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Creativity and craft: the information‐seeking behavior of theatre artists

Creativity and craft: the information‐seeking behavior of theatre artists Purpose – The aim of this study is to explore the information needs and behaviors of practicing theatre artists. Psychological research into creativity provides a framework for understanding both theatre artists' information‐seeking behavior and the role of information seeking and gathering in the creative process. Design/methodology/approach – The exploratory study presents findings from an online questionnaire of 73 practicing theatre artists and qualitative data gathered from eight interviews with theatre professionals. Findings – The study reveals that theatre artists seek information for six primary purposes: understanding a work's historical, cultural, and critical background; finding sources of inspiration; learning about contemporary or historical theatre productions, artists, and events; learning technical or process information; finding performance materials; and furthering career goals. Theatre artists view the information search process as being essential to their creative activities, and their first‐hand accounts of their artistic experiences illuminate the critical role that information seeking and gathering play in the creative process. Research limitations/implications – Some theatre professions, such as lighting or sound design, were represented in the questionnaire but were not represented in the interviews. Practical implications – The study has practical implications for the delivery of library and internet theatre art collections and information services. Originality/value – Few studies have examined the information‐seeking behavior of practicing theatre artists. The paper demonstrates that studies of artists can be used to understand the role of information seeking and gathering in the creative processes of people working in various subject domains. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Documentation Emerald Publishing

Creativity and craft: the information‐seeking behavior of theatre artists

Journal of Documentation , Volume 66 (3): 21 – Apr 27, 2010

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References (35)

Publisher
Emerald Publishing
Copyright
Copyright © 2010 Emerald Group Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.
ISSN
0022-0418
DOI
10.1108/00220411011038430
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Purpose – The aim of this study is to explore the information needs and behaviors of practicing theatre artists. Psychological research into creativity provides a framework for understanding both theatre artists' information‐seeking behavior and the role of information seeking and gathering in the creative process. Design/methodology/approach – The exploratory study presents findings from an online questionnaire of 73 practicing theatre artists and qualitative data gathered from eight interviews with theatre professionals. Findings – The study reveals that theatre artists seek information for six primary purposes: understanding a work's historical, cultural, and critical background; finding sources of inspiration; learning about contemporary or historical theatre productions, artists, and events; learning technical or process information; finding performance materials; and furthering career goals. Theatre artists view the information search process as being essential to their creative activities, and their first‐hand accounts of their artistic experiences illuminate the critical role that information seeking and gathering play in the creative process. Research limitations/implications – Some theatre professions, such as lighting or sound design, were represented in the questionnaire but were not represented in the interviews. Practical implications – The study has practical implications for the delivery of library and internet theatre art collections and information services. Originality/value – Few studies have examined the information‐seeking behavior of practicing theatre artists. The paper demonstrates that studies of artists can be used to understand the role of information seeking and gathering in the creative processes of people working in various subject domains.

Journal

Journal of DocumentationEmerald Publishing

Published: Apr 27, 2010

Keywords: Arts; Information research; Theatre; Behaviour

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