The art students at the college were putting together their
summer exhibition. Paintings, photographs, furniture, ceramics and models were
being prepared for display in the main hall, reception and main corridors.
In the corner of reception was a big box containing hanging
materials. A bag of masonry nails, paper bags, masking tape, some old frames, glue
and so on.
Thinking that the cleaners might mistake the
materials for rubbish, a tutor had written the following next to the box:
One of my part time tutors was walking through the reception
on his way to the canteen for lunch. He spotted the sign, stopped and got out
his marker pen.
He wrote the word ‘thanks’ on a piece of paper and dropped
it on the floor. Seeing the joke I
decided to do the same.
By the end of the lunch hour there were a dozen ‘thanks’ on
the floor written on various pieces of paper. By the end of the day there were
more ‘thanks’. By the end of the week there were hundreds.
No one cleared away the pile of ‘thanks.’ After all, there was a sign that said, ‘please
leave thanks.’
By the time the show opened to the public the pile of paper
was two feet high, six feet wide and had become a distinctive, eye-catching piece.
I didn't take a photo at the time, although this image is quite close to how it looked.
The art tutors wanted to know which student had thought up
this art piece so they could mark it and attribute the mark to the student’s
final grade.
All the art students looked blank. The tutors were baffled.
They marked it anyway expecting the student to come forward at a later date.
Being a creative is something you are.
It’s not just a job.