Sunday, January 7, 2007

Peak Art

Peak Art


I’m worried that art and literature have peaked along with oil, like separated twins expiring at the same moment in spite of time and distance. I’m worried that the definitive Canadian poem was written by Margaret Atwood in 1970, and that it pounds the final nail into the coffin of that grand old idea that art might be something more than a strictly commercial enterprise. Those interested in Canadian literature (or art, or what have you), its making and its consumption, often fret over what makes a piece discernibly Canadian. Love of the land, pastoral imagery, down-to-earthness, humility, sense of humor, the inclusion of a Mountie, a Horatio Alger-esque hero or heroine, a railroad track, ambivalence re: ethnic and cultural diversity or . . . what? Well, I’m loath to argue that the mystery-Canadian-ingredient we’ve all been hem-hawing about for so long may well be artistic disillusionment and complete surrender to practical and financial considerations, because I really hope that isn’t what it is. Or at least won’t be forever. But in Atwood’s poem “Later in Belleville: Career”, we’re given a glimpse of commercialized talent decaying quite comfortably no thanks to itself. The poem should be read in it’s entirety to be fully grasped, but here are the highlights. It begins with Atwood's depiction of Moodie's artistic beginnings, crafting trinkets for tourists by the light of an oil lamp so that her children might wear shoes, and concludes:

Now every day

I sit on a stuffed sofa

In my own fringed parlour, have

uncracked plates (from which I eat

at intervals)

and a china teaset.

There is no use for art.

The poem opens with oil burning conspicuously and ends with the obsolescence of art and the means of procuring warmth and sustenance rendered abstract, invisible, and waaaaay besides the point. In between, art is crafted with spendthrift tourists and hard-to-come-by shoes in mind. Just when she might have been free to write with true uninhibited candor, free from the threat of financial ruin and starvation, she falls silent, unable to speak a word regarding the society that has allowed for her survival and no longer feeling the need to deal in contrivances. Is art merely the province of the disenfranchised? Once licensed, is it still art, or is it prostitution, compromise, calculated reciprocity, a faked orgasm—beautifully timed to coincide with whatever public thrust, but just as fake nevertheless?

This poem may be read and interpreted on many levels, and it is not my wish to de-contextualize it from the exquisite collection it is part of, but the succession of images it employs are compelling, for me, on their own terms. First Susanna writes for survival, then for a slightly more comfortable survival, and finally not at all. Why bother? She has fringes now. Actual fringes. Isn’t that art enough? Knick-knacks, imported goods, an abundance of food. If one sits a little longer with this poem, it isn’t difficult to imagine the oil lanterns burning down to nothing, darkness closing the scene. Nearly two-hundred years later, we’ve grown into a nation teeming with optimistic and inspired artists turned business-savvy sales-pitchers. We are running low on fuel. Not a stubborn Keats among us. The neon lights are flickering. Even billboards, now, are flickering. The arts are industries like any other: stylized and slick, chock-full of posers and panderers to business-tripping buyers and investors, if not treasure-hunting tourists.

At this year’s Northrup Frye literary festival in Moncton, New Brunswick, I spoke with one of the authors, a university professor, briefly about the future of Canadian literature. He did not seem optimistic. In fact, he ever-so-slightly rolled his eyes at me and suggested I was optimistic when I professed my belief that inspiration is contagious, genius is contagious, the literary future still might be kind of a little bit maybe bright etc. . . He left me with the distinct impression that he felt a considerable percentage of up and coming young writers were on the megalomaniacal and empty-slick side. As an aspiring writer myself, I cringed, and silently agreed. I am all too familiar with the self-important blood that runs in creative veins, the temptation to colonize all that one sees and perceives, and weave it into a masterpiece of disillusionment and ennui. To re-invent the wasteland in our own image (which, of course, is sort of what I’m doing in this essay, but with good intentions, I promise). In the afterword to her Susanna Moodie poems, Atwood quipped that megalomania was supposed to be an American affliction (paranoid schizophrenia being a more apt Canadian illness). My friend Natalie writes to tell me about a creative writing student she knows who is “so arrogant, it’s impossible to have a conversation with him.” Alas. Or, not even alas. . .but just. . .uh-huh.

