Sometimes I find that I have reworked an image or a scene or a text that comes from another artist almost without realizing it. There’s a kind of incorporation, literally a sense of these things entering into the fabric of my own thinking, that happens with deeply influential works. Then there’s the inevitable ventriloquism that happens from participating in culture — from being born into a language and ways of telling stories. It’s a slap to label something derivative, but what doesn’t derive from the world it emerges from?
This generator embraces that sense of permeability and derivation as a welcome kinship.
The task is to deliberately interrogate and rewrite some element of a text, picture, play, song etc. that has left its imprint in your aesthetic temperament.
Make a list of 7 or 8 intense memories from your lifetime of reading, listening, or viewing. These intensities I think of as marked by a particular kind of exhilaration that combines a feeling of belonging (These are my people!) with a sense of awe or longing (I wish I could do that!). The are moments you came into contact with something you wanted to be part of.
Select one entry from your list, and zero in, in your mind’s eye, on some element of that piece. Make notes on what it is doing and what it is made of. What are the images in the scene, the formal tools in play, the affect on you as its audience? What materials does it use and how does it assemble them into a scene?
Then, working from these notes, without leaving anything out, but playing free and loose with how to reconstitute them, make a new scene, or song, or image, that works and reworks all these things.
The goal is to be simultaneously loving, reverential, and free.
After you have made this thing that out of what has come before you, read it again, keeping alive the question of what it might become.