thanks for taking up birgitt's challenge, reinhold. a few thoughts to follow what you say...
first, i am surprised that you say you are an os outsider. i always think of you as very much inside of this community and flow. next, to where you finish, in reference to artists gathering in open space, i agree with what i think you're saying, that it's a different matter when artists gather to do their own work in open space, dancing, singing, etc. that is not the central question here, which started with chris asking about working with a visual artist/facilitator in an upcoming gathering. then to the bit about text proceedings being boring and lifeless, i absolutely agree with you about how such things can have the life squeezed out of them by round after round of revisioning... but i actually find that when we type the rough stuff and put it all on the wall, the wall just vibrates. the books we print for longer and larger events have a real spark in them. that they don't work for you may be true, but i have heard stories of these books being desktop references for years after a big event. this to me gets to the issue of us being outsiders when we come to facilitate a gathering. it's not our job to say what the issues are, to tweak the language of their expression, to set the order or importance or connections... we invite participants to do all of that. i would include in that same realm, that it's not my job to tell them *how* they should document or *what* will have more life and meaning for them. i would never suggest a visual artist/facilitor unless they were bringing it up in some way themselves, at least bringing up the need for one. in the same way, i don't impose a gallery of posters, a text document, a weblog, a wiki, or voting as the document option. i talk with them about what they want to produce, what do they want to sustain following the meeting, and what will make the results of the meeting *real* for them. the important thing for me is that it fits the purpose, the people, and that it is something that *they* will be able to sustain going forward, if sustained actino and movement is their intent. you quoted... Michael Hermann writes: " is the artist's work beautiful, interesting, magical, and more? yes, of course. but what if i am a great story teller? would i ever get up and attempt to 'keynote' the closing circle with my own summation?" Of course Michael expects everybody to cry out "of course not!" But I say: WHY NOT?????? my simple answer to why not is that i'm not a member of the group, i'm there to give attention to the group, and -- i think -- make nothing. i invite, they make, they document, and they act. not because i'm not smart, not caring... but because i'm not *in* the group... i likely don't understnad the issues well enough to comment, i'm likely not to be around when the solutions have to be implemented... i may be *in the system* for the day(s), but i'm not long-term committed to the work in the way that they are. even if i have a brilliant ability to take them up the mountain and show them the way and the future and the glorious swirl of everything, if i leave them after teh last day with the expectation that they can do what i do, and follw that thread without me -- *if* i have really guessed it right -- then they will be disappointed when they crash. so i always want them to do everything for themselves, to choose what issues, language, formats and colors that they know, that they can practice for themselves, and that they accept for themselves as *real*. if i take a group of spreadsheet jockeys and leave them with gorgeous metaphors and drawings, they won't likely know what to do with them when they get back to work, and the meeting will disappear. but if they create spreadsheets as documentation, then there is no loss in transferring back to the *real* work.... everything in the meeting is automatically *real* work, because it had a spreadsheet, like all the other *real* work. the situation is much different, of course, if they *ask* for an artist, or ask to be introduced to new things, or suggest a purpose for which drawing and art and dance and such would seem to be a natural vehicle. then we can have somebody along, and i might recommend a drummer or an artist or a massage therapist, and let them make the arrangements directly, just like the hotel choosing. in those cases, i'm looking for people who can come in as artists who know how to facilitate... to invite the art of others, not bring their own art. i'm looking for people who have an art about art making. you've said just a very little bit about how you do your work. you've called yourself a visual facilitator rather than an artist. what i've heard so far leads me to think that you are very much working in that realm of inviting other people to express their own art. so i'd like to hear more and more about how you actually do that... and even more than that, given that we are hundreds around the world here and most won't get to work together with you... is there anything that we as facilitators can do to make a more welcoming and workable invitation to people to express in other ways. perhaps there is something as simple as a long list of materials that you could suggest to us, and that might be offered to a client... so that they might choose to provide these for ppts. maybe it doesn't work without someone expert in using these materials to help people get started. anyway, i know what we usually do to open space for story/word expression and i'd be interested in what it is that you do to "open space" for visual expression. how do you make and support and sustain that sort of invitation? michaelh On 8/24/06, Visuelle Protokolle <m...@visuelle-protokolle.de> wrote:
Hi Birgitt, you are challenging me! So I jump into the ring, as an outsider. When Harrison Owen used the fourfold way of Angeles Arrien to form the method of Open Space, he did an ingenious job, as the world wide distribution of the method shows every day. But ... Now Open Space seems to me to be both, a method and a movement. The movement organizes OSonOssses etc. and spreads also with amazing speed. I am not part of the movement, but I admire the method, use it sometimes, and took part as a visual facilitator (I prefer that expression to visual artist) several times, so also together with you. And since years I am a member of this list serve and follow the discussions. So if I am asking for a dialogue, what have I to say, and what do I expect? A dialogue for me is different from a discussion. In a discussion everybody tries to be right and convince the others, in a dialogue everybody listens and is ready to learn. So I tell my story, and am curious what will happen. Michael Hermann writes: " is the artist's work beautiful, interesting, magical, and more? yes, of course. but what if i am a great story teller? would i ever get up and attempt to 'keynote' the closing circle with my own summation?" Of course Michael expects everybody to cry out "of course not!" But I say: WHY NOT?????? For me the method of OS is brilliant at its beginning, excellent in the middle, and only slightly average at the end. I see no value in boaring texts, written by the obediant ones. I am no friend of spoken reports of group results. Words, words, words. I am missing the fire that was alive in the groups! Alive, not online, not typed, to feel it with your senses! And I know, that images can help a lot here. Right now I take part in a project (not OS), where the client organized 200 interviews of storytelling, done in pairs, and the listening partner did write the story down. Then it was revised and typed, then revised again, and now all the stories are dead and boaring! A true storyteller would have used the content and would have given it a form to reach people, to bring the message to the public. For me that is beautiful! You also could build a scene play, dance the messages, sing them, draw them (what I did). Birgitt, you wrote:" when you gave us your gifts as a visual artist, people's learning ended up going much deeper through the art as a wonderful reflection tool. " Since for me you are the one, who really added value to Harrisons method, by taking into account the givens, as framework for the openness, by adding the 'Purpose' in the middle of the medicine wheel, and above all by daring to offer OS as an ongoing method within organizations, and to teach organizations to use it this way, may be you understand what I am asking for. It is not only a better way of documentation (what images of course can offer), it is the wonderful opportunity, no, the necessity, to transport the spirit of all what happens in Open Space first to all the senses of the participants and then to whom it may concern. All this for me is true in every Open Space session, and I know that people can be trained as 'transporters of spirit'. wether by drawing or any other way. In the meantime it is a good solution to have someone from the outside, as witness, as reciever, container, and that is what I can offer to be. If artists use Open Space for their themes, if they explode dancing, singing, drawing, beautiful. But that is not what I am talking about, unless all of us are keen enough to detect the artist insides themselves. Blessings Reinhard VISUELLE PROTOKOLLE Kuchenmüller & Stifel tel +39-0566-88 929 www.visuelle-protokolle.de ------------------------------ *Von:* OSLIST [mailto:osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu] *Im Auftrag von *Birgitt Williams *Gesendet:* Mittwoch, 23. August 2006 14:19 *An:* osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu *Betreff:* Re: Working with visual artists at an Open Space Hi Reinhard, You know that I admire your work very much and have appreciated your help in our workshops, and when you gave us your gifts as a visual artist, people's learning ended up going much deeper through the art as a wonderful reflection tool. What interested me in your mail to this list was your comment "I was hoping that your question would open a dialog I was seeking since years." If you have the energy for it, I would very much like to hear from you regarding what you were hoping the dialogue would be. I have an idea that you, who know OST very well, have some insights that we all could benefit from. Blessings, Birgitt Birgitt Williams -----Original Message----- *From:* OSLIST [mailto:osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu] *On Behalf Of *Visuelle Protokolle *Sent:* Monday, August 21, 2006 2:34 AM *To:* osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu *Subject:* AW: Working with visual artists at an Open Space Hi Chris, and all you others, I was hoping that your question would open a dialog I was seeking since years. Since years I am on this OS list, feeling that you and me are seeking for the same treasure in and on similar ways. But then I get Harrison's "One caution about visual artists and other such addendum" and ask me, and ask you: Are you, like me, an addendum to the process of self organizing people, helping them a bit as we can with our tools, or are you the high priests and I am the addendum? Mit freundlichen Grüßen best regards Reinhard VISUELLE PROTOKOLLE Kuchenmüller & Stifel tel +39-0566-88 929 www.visuelle-protokolle.de ------------------------------ *Von:* OSLIST [mailto:osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu] *Im Auftrag von *Chris Corrigan *Gesendet:* Mittwoch, 9. August 2006 18:51 *An:* osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu *Betreff:* Working with visual artists at an Open Space Hi mates: I have an opportunity coming up in the fall to work with a visual artist for an Open Space I am doing. The clients wants us to work together and I'm excited by the possibility, but haven't ever done that before. So what kind of good stories do you have of working with visual artists (and visual art as a modality) in Open Space. Daniel? Reinhardt? Is Nancy Margulis around? Others? Chris -- CHRIS CORRIGAN Consultation - Facilitation Open Space Technology Weblog: http://www.chriscorrigan.com/parkinglot Site: http://www.chriscorrigan.com Open Space Resources: http://tinyurl.com/r94tj * * ========================================================== osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu ------------------------------ To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu: http://listserv.boisestate.edu/archives/oslist.html To learn about OpenSpaceEmailLists and OSLIST FAQs: http://www.openspaceworld.org/oslist * * ========================================================== osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu ------------------------------ To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu: http://listserv.boisestate.edu/archives/oslist.html To learn about OpenSpaceEmailLists and OSLIST FAQs: http://www.openspaceworld.org/oslist -- No virus found in this incoming message. 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