When did our country cease to simultaneously alienate and guilelessly enchant it’s artists and begin to flat-out piss them off so much that they pretty much forsake their art in favor of acquiring status and cash and corporate positions? I know I’m generalizing, but am I really? Why the well-known hegira from starving, sensitive artist to fat, mainstream, business-savvy sell-out? Could it be because any country so hyped for its natural resources simply cannot survive the transformation of those resources into products, raw talent into genius (in the old creatively brilliant but not necessarily a pop-star sense of the word)? Somewhere along the line, something gets adulterated, refined beyond recognition, over-processed. When every last bit of originality has been transformed into an oeuvre, an empire, a business, a franchise, a series of novels, a finished product, a highway: what then? Settle into the cozy living room you’ve purchased/inherited or else venture out into a brand new wilderness, a wilderness alive with parasitic art waiting to suck you into the souvenir shop, club, department store or charity it was created to promote? Go stand in line to sing a cover song? Not bloody likely. Not when you’ve acquired a stuffed sofa already.

I realize I’m not painting a pretty picture. My perspective as a small-town Maritime girl probably biases me from the get-go against pure commercialism. But I see far more interesting, intelligent and visionary work coming from Canadian journalists (who are usually a bit more assured of their paychecks, and who, for good or ill, belong to a community of their peers) than I do from its poets, artists, novelists and story-tellers (N .B. I exclude New Brunswick journalists from this praise—which is not to suggest that they lack vision or talent, it’s just that if they do have any, who would ever know it, what with the whole conservative media monopoly thing—which is neither here nor there, but of course, there it is all the same). If there is no use for art it is because society has determined there is no use for art, no training ground, no cradle, Creative Writing MAs and MFAs aside—although these programs are arguably far more like tiger’s dens than cradles—ah screw it, pay me no mind, Socialist or no, we’ve never been a nation of swaddlers—the wilderness, the wilderness, lest we ever forget. Why are so few voices really crying out in it though? I mean really crying out unapologetically and unafraid of doing anything other than echo? Teasets, I fear.

Mrs. Moodie was not sitting pretty because of her own literary or artistic work: her husband’s success in a political rebellion is what won her her comfort. What society rewards is what it will get more of. And it certainly has gotten us more politics, more billboards, more used car parts, more machines that need oil. Brave creativity and upsetting candor is still pretty much suspect, easy to perceive as megalomaniacal and anti-social: not things you get rewarded for. It’s up to us to start rewarding artists if we want to keep producing (yes, I said producing) them in all their rebellious and challenging glory. Like the natural resources they are. They have their uses. Like oil. Which, by the way, we’re almost out of. Although perhaps this is why we hate to encourage the independently creative. It would be such a shame to have to burn things people actually poured their hearts, souls and integrity into when the day for last-ditch fires finally comes.

9 comments:

Donna said...

Dearest Jennifer,

You are truly a miracle. Just a brilliant star.

"the wilderness, the wilderness, lest we ever forget. Why are so few voices really crying out in it though? I mean really crying out unapologetically and unafraid of doing anything other than echo? Teasets, I fear."

As a born visual artist constantly criticized for not catering to cash-laden tourists and separating them from their dollars, as in, "Why aren't you making a killing producing what tourists want to buy? Why are you so lazy? You should be RICH." Implying that I am good for nothing because my talent is not being used as a commodity. Because I care not to produce more of what there is an overabundance of -- paintings that aren't much more than fancy cake decorating, framed prettily to coordinate with decor, really serving as accessories -- These are what tourists 'want.'
Yet I FEEL constantly creative, even if it seems like I am just spinning my wheels at the moment.

