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The art of feedback
and feedforward: the technology of collage
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Collage
is mental dynamite, liberating inhibited
feelings, emotions, and inner thoughts,
transposing and translating them
into reality.
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Ever since I was a youth of 17, in pursuing my
research and in my quest to understand thought,
human nature and myself, I have been using a
simple, but potent tool — collage. My initiation
in this art occurred in college. In the years
that followed, I made extensive use of this technique,
primarily as a communication tool. I’ve
continued this practice to the present day.
Invented in the early 20th century, collage
was the brainchild of the founders of the
Dada movement. Principal among them was the
German artist Max Ernst, renowned for his
ingenious and disquieting images. He and his
colleagues used the medium as art and provocation.
They even vaunted the technique’s capacity
to predict the future. But for my purposes,
collage is not about assembling shapes and
colors for esthetic effect. It is a powerful
communication and feedback tool. What’s
more, it’s user friendly: you just need
a dash of patience and a good dose of humility.
Collage is a great means of revelation and
discovery.

Collage materials are simple and inexpensive:
any size cardboard will do, magazines, newspapers,
or other publications destined for the recycling
bin, scissors and glue. Flip through the pages
and cut out anything that catches your fancy.
Let intuition be your guide. Don’t try
to tell a story or deliver a message. Just
pick words and images based on how you feel.
Be playful. It’s not about precision
or logic; that’s not the object of the
exercise. This isn’t a test. It’s
easy: just let yourself go; clip whatever
touches you, whatever speaks to you. Arrange
the words and images on the cardboard as you
go along. Assemble your collage gradually,
intuitively. Keep an open mind; proceed as
you see fit, that’s the ticket. Collage
is a powerful creative act; it frees up your
mind. Keep cutting out and placing whatever
you come up with on the cardboard until it
is completely covered or until you feel you’ve
done enough. But remember: collage takes at
least three images! Once you decide everything’s
in place, start pasting. Glue your images,
shapes, and words on the cardboard. I love
this final stage because it is a wonderful
wellspring of ideas.
Collage captures and identifies emotions,
feelings and inner thoughts. Throughout the
activity, they are revealed and then projected
into words and images. We delve deep into
our inner core to find them and externalize
them. It’s spontaneous! More often than
not, these emotions have not been decoded.
They have yet to be processed in our brain’s
control centre. The seeds of emotions are
everywhere; they circulate from our unconscious
to the collective unconscious and vice-versa.
The emotions inhabiting us are part of a gradual
process of emergence and materialization.
There is a layering of diffuse feelings, emotions
and thoughts, neither decoded nor externalized,
waiting to materialize in the world.
The build-up of emotions, feelings, and thoughts
can be compared to the gradual accumulation
of ice in winter. As we know, dynamite breaks
up a river ice jam, allowing the waters to
run freely. Collage is mental dynamite, liberating
inhibited feelings, emotions, and inner thoughts,
transposing and translating them into reality.
That is exactly what is involved. Schools
teach us nothing about the mechanisms of thought.
Some education! We’re not shown how
to recognize, identify and manage our mental
processes. Even less do we learn how to promote
the free flow of feelings, emotions and thoughts.
We’re drilled and grilled, conditioned
to swallow material and regurgitate it at
the right time and place. If we aspire to
more than that, we’re left to our own
devices.
Once our collage is finished, once our diffuse
feelings, emotions and thoughts have been
seized and assembled, our mind must adapt
accordingly. And that’s when the surprise
comes in! It’s like being on “Candid
Camera,” or “Spy TV.” Something
emerges from within us and takes on a life
of its own. And we have no choice but to acknowledge
it. It’s like the ice jam break-up or,
if you prefer, the equivalent of release,
surrendering, and letting go. Something inside
us has been set free. It has been revealed.
It no longer needs to cling on, to hide, or
to hole up in its prehistoric cave.
And on top of that, there’s the basic
gestalt principle that “the whole is
greater than the sum of its parts.”
This idea applies to collage in which the
finished product is much more than the mere
sum of the words and images. The finished
collage has an original and highly amazing
effect on the mind. It can be startling. Sometimes,
it’s as if I’m viewing a much
more intriguing newscast than the run-of-the-mill
fare we normally see. It’s like watching
a new specialty channel: MIND NEWS! that keeps
us up to date on the latest developments in
the human mind. And the channel has an incredible
number of foreign correspondents, posted in
the collective unconscious. Its programming
features a startlingly original history series
and the world’s most authentic reality
show. What is striking about this specialty
channel is that we are at once the viewer,
the host, the news itself, the producer and
the station director. As a bonus: the channel
is commercial free.
Collage intensifies my investigation into
all sorts of ideas. During the process, some
ideas appear vital. Other times, collages
remind me that some issues are not important,
that I don’t need to concern myself
with them and that I can go on to other things.
Collage helps me separate the wheat from the
chaff. It saves me a great deal of time.
Astonishingly, collage gives us the distinct
impression we’re programming a compelling
future. It helps us see and materialize in
the here and now elements of our inner life
that have not yet found concrete expression.
