How Does Creatorship Come to Life?
How Does Creator’ship Find Life?
On the Frail Reality of Being an Independent Creator in Turkey
06 FEB 26
In Turkey, being a creator is not yet a profession; it's often a hobby, a transitional field, or a wait left to the mercy of algorithms. The main problem in this field, which has not yet taken root and is just sprouting, is not a lack of talent, but a lack of foundation. There are creators, there is production, and there are even viewers; however, there are almost no independent spaces that would bring these three together in a sustainable structure.
Just like what happened to independent curatorship once upon a time.
When Power is Not Distributed, Visibility Concentrates in Monopoly
Today in Turkey, the creator ecosystem revolves in a narrow circle around a few large platforms, agencies, and brand collaborations. Visibility is surrendered to algorithmic success; and algorithmic success is surrendered to repetitive faces and formats. This situation means not just a competition problem for new and independent creators, but structural exclusion.
While creatorship should carry the claim of establishing its own narrative; it is increasingly reduced to "compatible content production". Just like how biennials stopped being a breakthrough space for independent curators and turned into an additional prestige area for institutional managers.
Who is an Independent Creator — Who Doesn't Have to Be?
An independent creator;
Doesn't have to speak in agency language,
Remains loyal to context, not brand,
Doesn't get squeezed into the aesthetics of a single platform,
Is someone who measures their production not only with likes, but with meaning.
However, in our geography this figure is often romanticized: "on their own", "unsupported but free". Yet unsupported freedom only produces burnout in the long run. Just as independent curators cannot survive without institutional ethics and time allocation, creators cannot be sustainable without structural support.
What Gives Life to Creatorship: Space
Creatorship finds life not by producing content alone, but by being situated.
When context, archive, editorial framework and visibility don't work together, the creator merely turns into a user lost in the flow.
Collecist's new space comes into play precisely here:
As a settlement area, not a showcase.
Here the creator;
Presents their production not as a singular share, but as a continuous practice.
Touches editorial filtering, not algorithm.
Doesn't shout to be "discovered"; positions themselves.
Why Does Being a Creator in Turkey Require Courage?
Because in this field, these questions are still not asked:
What does this production say?
What void does it fill?
What aesthetic or intellectual risks does it take?
Instead, questions like "how many views?", "who did they work with?", "which trend did they catch?" are in circulation. This removes creatorship from being a form of cultural production and imprisons it in performance economy.
Yet creatorship, just like art and curatorship, lives with plurality and risk.
Collecist's Position: Not a Savior, but Ground
Collecist is not a "selective elite" or an accelerator in this field.
It offers a claim:
Creatorship develops only when it meets the right ground.
For this reason, this space;
Calls not those who rise fast, but those who deepen,
Not those who make noise, but those who build discourse,
Not those who resemble everyone, but those who seek their own language.
Instead of Conclusion: The Only Thing That Can Be Done in the Sprouting Period
For independent creators to survive, they need settlement more than competition, context more than visibility, common ground more than individual effort.
Creatorship in Turkey hasn't died yet;
but it can't grow on its own either.
S. Çağatay Özkefeli