
In 2010, Nathan Langston craved connection after moving to New York City.
The poet-composer wanted to meet other artists and developed an art project called Telephone, which is inspired by the children’s game of the same name.
“The game seemed like a sneaky way to meet other artists,” said Langston, founder and director of Telephone. “It took a long time, but it worked! At first, I was physically taking work from artist to artist around the city on the subway, but that took too long.”
Instead, Langston and other artists started sharing their creative works online for Telephone.
“We began passing works via the internet, which vastly increased the pool size of possible players,” said Langton, who’s now based in Seattle.
“The other thing we did was to assign each finished work to two or three artists, rather than one. That meant that the game branched outward like a family tree, and if any one artist dropped out, the game could continue expanding.”
To participate, artists sign up through the Telephone website, receive an anonymous piece of artwork from another creative to interpret, and then have two weeks to create their artistic response in a different medium. Continue reading “Global Connections — Telephone Inspires Artists to Interpret Creative Works Across Different Media”



