Collaboration: An Artist's
Perspective
Remember What Jack Said
Introductory Remarks
The current interest in artist/architect collaborations seems to date
back to the late 1970s when architect Richard Hobbs invited artists
into the design process for the Viewlands-Hoffman electrical substation
in Seattle.
This was soon followed by the collaboration in 1983 between Cesar Pelli,
Scott Burton and Siah Armajani on Battery Park, New York. In the UK,
the first collaborative process was, probably, Tess Jaray's work on
Centenary Square, in Birmingham, completed in 1990.
These early experiments in 'art as public space' required a closer
fit between art and architecture, and this was achieved by artists collaborating
with architects and, what Miwon Kwon [1]
describes as, the other "members of the urban managerial class",
ie. planners, urban designers, and city administrators.
The lessons learnt, from what is now over 25 years
of collaborative practice, are complex. Not only is it still impossible
to say what makes a successful collaboration, but the very contexts
in which we might want to collaborate seem increasingly determined to
stop us imagining a better world together.
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Not every artist can do this sort of work
We were discussing this only the other day. Jack had been presenting
his collaboration with Alice Adams on the Seattle metro project, and
was now taking flak from a disgruntled artist in the audience. I couldn't
guess how Jack was going to respond - what had seemed like a positive
insight into collaboration had just been destroyed by 'pissed off' of
Birmingham, or some other such place.
Well, Jack looked the guy in the eye and said, 'Not every artist can
do this sort of work - and maybe you are one of them.' And that's when
I understood how it works. Just because you are an artist doesn't mean
you can collaborate. The collaboration, and the ability to collaborate,
come first - and it doesn't matter much whether you are the artist,
the architect, the client or the girl next door.
Katherine Clarke [2] got it right when
she said, "Collaboration is the making of a relationship not an
object... Although it sounds obvious to say it, collaboration is about
difference, otherwise why bother. Acknowledging difference opens up
a space to recognise what you didn't know, what you do know, and what
you didn't know you knew; this is the substance of collaboration far
more so than the material outcome that may or may not result."
Build the relationship first, then identify the differences,
and then create the space.
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Collaboration or Cooperation?
In most art and architecture collaborations, the relationship between
architect and artist is usually defined by the division of the project
into its component parts, ie. the building, the external works, the
artwork, etc.. Theory describes this sort of relationship as cooperation
(Roschelle & Teasley 1995) [3]:
"Cooperative work is accomplished by the division of labour among
participants, as an activity where each person is responsible for a
portion of the problem solving."
Collaboration is different. Collaboration is a "coordinated, synchronous
activity that is the result of a continued attempt to construct and
maintain a shared conception of a problem." Or, more simply, the
"mutual engagement of participants in a coordinated effort to solve
the problem together."
So if the project is divided, and we each work on a different component
part, then we are cooperating and not collaborating.
If it is accepted, though, that we want a collaborative relationship
¯ ie. something more than simple cooperation, then we must attempt to
build and maintain a collaborative approach.
Five Steps:
1. mutually agree to collaborate;
2. work collaboratively (site visits, meetings, drawings,
discussions, e-mail exchange, etc.) to build a shared understanding
of the project (the site, the vision, etc.);
3. work at understanding each other's differing abilities,
knowledge and experiences;
4. establish coordinated mechanisms (meeting schedule,
critical path, information exchange procedures, etc.) to support the
collaboration;
5. agree a programme of higher level (principals/principles)
sessions which enhance the shared understanding of the site and create
an over-arching vision for the project. This may be about revealing
opportunities and overcoming constraints. It might simply be about making
drawings together.
These five steps can be understood, Bull & Brna
1997 [4], as a collaborative state based
on a coordinated dialogue rooted in the belief that each participant
can make a significant contribution to the project.
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Echoes from a Collaboration (Dear David/Dear Larry)
Of course, beyond the five steps set out above, there is probably no
blueprint for collaboration. Nothing can, or indeed should, be predictable
in what is essentially a dynamic process. I've just been skimming through
e-mails that, in many ways, illustrate something of the collaborative
process - in this case a two year collaboration with an architect and
other artists.

'Conversation Piece', Electric Wharf, Coventry
David Patten/Bryant Priest Newman Architects, 2003
Dear Larry
The important thing about the site visits is not so much what we look
at (although that is important) or talk about (although that is also
important) but how bits of looking and talking get spliced together
to suggest new possibilities.
- this is a bit like Chuang-Tzu's "Thus their one thing together
with their talk about the one thing makes two things. And their one
thing together with their talk and my statement about it makes three
things. And so it goes onŠ" And this sits at the heart of any
successful collaboration ¯ simply, if you are not doing this then
you are not collaborating.
Dear David
SORRY, I responded to previous e-mail without opening the attachment.
