Left Brain Art (LBA) is a distinct art form centered on the artist's search
for the core elements essential to the produced artwork. Developed by Mel Zaid from
1971 onward, its underpinnings are based on an Art Method paralleling the well understood Scientific Method, the backbone of
many important advances in science. This analogy between these separate creative
processes is especially valuable for artists with a strong "left brain"
proclivity, enhancing the creative process and forming a bridge between Art and
Science as it evolves in an Art/Sci - Art/Tec movement.
Expressed simply, this Left Brain
Art Method analogizes the Scientific Method
by introducing three
related precepts Explore, Explain and Exploit, making complex artworks and
their concepts visually accessible. "Explore" embodies the process of
statement, searching, simplifying and concluding, resulting in a specific
artwork where questions of why and what are well explored and understood by the
producing artist. "Explain" affords "peer review" in which the artist reveals
to others the fundamental visual concepts of the artwork without resorting to
clichés. "Exploit" is the process of expanding the separate unique language
elements into a self-consistent body of
art work which brings a readily understandable language and meaning to the
intuitive viewer. The end result is a unique and expansive visual language -- providing an additional form of communication
for otherwise complex and intractable concepts - an art/science goal.
This "method" in the creation of art has a long history spanning
centuries. Although not specifically
conceptualized as in Left Brain Art, an examination of much of the art seen in
museums will reveal many similar attributes. The work of Alexander Calder, Henry Moore, Jackson Pollock, Umberto Boccioni,
Richard Serra, and John Chamberlain,
as well many other ground-breaking artists, all reveal a similar searching
for "core understandings" in their development of a "consistent body of work".
In a
contemporary development within Left
Brain Art, a large body of Multi-space Art was first initiated by Zaid in 1979 in both sculpture and flat work and
each of these were described in many related exhibitions, presentations and in
various publications including many in ARTLIFE (1981-2005, including "SciTec - Artists with a left brain" 2004,
Vol 24, Nr 8 & Nr 9), Art gallery International (1987) and other writings,
the DVD Video "multi-space", a published pamphlet (2006) entitled "LBA" and the
web site
www.multispace.net.
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