We are projected into our own future. It’s
as if we are trailblazing our future landscape.
It’s as if we’re strolling along
a country path, tossing our feelings and emotions
ahead of us and then catching up with them.
On the way, they seem familiar to us. They
are no longer in our way. Better still, we
can feel our progress dramatically accelerating
(feedforward). It is exhilarating to find
out how much more there is to discover.
There are common threads from one collage
to another. The process is like a transparent
layering of key ideas that are taken up again
and contextualized anew. As time went by,
I discovered common threads from one collage
to the next:
• History: ancestors, previous eras,
a return to the past, artifacts.
• Place: house, town, office, spaces,
Earth, planet, atom, cell, solar system.
• Situation: meeting, announcement,
opportunity, context, particular moment, circumstances.
• Viewpoint: witness, actor, observer,
precursor, victim, roles – as in a play,
situation seen from different angles.
• Development: I’m described,
guided, comforted, helped, I’m told
certain things, I’m prepared, I’m
revealed to myself, feelings, memories and
emotions are revealed to me.
• Health: relief from headaches, stress
and anxiety.
We can create a collage about a specific theme
or person. The principle is the same: with
the theme or person in mind, select words
and images based on how you feel. Occasionally,
you can include photos of yourself, other
personal photos, your writing, key ideas,
and phrases that capture your imagination;
in short, anything you want. You can also
do collages and send them to someone important
in your life. This is the sexy side of collage.
Here are some suggestions: family, in-laws,
friends, an old flame, a school teacher, colleagues
at work, your boss, a supplier, the mayor,
your member of the legislature, your favorite
stars of TV, sports and the arts, etc.
When I first entered the exhilarating world
of collages, I offered them to friends and
family. I was engaged in a period of introspection
and needed to clarify my relationships or,
at least, to reassure myself about the quality
of my relationships. So I gave collages to
the people around me and derived great benefit
from doing so. I felt I had found a positive,
original and effective way of putting my relationships
in order. In using this technique, I realized
that every family has not only a genetic heritage,
but an affective heritage as well. This heritage
is passed on from generation to generation
and it surfaces from time to time. We find
ourselves wrestling with a particular facet
of our history that is almost unavoidable.
Present in family heritage, these facets carry
emotional charges (negative or positive) that
tend to impact family members. In the series
of collages for family and friends, I literally
collected these emotional charges, translated
them and externalized them. And they vanished.
As easy as that! Something emerges from within
us and takes on a life of its own. And we’re
compelled to come to terms with it. It’s
just like the ice jam break-up. I’m
left with the same feeling I have when I wake
up in the morning and recall a dream.
A fascinating and poignant illustration of
collage’s impact concerns my father.
Unfortunately, he passed away since then,
but I know he wouldn’t have objected
to my telling this story. I created three
or four 9-inch x 12-inch cardboard collages
with him in mind of course. Without any preconceived
ideas. I wasn’t trying to tell him a
specific story. But my intent was clear: I
wanted to tell him I had to “go further
in life” and to do that, I had to relinquish
certain values he’d taught me. I didn’t
want to jettison the entire heritage he’d
given me, just shed some aspects. I knew that
to fulfill my dreams, I had to get rid of
some baggage that risked becoming a burden.
So I finished the collages. But I was at a
loss as to how to interpret them. Whatever
they recounted wasn’t familiar to me.
I visited my father at work and handed him
an envelope containing the collages. “I’ve
got a gift for you,” I said. He opened
the envelope and took a couple of minutes
to look at the collages. I could see the emotion
welling up in his eyes. Clearly, the images
spoke to him; they had special meaning for
him. I couldn’t see what it was. But
I knew the collages resonated with him. “Who
told you that? Who told you about all that?”
he asked. I confessed I didn’t know
what my collages conveyed. I had done them
intuitively, without trying to relate anything
specific.
I told him I intended to seek new horizons
and I had to let go of certain things he had
given me. I was simply giving them back to
him. His reaction bowled me over. He took
it all in stride. Glancing at the collages
again, he said he understood. He accepted
my “gift.” The meeting was brief
and cordial, but charged with emotion.
I soon realized what happens when I offer
people a collage. They search for meaning
in the collage, project themselves into it
and relate it to their inner life and personal
history. It’s an automatic reaction.
Their interpretation is necessarily subjective.
I’m convinced the people themselves,
as I perceive them, are actually doing the
collages. Often, people are astonished by
what they see; they get completely involved.
They discover meaning, which they alone can
fully comprehend. I find it very rewarding.
Giving people a collage helps me see myself
in relation to them. I also discover the kind
of relationship I could have with them. Sometimes,
the insight a collage brings can end a relationship.
In other situations, a collage highlights
what the two people have in common, enriching
their relationship. Collage helps people regain
their centre, encouraging them to focus on
their personal concerns and take care of their
own affairs.
In our society, the process involves a form
of projection. As everyone knows, individuals
tend to project themselves on one another.