Surely art and creativity are infinite and eternal. What is finite are the limitations of the ego, as well as the ability to spin this world into other than what it is, an illusion. Neither the ego nor the world are authentic eternal beings, therefore the limitation and failure. It is actually a GOOD thing when we finally realize this, so we can turn to what is real.

It has troubled me that even when our spiritual essence is finally recognized, it is being used as the next vehicle of materialism and commercialization.

I guess the test is creation for no other motive than the joy of creation, come what may.

We can examine our goals. What are they? Do they concern this world, or what is beyond this world?

Jenn, I so enjoyed this latest post in your blog.

Much love,
Donna

Donna said...

January 15
APRIL FOOLS!!!
I couldn't leave that last post even as a temporary joke for long--about this world being a world of mere illusion, limitation, and failure... I had guilt, felt evil over it. :)

What I really think the truth is :) :) is that we are here in this physical life to learn what we are here to learn. Part of this learning is to know that even in this world of perceived limits, as divine co-creators living in the physical we have no limits. There are only the limits we think we have.

Discoveries of this are in the realm of the artists who, creating out of Love for their art and out of joy, eventually find themselves at a wall--the wall no human has yet gone beyond. They feel they have reached the limit of their potential or their art, but they can't accept that. They either dream or envision themselves pushing past the wall, and then, they take a leap of faith and PUSH, over the wall or through the wall, and invent or reach something new. They do this in harmony with the Divine. By doing this, they take ALL of humanity with them to this new 'limit.' They have pushed the collective past a limit.

Did not mean to imply I was putting down cake decorating as art. Have you seen an exquisitely decorated cake that is just AMAZING? We are ALL artists-- whether as athletes, writers, cinematographers-- and we do have unlimited potential.

So I can identify with your feelings about nothing new getting done under the sun, but surely that is just a temporary perception. Great individual art achievements happen in waves of group movements and mirror the collective landscape, of politics, etc. So, since there is a lot of angst about the state of the world these days, it could be stifling feelings of freedom or the desire to create. Someone or someones though will see through this and take the next giant leap for mankind, or is already doing it.

Maybe the secret is the motive of creating. If it is mainly for worldly commercial gain, then it could get stale. But if it is for Love, then surely creation has no limit, and Creation really is eternally divinely unlimited.

Jennifer said...

Hi Donna,

Thank you for your thoughts. I often think that as much as this is the world of illusion, it is also the world of demonstration, and manifestation. Artists often say they are attempting to articulate something in the material realm that is almost beyond words or representation... then comes the "push" you speak of. . . but, ultimately, the material world, this world, this shared reality is our canvas... and it will be through the manifestation of our visions that reality is created in the first place.

Everything is "art", which shares the same root word as "artificial" and "artifice"-- and the entire history of civilization is "art", i.e. was done intentionally.

There is also "happy accident", or "fate" or "serendipity", when creation seems to synthesize, cooperate...and then there is "disaster". . .when it all clashes, when creation goes "against the stars". . .Hey, do you suppose there's a reason "star" contains the word "art"?

Okay: as you wrote:

"What I really think the truth is :) :) is that we are here in this physical life to learn what we are here to learn. Part of this learning is to know that even in this world of perceived limits, as divine co-creators living in the physical we have no limits. There are only the limits we think we have."

This is Matrixian philosophy ((now there's a term)... which is very countercultural, and assumes that mainstream society is essentially an agreement to deny limitlessnes and to remain repressed for the sake of letting the machines run.

Artists, usually, want to transcend the machine...want to believe that their product is beyond the machine, was produced by something other than "the system". But what I believe is that there really is no "system", ( well, there is, but it is an inifinitely malleable one)-- what we enter into it will be what we get out...and we can change the product of that creative system. We only have to choose to.

This is why, as authors such as Andrew Potter and Joseph Heath have argued in "The Rebel Sell" that if we all chose an alternative, eventually "alternative" would become mainstream, big business and the same crises of production would occur.

But... this is a good thing!! We can forever choose our dream, and pursue a new dream, and the means of creation (production) are already there. . . .

