When Thomas
Edison needed ideas for his brilliant inventions, he dozed with ball bearings
in each hand and pie plates at his feet.
As his fists unclenched, the balls crashed, awakening him to write down
what he was thinking at that instant. How do artists come up with their strange
and wonderful ideas? In fascinating interviews, I learned some of their
secrets.

Sometimes a compelling message is translated through their genre such as in Hillel Kogan’s dance piece We Love Arabs at the
Spoleto Festival. “Usually I do have an
idea before I start the creation.
Through improvisation I discover the way to talk through the body.” His
piece is a depiction of how Jews see Arabs and the social codes in Israel . But artistry
made it approachable. “Regarding ethnic
conflict, especially in the Middle East , the
approach is very serious, melancholic. Humor is a tool to enable us to take
some distance. The effect is that it holds down the hard feeling. Humor is my language.” After the Mother

Sometimes commercial interests initiate the project as in many of the commissioned murals. “My responsibility is to
come up with an image that’s not aggressive marketing.” On Queen Street, the
mural “Wine” began as an advertisement for a wine distributor but the finished image,
a mural David is most proud of, is the result of “being hemmed in by good taste”:
the wall backed up to the Gibbes Art Gallery.
A parody of Renoir’s “Boat Party” and an homage to the Charleston ’s culinary community was the
creative result.
Ideas are
elusive so the artists need systems to capture them. Hillel Kogan decries videotaping as he
improvises because it “destroys something”.
He trusts what feels right and uses assistants to give feedback. Charleston’s poet laureate Marcus Amaker
always carries a notebook of unfinished poems; Blind Summit puppet theater uses
workshops of “brainstormy, anything goes, chaos” to get feedback from colleagues.
Despite her excellent visual memory, Mary Edna catalogues every photo and
location she shoots. 
Success often comes from
combining ideas. “The big work is to
connect, to link the ideas” said Hillel Kogan.
“The search for unity is much more demanding than the search for good
ideas.” Mark Down agreed: “I always know something is good when ideas are
kaleidoscoping into each other.” Marcus
Amaker’s poem The New Foundation “…was birthed when I saw a direct parallel
between architecture and personal growth. Sometimes a poem will take me where
it wants me to go and I just have to be open and listen.”
“It’s a
discipline,” Greg Tavares of the
“The Have Nots” said of his quick-fire ability to instantaneously come up with
improv skits. What audiences enjoy is
the result of years spent acquiring skills and honing intuition: competency. Greg
describes it as “The difference between learning the steps and waltzing.”
For More
Information:
Spoleto Festival: May 26 to June 11 https://spoletousa.org
Marcus Amaker, poet: http://marcusamaker.com/poems/
Mary Edna Fraser: studio open by appointment http://maryedna.com/
David Boatwright: http://www.luckyboyart.com/
Susan Altman: http://www.susanaltmanfineart.com/
The Have Nots: http://www.theatre99.com/