Ever since the servers have been able to handle it, professional and amateur musicians alike have used the Internet to collaborate. Dedicated 'online band' websites like kompoz.com and MyOnlineBand.com serve as social networking portals for the musically inclined. Popular musos in collaboration sell records and win Grammys, it's just how the world works.
But can collaboration work in the realm of visual art? Well, yes and no. Through the long history of art, there are very few famous examples - it's not hard to imagine Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dali ending up in a paint fight were they forced to share brush time on the same canvas.
20th and 21st Century technology, though, has opened up avenues to collaboration in previously impossible spheres. Yochai Benkler tells us about the advent of open-source software, and the collaborative development efforts that have grown out of it. Amanda Korman explained in The Berkshire Eagle earlier this year that even authorial collaboration on books has moved online, just as publishing is shaping to do the same.
It's hard to say with any certainty that visual artists are prepared to commit themselves to online collaboration. For that reason, Canvas Collective will not pin our hats on the exercise. Our main feature isn't a collaborative canvas.
But we are determined to offer a platform where cultural collaboration might blossom naturally. That means social media links, plugins, places to upload work, and comment boxes wherever possible.
After all, our website hopes to invite as many young and amateur artists into the artistic conversation as possible. What would our site be if it didn't offer artists the chance to converse with each other as well?
References
Benkler, Yochai (2006), 'Peer Production and Sharing', The Wealth of Networks, New Haven, Yale University Press.
Korman, Amanda (2011), 'Book collaboration goes online', The Berkshire Eagle, 26 February 2011, available http://ezproxy.library.usyd.edu.au/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/853899607?accountid=14757
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