At some point the line between "spirit" (unmanifest) and "matter" (manifest) must be crossed...whether or not we cross it makes all the difference to whether our vision of reality lives or remains only potential, theoretetical, a what-if. It is one thing to say "it is already so in the realms beyond", but quite another to alter the system's output so as to create the infrastructure or conscious-readiness for it to exist on Earth as well.

All that being said, today in the local paper there was a story about a homeless artist from my province who was living in a shelter, bringing in absolutely no money, and just about down to rock bottom, until someone intervened and got his work onto EBay... even at that, it still probably won't be enough for him to earn a "living"....not right away.

First, it seems, we all have to somehow create something with practical utility to not only us, but also the collective. If this were not so, every fingerpainter could be wealthy, every greeting-card poet a celebrated genius.

There is a definitely a curve, there, somewhere, and I don't know who is taking the measure of consciousness, or determining which art cracks into the collective and begins to help fueling the machine, and whose, for whatever reason, simply never gets processed, and ends up harming the creator, by distracting them from all other form of engagement with the world, effectively causing them to forego authentic interaction with the world in favour of their "art".

Its a puzzle, indeed.

As a child, I knew I had artistic tendencies. . .innovative tendencies, and a desire to create my own systems of meaning (and then share those with others, so that others could participate in my reality). But, I was also aware that "oblivion holds no adolescent charms" and the concept of starving for art did NOT appeal, and never did. It seemed a fundamental wrinkle in the system-- why were those who felt destined to leave their mark upon the world also forced to contend with the fact that to do so "genuinely", one may have to opt out of the mainstream to do so, and starve/suffer in the process? I understand the spiritual analogy of the long, dark night of the soul, but, unless our work does become a commodity, we have suffered for naught. Sad to say, but still seemingly true.

Remember, I'm a Capricorn. I'm all about the manifest, the bottom line, the system. . .the infrastructure from whence things come. . .

Such as it is, there seems to be a fatal flaw in our artistic "matrix", one that is dificult to reconcile on a daily basis.

I think of the "grunge wars" in music, and the fight for authenticity, and how many times it has been done and coopted. The alternative becomes the mainstream....the former mainstream recedes....the tides change....it returns, until the next alternative wave...

The funny thing is that if you had chosen to make very high-end, unique art to sell to tourists, you would have inevitably driven up the price of other kitsch... and yet, by choosing not to participate, you allow the standard to remain where it is.... you see the conundrum?

You wrote of those who push beyond:

"They either dream or envision themselves pushing past the wall, and then, they take a leap of faith and PUSH, over the wall or through the wall, and invent or reach something new. They do this in harmony with the Divine."

Yes, but if it truly is in harmony with the Divine, one wonders why so many of our "inventions", so much of our art and culture is responsible for the harm being done to our planet right now... You have to have tremendous faith, one might even (mockingly) say "Bushite" faith to believe all that is happening now is Divine will....its just human will, if you ask me.

Although, to be fair, I do believe humans can rise to divine heights...and that art can be one vehicle of ascent, if you will...

Right now, we so deeply need a new blueprint for living, and only a great artist can produce that... a great many visionary artists in fact....able to create real change, intentionally, and so, artifically, yet truly, as the paradox goes...

I am going in circles now...thus pass the torch to you so your Piscean waters can round the rough edges off my jagged rocks, here...

Lots of Love.......

Jenn

Jennifer said...

Or maybe. . . the secret lies somewhere between Taurus and Scorpio-- creation and destruction--

like Pluto and the forest fire analogy-- burning away the old to make room for new growth-- perhaps we just hold on too long sometimes, to a certain way of doing things, and this prevents new growth, so we need a transformation of the system in order to allow new product, and new voices, and innovation through?

The idea of a creator ending up financially fat, and thus no longer needing to create.... maybe this says a lot about our need to let go, continuously share our wealth, continuously contribute new ideas to the whole, even if it is no longer for profit....OH.... I think I just got it.

