I do not mind, and I would be glad if people from future generations would refer to my texts, photos, and works, like, e.g., “Diaries,” “Negation of the End,” or “Death.”
I do not mind if posterity will argue with thoughts, oppose, improve, ennoble, reject, or discuss with them. Moreover, I hope that everything I create will have a second life in the future after my death. What will happen with my printed photographs after my final end? Will they have a second life in my basement? Or, perhaps, they will receive a second life in my museum? Do I plan to open such an institution? The answer is simple: no. Still, I do not mind if someone will do it after my death. The other case I wonder about is what will happen with the www.adammazek.com website once I’m not present in this world anymore. Will it die in a “natural,” for web pages, death? The answer is open. Will my thoughts, written on a virtual paper, be transformed, argued, improved, rejected, or forgotten?
I wish I had known it, but I cannot move to the future and see how it will look.
In one of my previous posts, I already wrote that the creation process, producing art, is an eternal dialogue between contemporary artists and intergenerational, endless dialogue between people.
We give ourselves hints, information, incentives, inspiration to move on, to ask fundamental questions about our existence, about humans’ place not only on our planet, Earth but in the entire Universe. We do it by writing thoughts or taking pictures and playing music, singing, dancing, painting, drawing, sculpting, etc. Every creation process is crucial. Every voice from every era is fundamental for all of us. Thus, I do not mind if someone in the future will be inspired by Mazek.