Have now done so and really like the ideas and image!
- always read everything. Be thorough.
Dear Larry
Brilliant - I am with you.
- and good ideas come from both sides.
Dear David
Just to remind you we haven't received the CD with images referred
to in salvaged materials schedule that you prepared - can you bring
tomorrow please.
- don't forget to do what you promised! Again, be thorough.
Dear Larry
Well, I've spoken to both 'X' and 'Y' and I'm no wiser! Let's see what
happens over the next few days, and if things aren't sorted we should
discuss the situation on the 16th.
- things always go wrong. You can see it coming. There's nothing much
you can do about it. Collaboration isn't a defensive shield.
Dear Larry
Bastards! Oh this is a mess!
- and, if they can, things do go wrong.
Dear David
Very interesting - I am humbled. Yes, I think it's a runner.
- sometimes it is good to surprise (but probably not necessary to
humble) your collaborator.
Dear Larry
It could be something like this, but you've got a better sense of design!
- and sometimes you just have to come clean, and say you're not as
good at something as the other person.
Dear David
We need to think quickly where we go from here.
- sometimes you get lost along the way, or a good idea is destroyed
by the inevitable.
Dear Larry
This might be a useful drawing to take next week. It shows something
of process and dialogue. It also says where we've been.
- collaboration is a bit like Thoreau's cabin [5],
"I had three chairs in my house; one for solitude, two for friendship,
three for society." That third chair is really important ¯ it
defines the collaboration and allows the collaboration to interact
beyond itself.
Dear Larry
It is only 9.30am and I already catch myself smoking two cigarettes
simultaneously! I am concerned that in the rush to get the drawings
done for Friday, we might forget some of the things we have explored
over recent months. We need to grasp these things and make space for
them to happen.
- collaboration doesn't, in itself, remove the usual stresses and
challenges associated with getting the work done and delivering the
outputs.
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Of course the assumption is always that the collaboration is between
one artist and one architect, when, in fact, other people get involved
- including other architects and other artists. Sometimes this can be
a negative - the thorn in the backside that needs to be dealt with so
that you can sit down again and get on with removing the thorn in your
foot. And sometimes it simply just works, enhancing the experience for
everybody involved and increasing the possibility of something very
special happening.
Dear Jane (from Charlie)
My relationship with the other people attached to the project has been
one of open debate and free exchange of ideas, motives, needs and insights.
This has been an exciting and informative process that has fed the work.
My role fluctuates from observer, listener, researcher, advisor, idea
juggler (my favourite), 'what if' scenario jockey, to producer of images
that ultimately meet the brief at hand.
I have a particularly close working relationship with Larry and David.
This has been mutually beneficial and informative as to how other thought
patterns and needs are articulated and manifested into product. I have
been constantly amazed at the cross readings of each other's practice
and how this has moved into action via the collaborative process.
But beyond particular specialist function what has been most interesting
is the evolution and revealing of a mutually shared idea of what this
project might be or could become.
- collaboration is inclusive and not exclusive. Others need to come
into the dynamic process to confirm, challenge and/or extend the possibilities.
After all, the intention is not to have a cosy relationship but to
produce the best work possible.
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Capture the Imagination and inspire the people!
Within regeneration and place-making collaborations, the artist's sense
of touch, rooted primarily in the 1:1 experience of painting or sculpture
or craft, has allowed a different take on the possibilities for the
social, perceptual and indigenous to influence what are essentially
economic and marketing projects. How well we understand this as an important
contribution will now be tested by new policy imperatives and funding
programmes that may, because of their inherent conservatism, discourage
the meaningful involvement of artists as legitimate collaborators. Maybe
this won't be a bad thing.
Maybe it is time for artists to seek out more interesting
collaborations in less commodified circumstances. Or maybe we stick
with it if only to remind policy makers and funders that what constitutes
public space should always be contested and constantly (re)negotiated.
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How brave are you?
To some extent, Maurice Maguire and I set up pro/POSIT [6]
out of frustration with the experience of collaborating with
architects. This is not a criticism of anything or anybody, it is simply
a recognition of the inherent historical and contextual flaws in the
relationship between art and architecture. Despite the current emphasis
on setting up artist and architect collaborations, nobody should believe
it is possible to overcome the weight of history.
Although the relationship between art and architecture has always been
enjoyably complex and reciprocal, it has also always been an unequal
and, perhaps, unfair relationship. Architecture has defined and dominated
the physical and psychological contexts in which art has been allowed
to operate since, in Europe at least, Brunelleschi got his own back
on Donatello.
