Listening is the whole deal
Adam Moss in the afterword to The Work of Art:
THERE IS A PHRASE, variations of which many of the subjects of this book ended up uttering at some point. As they were describing why they did this or that, they would say they βlistenedβ to the work, or the work would βtellβ them what to do; the work would βspeakβ to them, as if a character in a book or a color on a canvas could issue orders. Tony Kushner asked his Angels alter ego, Louis, to explain the play to him; Cheryl Pope waited for the mother in her picture with no face to tell her whether she wanted a face. For a long while, I dismissed this phrasing as clichΓ© β more of the empty language people often employ to describe how they work because creation is so hard to describe. Eventually, however, I began to think that no, maybe listening was the whole deal.
Listening to what the poem or song was telling them was another way of describing how they listened to themselves, taking whatever their imagination spewed forth, recognizing it and translating it backβsimplifying it, usuallyβso their conscious self could go about manipulating it. And this attending (βI was just taking dictation,β said Kushner, a common sentiment) was really, I realized, at the heart of the project of this book. Thatβs what the exhibits they shared are about. The studies, notes, doodles βthey are all ways the artists have of talking to themselves.
Or, as Anni Albers put it: βthe listening to that which wants to be doneβ:Β