Once an artist has created their way into (even if only temporary) financial security, this should liberate them from "art", "artifice" and allow them the true freedom to really create on a divine scale....without fear, without limits....

the question is, will they be able to find the motivation once survival is no longer an issue?

ooooh.... there's an alternative reading for the poem....with a much deeper meaning to the notion of what "art" is....hmmmmmmm???

Hmmmmmm?


Hmmmmmmm?

I wish I knew how to draw more people here to get them in on this question, cause I think its a good one!!!

Can't wait to hear your thoughts--

Love Jennifer

Donna said...

Hello Jennifer,

This "Peak Art" blog is such a little masterpiece of yours.

This topic reminds me of "The Artist's Way" by Julia Cameron. You read that, right?

What do we create FOR?

There are some superstars who go way beyond rich to go on creating, performing, for the sheer love of it. Some just recycle the same work, glad to keep spreading what people have loved of their creation. Some though do keep recreating themselves and their art. It's a blast to watch an artist evolve over a lifetime.

And that 'waiting until we are comfortable' so we can start producing our authentic expressive art is that old trap our egos set and keep us from going for our dream.

Plus, think of artists who die unrecognized and become valued posthumously. Van Gogh for one.

So cool you pointed out "art" as root word! and arts and star...

INTENTIONAL must have something to do with CREATIONAL, yet sometimes we create things by accident!

Speaking of serendipity: This morning I opened my emails and then this blog but that's as far as I got due to interruptions. Later at the beach I though of you and how your page was still on my computer not read yet and how I wouldn't get to read your comments until tonight. The second I thought of you I found a bit of old china that had washed on shore, that face up had a pretty flower on it. Not even sure what kind...seven petals, will try to find out what kind. I picked it up wondering if something about it would remind me of you or this subject we are discussing. On the back it had part of the emblem with part of a word "Waller..." So it reminded me of the WALL. Cool.

This sounds SO Capricorn:
"unless our work does become a commodity, we have suffered for naught. Sad to say, but still seemingly true." If this is true, then I desperately need to crash my skull against a Capricorn's so I can get some of this into me... I need to get some economic sense.

I think if I am creating joyfully, because I have an idea and I desire to do it, I am not suffering, au contraire ... But if I'm trying to just crank something out, because I feel like I should, that might feel like suffering...

As to the next Keats-- I think I met her already. :)

Love,

Donna

Jennifer said...

Hi Donnna--- oh my-- thank you, that's a VERY high compliment coming from you.

You don't need any economic sense-- you're doing beautifully without it, if there's even any such thing. And if there is, I'm sure it causes headaches and muscular twitches....ha! I don't really have any either, but about needing our "art" to become commodity if it is to be shared....well...yes.

Here's my thinking: if we are starving for our art, it is obviously because we think we can produce something of value. If we do, in fact produce this, and fail to distribute it, we have essentially toiled in darkness for nothing. Maybe just to please ourselves, which is fine on its own terms. Like taking exercise.

However, someone who seeks to make a living from art must enter the crazy-making marketplace.

If it is not something that can be distributed over a wide enough spectrum to sustain its own production, it will never penetrate the collective, or inform, or inspire others.

If we make just "one" distinct creation, it becomes exclusive, and thus, in a way, an object of division...

Much has been written about the selfishness of artists, and a lot of it is unfair, but some of it is true. To believe oneself above seeking one's fortune (or sustenance) in the marketplace is elitist in the extreme, and then people like Paris Hilton are given record deals without ever toiling.

Is what she produces "art"? Yes, it is....Trash art, but art nonetheless....art used to be the individual's attempt to mimic nature.... ( the word "art" hides in nATuRe) too.....her art is a weird parody of western society and so provides scary insight into what we value.

Artificial and natural: for centuries, we have been worried about our ability to discern between the two....

Is that a real diamond or a fake?

A natural blonde or not?

There is HIGH distinction to be had by having a natural anything. . . be it breasts or calves or hair colour....!!