It doesn't really matter how brave any of us think
we are being in establishing or working in an artist/architect collaboration,
we are still paying for those eggs Donatello dropped when he "acknowledged
himself beaten" by the art and skill of Brunelleschi's crucified
Christ [7], and the full-blooded collaboration
between artist and architect - the very thing we all work for - remains,
at best, elusive. And nothing will change this until somebody is brave
enough to commit fully to the phrase 'artist-led project'. How brave
are you?
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Future Possibilities
Actually things have changed greatly since Viewlands-Hoffman in the
late 1970s, and certainly much has changed since Jack Mackie stood up
at the 'Context & Collaboration' conference in Birmingham in 1990
to present the Seattle metro project. Probably the biggest change has
been, as Miwon Kwon has noted, in the shift of the collaborative focus
away from "a physical location - grounded, fixed, actual - to a
discursive vector - ungrounded, fluid, virtual."
It is too early to guess the impact this is going to have on 'art as
space' collaborations, but, in the emerging voids left by the disappearing
acts of both art and architecture, new possibilities for collaboration
are beginning to appear:
"new tools and new professionals, people who
can move between sectors and groups, weave agendas together, and find
common aims without claiming power. Perhaps these people, of whom there
should be more and more, could be what Blake called the Golden Builders
of the cities." [8]
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Concluding Remarks - The Don'ts
Okay, let's face it - you've come to this page looking for advice on
collaboration, looking for the do's and don'ts. Hopefully I've already
covered, or at least suggested, some of the do's. And I think I have
said something of the contexts within which some collaborations tend
to occur. So here are some don'ts.
- Don't come to me looking for a blueprint for collaboration, it
doesn't exist. If you want to know about blueprints, read Calvino's
'Cities & The Sky 3' in Invisible Cities [9]
("We will show it to you as soon as the working day is
over; we cannot interrupt our work now."). Otherwise, you are
better off trusting to instinct and just getting on with it.
- Don't collaborate if you are a princess, prima donna, or shaman.
It just won't work. You are the thorn in the backside. Remember what
Jack said.
- Don't enter a forced marriage - it will end on the rocks. Fall in
love first.
- Don't be exclusive or elitist - be open and generous.
- Don't forget Donatello's eggs - they are very important in all of
this.
- Don't think of collaboration as anything special, it isn't. It is
just a way of working. And when it works, it is the best way of working.
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References
1. Kwon, Miwon. One Place After Another: Notes on Site
Specificity, October 80 (Spring 1997).
2. Clarke, K. RSA Awards - Notes on Collaboration (undated).
3. Roschelle, J. & Teasley, S.D. The construction of
shared knowledge in collaborative problem solving. In C. O'Malley (ed.).
Computer Supported Collaborative Learning (1995).
4. Bull, S. & Brna, P. What Does Susan Know That Paul
Doesn't? (And Vice Versa), in B. du Boulay & R. Mizoguchi (eds),
Proceedings of International Conference on Artificial Intelligence in
Education, IOS Press, Amsterdam (1997).
5. Thoreau, Henry David. Walden and Civil Disobedience,
Penguin Classics (1983).
6. pro/POSIT is the formal working partnership between
David Patten and Maurice Maguire. Founded in Cambridge in 2001, pro/POSIT
creates 'perfect moments' with other golden builders, and is currently
collaborating with Bryant Priest Newman Architects on the design development
of the Irish Quarter in Birmingham. Further information at www.proposit.co.uk
7. G. Vasari Lives of the Artists - A Selection translated
by George Bull, Penguin (1987). "Thus, one day when Donato [Donatello]
had finished a wooden crucifix (which was placed in S. Croce in Florence,
under the scene where St. Francis raises the child, painted by Taddeo
Gaddi), he wished to have Filippo's [Brunelleschi] opinion; but he repented,
for Filippo said that he had put rustic on the cross. Donato then retorted,
"Take some wood and make one yourself," as is related at length
in his life. Filippo, who never lost his temper, however great the provocation,
quietly worked on for several months until he had completed a wooden
crucifix of the same size, of extraordinary excellence, and designed
with great art and diligence. He then sent Donato to his house before
him, quite ignorant of the fact that Filippo had made such a work, so
that he broke an apron-full of eggs and things for their meal which
he had with him, while Donato regarded the marvel with transport, noting
the art and skill shown by Filippo in the legs, body and arms of the
figure, the whole being so finely and harmoniously composed that Donato
not only acknowledged himself beaten but proclaimed the work as a miracle.
It is now placed in S. Maria Novella, between the Chapel of the Strozzi
and that of the Bardi of Vernio, where it is still greatly admired by
the moderns."
8. Jenkins, Deborah. The Richness of Cities, Comedia &
Demos (1997).
9. Calvino, Italo. Invisible Cities, Secker
and Warburg (1974).
A case study of the Electric Wharf project is on the
ixia website, www.ixia-info.com
© Copyright David Patten 2004. All rights reserved.
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