When asked a
question about our contemporary society and the changes that happen within it I
have to answer twice. I identify myself
as an art educator and an artist. At
times these personalities work incredibly well together, but there are those
moments when it’s not the best to cross these paths. When asked about our society and the current
move toward technology integration, when asked what it means to me, I have to
answer twice. Luckily, this is one of
those times in which my answers benefit from each other. As an artist technology integration means a
drastic shift in creative medium, and as an art educator technology integration
means a more accessible curriculum.
Traditional art
has always been held in highest regard by the social consciousness of
humanity. Oil paints gently brushed on
to stretched canvas, marble finely chiseled into the likeness of another, and
inks of various colors pulled across paper to form a composition that speaks to
the very soul. These are the things we
think about when we discuss art, at least, they were. Now the digital age has brought about tools
that can near perfectly mimic traditional mediums, and with those tools the
clever of us have created new types of art.
The greatest moments in art history, the times in which the world was
changed by art, were all caused by boredom with the known. It is when someone does something new, makes
something unexpected and unseen, that the world notices and remembers. With technological integration the world of
the past has become available in the palm of your hand. Any artist can use new devices to replace
entire tool kits of artistic materials.
Any artist can find that new way to create something, that unexpected
and unseen thing anywhere they are by merely having the right type of
tool. And so many tools have become
available as we understand our technology more and further its reach back. Many of these tools make art creation an
available pursuit for anyone. Of course
the truly great will take their time to experience their craft, hone their
ability, and learn all there is to make something great, but it won’t cost them
a life savings and a lifetime anymore.
As an artist, technology integration means that art is becoming
something beautifully new, something that has more mastery over a universal
language than it has ever before.
Technology integration means art can be for everyone.
The art
classroom is a place that teaches to tradition.
We teach the famous artists of old, discuss why they are so famous, and
wish to understand how our own work can speak to as many people as their art
did. However, classes find themselves
limited. The arts are never placed in
high importance when it comes to funding, and art educators know this all too
well. With the push in schools to have a
1:1 ratio of available technology to students it means that technology
integration allows for greater access.
The art classroom can now be created through the use of devices that
mimic the expensive tools and materials used in art creation. Students won’t have to study just the artists
that are in their textbook. They can
explore the world of art through their digital device and discover what type of
art truly speaks to them. I have been
wishing to move the art classroom to a more contemporary mindset, helping
students understand that traditional visuals and the importance placed on
traditionally “good” art is not what matters.
What matters is making something that speaks for you, about you,
something that you feel good making.
Through technology integration students have the entire history of art
in the palm of their hand. They have
access to every artist new and old. They
have access to every work that has ever been made. They are no longer limited to what is held in
a school-mandated textbook when they have the ability to read any book. Now I am not speaking against traditional art
in any way. The fine forms and figures
devised by artists of old still allow us to create amazing work. We still need to understand these principles
and elements of art to speak properly with it, but we do not need to use the
tools of artists before us. We have
access to new tools, to entirely new mediums.
Technology integration brings us the entire world of old art and all
that is new art.
As an artist
technology integration means a drastic shift in creative medium, and as an art
educator technology integration means a more accessible curriculum. Young artists are mastery the old world with
new tools and students are discovery so much more with what they can
access. Technology integration brings an
end to many things as traditional artists and traditional teachers, and many of
us fear the loss of those aspects. We
fear the change that is coming. But, those
of us that can grasp this change and focus it within our classrooms can help
our students understand so much more than we ever could.