By projection I mean attributing to others
intentions or suppositions that bear an emotional
and affective charge. How we project ourselves
depends on our education, problems, desires,
and ambitions. We also receive and sustain
projections from others. Some people hardly
project at all, but can be extremely receptive
to other people’s projections. With
others, it’s just the opposite; they
constantly project themselves everywhere and
on everyone. It’s like a game with them.
Projection is a veritable scourge; a virus
plaguing human relationships since time immemorial,
poisoning them. It originated with our ancestors,
the first reptiles. Based on the dominant-dominated
relationship, projection slyly insinuates
itself into every aspect of personality, mainly
driven by fear and hatred. Maybe evolution
should have evolved a bit further. So, when
we create a collage for people, we tap into
their projections, translate them into current
cultural references and return them. That’s
why recipients of collages identify with them.
In that case collages produce an awesome boomerang
effect.
A friend and psychologist Dr. René
Bernèche has remarked that my collages
remind him of mandalas, which are basically
geometric representations of the cosmos in
Hindu and Buddhist Tantrism. In The Dance
of Life, Edward T. Hall wrote that the symbol
is one of the most ancient forms of classification
ever used: a mandala is generally in the shape
of a circle or square, and it functions much
like a matrix in algebra. Mandalas are particularly
useful when the relationships concerned are
paradoxical, in that they are both complementary
and contradictory at once; or when we are
considering pairs or sets of dissimilar facts,
the relationship of which we grasp intuitively
without having associated, linked or combined
them in a single system.
Reading Hall’s work was particularly
enlightening. It helped me understand one
of the fundamental aspects of collage. He
discusses the manifestations of human expression,
and points to the uniquely human capacity
to externalize at many levels. He underlines
our ability to go outside ourselves, to create.
According to Hall, culture stems from this
faculty; it is the fruit of human expression.
He also points out that culture equals mind;
it is the mind of a human being that is projected.
I saw the link with collages: the words and
pictures used are essentially cultural elements.
In doing a collage, I’m selecting pieces
of culture, of mind, and then rearranging
them on cardboard. Mind is certainly present
in collages. Therefore, they are extraordinary
communication and feedback tools for self-discovery
and self-realization.
Collage often delivers a specific, even highly
complex message. Often, it gives me a sense
of direction and helps define objectives.
I feel I’m getting somewhere. It’s
as if I was walking in pitch darkness but,
by doing a collage, I avoid obstacles and
move rapidly ahead. It’s a peculiar
feeling. But gradually, I must make a choice.
Do I really trust the message my collages
convey?
I discovered that collage externalizes our
thought structures. The process makes us more
attuned to the state of our brain’s
junction points. Collage acts as a nervous
impulse on them, facilitating the flow of
information from one neuron to another (ice
break-up). Also, collage updates our mind
tools. It helps us acquire new connections,
ways of thinking, and points of view. It is
major mental renovation. It is a magnificent
research tool with far-reaching effects on
our lives.
Recently, after making a series of personal
collages, I decided to translate them into
words. The results were remarkable. So now,
once the collages are finished, I explain
and interpret them. For each of them, I enter
my version of the facts, my explanation on
the computer. I also transcribe the words,
phrases and texts contained in the collage.
It reminds me of dream journaling, in which
we record our dreams to discern their meaning.
Of course, translating a collage is a very
subjective, freewheeling, and spontaneous
exercise, but it has transformed my relationship
with the medium. In so doing, I’m raising
collage to another level of communication.
I’m reinforcing, supporting, integrating
and appropriating the exercise, its content
and its message. Translating and transcribing
collages energizes me, giving me the momentum
to sustain a constant flow of creative ideas.
It is an extraordinary feeling.
So, in pursuing my investigation, I decided
to take the exercise even further by writing
this book. Certain themes came immediately
to mind, but something was missing. Either
I lacked the information I needed or I didn’t
see how the data were related. So I jotted
down the themes I wanted to tackle, and did
a specific collage for each of them. Here’s
a list: The Political Dimension, O the Revelator,
The media, Creativity/brain 10%, The Self-Contained
Experiment, Identity Crisis/Total Memory Environment,
In regard to this certitude/this reference
within me, The common thread/The One Spirit
Movement, Passage. Now, instead of waiting
until I completed the collage before translating
it and writing down my impressions, I took
notes as I went along. I looked at the words
and pictures I was cutting out and, immediately
after placing them on the cardboard, I noted
the ideas, reflections and questions triggered
by the picture or the text. I did this until
the collage was finished. Once I had pasted
all my words and pictures on the cardboard,
I immediately entered my notes on the computer.
The notes stimulated and nourished my writing;
they inspired me with new ideas and enabled
me to discern new relationships. And that’s
how I was able to finish writing the second
part of my book.
Ready to take off with collage?
Please visit:
http://homepage.mac.com/monsieurdavid
| Finally, we are suggesting that you visit Jean David's web site http://www.nationalbrainstorm.org/ where Jean exposes his most innovative and brilliant idea: The creation of an Archetypal Event, a kind of social Big Bang, a daring solution which could give birth to nothing short of a new paradigm about the way we could experience our lives, and which would be governed by the renewed image we will be holding of ourselves. |
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