All art is an attempt to communicate something.....its the message contained that is of value. Unfortunately, we have to be concerned with the means of disseminating that message, or it will not survive and Paris Hilton CDs will define the era!!!

Yikes.....

Nietzche once said "we need art in order not to die of the truth..."

Ponder that.....we need people to change our perspectives, help us imagine something even "more" true....than what passes for truth in our society....

That china you found is interesting...... part of someone's teaset, once? And now tumbling in the sands....back to the whirl from which it emerged....

Wild... I hope you kept it!!!!

Lots for me to ponder......


Love Jennifer

Donna said...

Hello again Jenn,

I'm having a wonderful time here, starting with Mrs. Moodie. Thanks so much!

Okay... I quote you here:
"Here's my thinking: if we are starving for our art, it is obviously because we think we can produce something of value. If we do, in fact produce this, and fail to distribute it, we have essentially toiled in darkness for nothing. Maybe just to please ourselves, which is fine on its own terms. Like taking exercise."

Good point. Now this might be getting back to the matrix idea ? but I vaguely remembered a story about birds learning a new trick almost simultaneously across a long distance, and I googled and googled till I found a reference to it. Here is a paper I found, go into it and start at the end of the fourth page and read a few pages and see everything there about all kinds of phenomena in the collective consciousness, via telepathy, and probably astral visiting I would think... Sheldrake... here is the link:
http://www.noetics.org/research/ch_book/files/Kenny.pdf

So, I don't think that if someone births a creation or even just a new idea that it can go unnoticed! A pebble tossed into the ocean does change the ocean...

Yet at the same time it's nice to just have the idea circulate quickly and reach conscious awareness of many, so if it 'makes it' into wide recognition, great!!

We can toil just because we want to create something, just because we think we can... I'm thinking that even ONE, in the dark, through Spirit, communicates with all. Also, we do work like magnets with our thoughts and attract like thoughts, so thus we attract people of like mind into our sphere.

I know to some people this would seem too far out, but I KNOW from my own experiences that telepathy is quite natural, and it is not hampered by distance, or, probably, time.

A book idea came to me a while back, I have started, am gathering it constantly... I have NO idea if ANYONE else would appreciate it, but all I know is I HAVE to create it, as it excites myself. :) In the end I will be happy just if I get it done, even if no one else out there cares. Yet if ANYONE else likes it too, wonderful!!!! That end of it I'm just not worried about. It is going to take a lot of time, but I'll just enjoy the process.

Getting back to the Capricorn facet of all this... The notion that an artist MUST starve and suffer in the beginning is no doubt myth. But it is freedom to release the bonds of worry about making a living, to release fear about it, and just GO for the dream. Instead of accepting poverty as our lot, we can trust in abundance. Once we have an idea and start take baby steps, the Universe is seen taking care of things and helping us through.

Jenn-- did you see my question about if you've read "The Artist's Way" by Julia Cameron? It goes deeply into this theme.

Love,
Donna

Jennifer said...

Donna,

Yes, I have read The Artist's Way-- beautiful book. . .and I agree wholeheartedly with creating for the sake of creating...

I think, in my mind, somehow (and now like a Sagittarius), I am taking the art as a "fait accompli", and now looking beyond creation to the "life" of the created. . . and this is the Universe's job, I know... create and let go... but it is such a hard thing!!!

There is a documentary called Stone Reader which reaaaally sheds light on the trajectory of a piece of art. It involves a man who read a book in 1972 (approx) and then, 30 years later, remembers it, and rereads it, and realizes what a masterpiece it was, and he starts digging for info about the author, only to find out it was the only book he ever wrote-- hunts for him--- and so on--and now the book has been re-issued and there is much interest surrounding it...

I'll link to it on the blog's front page....

I'm off to read the link you sent me!!!

Love Jenn

Donna said...

Hello Jennifer,
This I re-found today and I wanted to give it to you:
"A miracle is never lost. It may touch many people you have not even met, and produce undreamed of changes in situations of which you are not even aware."
From my best book ;)
Love,
D

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