Publication | Closed Access
Seeing More and Seeing Differently: Sensemaking, Mindfulness, and the Workarts
227
Citations
47
References
2010
Year
EmpathyVisual Art PracticeArt ManagementCognitionArts ManagementMindfulness InterventionVisual ArtsSensemakingPsychologySocial SciencesImmediate Work ConcernsAnalogous ArtifactsCreativityMindsetMindfulness MeditationArts PolicyCognitive ScienceArt HistoryCreative WritingMeditationVisual CultureMindfulnessPerformance StudiesContemporary ArtSpiritualityWorkarts Foster MindfulnessCreative IndustryPerforming ArtsArtsArts-based ResearchPhilosophy Of Mind
The past years have seen a marked rise in arts-based initiatives in organizations, a field we term the workarts. In this paper, we review the workarts in light of sensemaking theory, and especially the role of mindfulness within it. We propose that the workarts foster mindfulness by directing attention away from immediate work concerns and towards analogous artifacts. We identify three distinctive workarts movements — art collection, artist-led intervention, and artistic experimentation. In each movement, we find analogous artifacts that defamiliarize organizational members’ habitual ways of seeing and believing, enabling them to make new distinctions and to shift contexts: to see more and see differently. Our review raises a number of questions for the workarts in particular and research on analogical artifacts in general.
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