in a time of the rise of the know-it-all: we want answers instantaneously, without taking the time to contemplate the world around us. We are trained to search, not to explore. A perspective informed by the arts and culture can provide a sieve through which the immense volume of digital information and data may be filtered, to deepen understanding. It is the presence of the arts and culture perspective, alongside technology that will truly empower the relationship between human and machine.
Photo by Milanares/iStock / Getty Images
We're inspired by the idea of the hotel as a hotbed for culture, as conceived by Toronto's Drake Hotel. Its satellite, the Drake Devonshire , is "proudly creating our own version of a rural getaway where travelers, culture seekers and neighbours all happily intersect to enjoy the thoughtful contradictions of new and old, rural and urban and sweet and savoury."
Image via the Drake Devonshire website
Very soon, it is believed, everything – animate and inanimate – will be connected through the Internet. This concept, known as the “Internet of Things”, is lauded as a revolutionary means to advance humanity by boosting efficiency. Yet this reality, the connection between all things at all times, is nothing new: for millennia, the arts and culture have connected people, places and things across vast distances – and have advanced much more than mere efficiency.
As technology’s influence ascends in public consciousness, the perception of the importance of the arts and culture to daily American life is waning. Coders, software developers and other digital professionals have expanded our society’s definitions of creativity. However, although the idea of creativity is lauded, the work of artists and culture bearers is trivialized as superfluous, out-of-touch, inessential. The commercial value of art is increasing as dramatically as respect for the intrinsic value of art practice is diminishing.
In 2014, the Pew Research Center published a report on the Internet of Things, featuring predictions for 2025 by thought and business leaders in the technical and academic sectors. Although no one can predict exactly what the Internet of Things will be, nearly everyone surveyed agreed: that widespread connectivity will be the norm in the future, that our personal information will be collected and used in ways that may both help and hinder us, and that the way we interact with the world around us will be transformed.
The consequences of a connected future that isn’t holistic, that takes the emotional, spiritual and aesthetic needs of humanity for granted are potentially disastrous. The unchecked ascent of digital technologies and digital consumerism should be probed by artists and culture bearers, to illuminate both the risks for the global citizenry and the progress that can be derived by a system in which the arts and culture facilitate a checks and balances system for anti-empathetic products and practices.
Technology has its limits, and it is there where the arts and culture thrive. After two decades of “disruption” by the advent of digital technology into daily life, artists and culture bearers are armed with the perspective, access and familiarity with digital media, to advance an inclusive future. Collaborations between the arts/culture and technology sectors may address some of the societal concerns and heal the societal ruptures brought on by digital technologies.
Parts Two and Three of this series will specifically address four ways in which these cross-sector collaborations can transform our current realities.
"How an artist developed an unbelievable tree that grows 40 varieties of fruit."
Via Upworthy
Image via Sam Van Aken's website
Is the decline in fiction readers directly related to the decline of empathy in our society?
Literature, with its ability to highlight our universal experiences, is a powerful tool for the advancement of empathy and the building of interpersonal bonds.
How can we encourage the exploration of authors' alternate worlds, in an age where data retains ultimate authority? What do you think?