I began keeping notebooks on 10/6/2012 – not really
very long ago. I’ve always had a problem about keeping a sketchbook. I tend to resort
to destroying anything which I do not
consider (at any given time) to be’ right’. And that given time or state of
rightness is never a measured response.
Rather than face what I might perceive as negative criticism, or indeed
self-criticism, I would rather destroy
any evidence of the thing, if I consider
it to be anything less than a valid conclusion.
This destructive behaviour is mirrored by periods of intense
production. Sadly without sketchbooks I don’t then have any means of recalling
any of the ideas and thoughts produced in the productive periods. So one of the challenges I set myself back
in June last year, at Carmen Mills’s suggestion, was to keep a notebook/diary of ideas during a
productive period. That seemed to be more manageable than something with the
label “sketchbook” attached. I do realise that this may just be semantics, but
I thought I’d give it a go – and if it worked, great, if not, well it was just
semantics and why did I think it would be any different anyway!. A sketchbook seemed too intense, too easy to
spoil. A notebook is just that – a place for notes (sometimes sketches too),
but something I felt I could use without pressure.
I love the format of the small square book. To me it’s not
intimidating, somehow it’s friendly and the spiral in the middle means even if
you want to be neat, you can’t be. It actually won’t let you write neatly on the left
page. But, I wasn’t at all sure to begin with. I thought it might just be a
gimmick (like the relationship I‘ve formed with this blog may be going!) and what would I
write anyway! Well I very quickly filled 4+ books and then found that I had
started three new pieces of work!
I completed Year 1 of an MA in Canterbury before moving to Scarborough, and one
criticism which was made of me at that was that I shouldn’t need to prepare a
speech, I should just let the work talk. But when the thing I am talking about is so
important to me, I want to get it right. I’m very happy to answer questions,
but I really need the structure and security of being able to say my bit first.
So why do I
need prepare. Why do I need to present. Why can’t I just talk or why can’t the
work speak for itself? Well I think the
answer to that is that if I was showing one of the very rare finished pieces of my work – I believe and hope that it
would be able to stand on its own. I’ve
got hardly any finished pieces in 50 years, and I still don’t know if
either of the pieces I’m working on from these noteboooks are ever going to fall into
that category.
That is where these notebooks have been so valuable, and I
hope that I may now, on revisiting them, be able to control the ideas held within them without feeling
the need to destroy the outcome.
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