Today on my FB feed there was an invitation to participate in something called "The Sketchbook Project". I followed the link to a beautifully designed website here:
and discovered that the Sketchbook project is an idea born a few years ago that aims at creating an opportunity to enjoy sketch art produced by artists worldwide. It consists in a permanent collection hosted at the Brooklin Art Library as well as traveling exhibitions.
Sounded very cool and definitely one of the brilliant ideas born out of the globalized world we all profit from. So I read further and down into the terms and conditions.
And this is where things started to become incomprehensible for me. So you buy a barcoded sketchbook from their website - paying 25 USD for a 30-pages mini-book of recycled paper. You fill it up and send it over to the Brooklin Art Library. You retain copyright, but that is more or less all that you have. The project organizer have worldwide unlimited rights to your sketches, they can take out pages if they feel so inclined without asking your permission. They can use your art in whichever way they want after making "a reasonable attempt to obtain your permission", but if you fail to give your permission within 2 months, they may do it just the same.
I then followed a link named "shop" and found out that they sell prints of some of the sketches for up to 75 USD each. Given the way the terms are written, I can conclude that the artist does not see a cent of this money. So basically you pay 25 USD and send in 30 pages of sketches for the honor of being included together with other 22`000 sketchbooks in a physical library with your name and location recorded in a database...
I am wondering if I am missing some of the poetry of the whole thing. I can see the beauty of the idea, and not everything has to be ruled by business - this is the world that brought us Wikipedia after all. But Wikipedia does not sell printed books with the content contributed by the volunteers, nor does it demand an entry fee to write an article. Something seems flawed and I am not sure it is me (definitely not a "millennial") or if there is something intrinsically wrong going on here....is it just a beautiful initiative that tries to make enough money to keep itself alive?
I needed to discuss it somewhere, and SVS seemed the safest haven to vent - sorry for stealing your time for this, but would love your opinions!