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The responsibilities of the responders are twofold: 1) not to bring
their own agenda to work they are responding to and 2) have a desire for
the artist to do her/his best work. Responders are attempting to
help the artist create her/his piece, not to create their own. It
is important for responders, as hard as this may be, to not bring their
own bias and expectations to the process.
The responsibility of the artist is to be honest and open. The artist
needs to be in a place where they can question their own work in a somewhat
public environment. Also, it is the motivation and meaning of the
creator that is the basis on which feedback is given, so the artist should
be very clear about her/his intent.
PROCESS STEPS
1. Affirmation and Observation
Responders give the artist either positive feedback about the work or
moments that affected them. People want to hear that what they have
just completed has meaning. The artist must work to really hear
the comments. Responders need to try to make the palette of responses
as wide as possible. Be specific and expansive in the use of vocabulary
about the work.
2. Artist Questions Responders
Artist has the time to ask the viewers questions about the work.
Be specific; nothing is too insignificant. The more the artist clarifies
what s/he is working on, the more meaningful becomes the dialogue.
3. Responders Question Artist
Responders ask neutral questions of the artist about the work. It
is very important not to be judgmental in the phrasing of the questions.
This is a chance for the responders to help the artist step back and analyze
the work. If given the chance, most criticisms can be stated or
explored in this step in a neutral fashion.
4. Criticisms and Opinions
If there is a criticism that can't be stated in the form of a neutral
question, responders can express opinions about the work to the artist
after they have asked permission of the artist. The artist is allowed
to refuse at any time. The opinions should be positive criticism,
based on problem-solving techniques. It may seem redundant to ask
permission for every single criticism, but it is very important.
This gives the artist control of this very sensitive step and creates
a dialogue, albeit a very basic one.
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