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From:
setre .
To:
, ,
Date:
Fri, 11 May 2001 19:26:55 -0400
Subject:
[idm] understanding art (and all the other crap we are always yapping about.)
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<F54kidcDjoYAPNXRPmc00004434@hotmail.com>
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Here is a section of a book called Art Objects. Read it. learn something. Art takes time. To spend an hour looking at a painting is difficult. We are an odd people: we make it as difficult as possible for our artists to work honestly while they are alive; either we refuse them money or we ruin them with money; either we flatter them with unhelpful praise or wound them with unhelpful blame, and when they are too old or dead, or too beyond dispute to hinder anymore, we canonize them, so that what was wild is tamed, and what was objected, becomes authority. Canonizing pictures is one way of killing them. When the sense of familiarity becomes too great, history, popularity, association, all crowd in between the viewer and the picture and block it out. Not only pictures suffer like this, all the arts suffer like this. If the obvious direct emotional response is to have any meaning, the question "do I like this?" will have to be the opening question and not the final judgment. An examination of our own feelings will have to give way to an examination of the piece of work. This is fair to the work and it will help to clarify the nature of our own feelings; to reveal prejudice, opinion, anxiety, even the mood of the day. It is right to trust our feelings but right to test them too. If they are what we say they are, then they will stand the test, if not, we will at least be less insecure. But here we come back to the first hurdle of art, and it is a high one; it shows up. When you say "This work has nothing to do with me". when you say "this work is boring/pointless/silly/obscure/elitist etc.", you might be right, because you are looking at a fad, or you might be wrong, because the work falls so outside of the safety of you?re own experience that in order to keep you?re own world intact, you must deny the other world of the painting. This denial of imaginative experience happens at a deeper level than our affirmation of our daily world. Every day, in countless ways, you and I convince ourselves about ourselves. True art, when it happens to us, challenges the "I" that we are. A love-parallel would be just; falling in love challenges the reality to which we lay claim, part of the pleasure of love and part of its terror, is the world turned upside down. We want and we don?t want, the cutting edge, the upset, the new views. Mostly we work hard at taming our emotional environment just as we work hard at taming our aesthetic environment. We already have tamed our physical environment. And are we happy with all this tameness? Are you? Art cannot be tamed, although our responses to it can be, and in relation to the Canon, our responses are conditioned from the moment we start school. The freshness which the everyday regular man or woman pride themselves upon; the untaught ?I know what I like? approach, now encouraged by the media, is neither fresh nor untaught. It is the half-baked sterility of the classroom washed down with liberal doses of popular culture. The media ransacks the arts, in its images, in its adverts, in its copy, in its jingles, in its little tunes and journalist?s jargon, it continually offers up faint shadows of the form and invention of real music, real paintings, real words. All of us are subjected to this bombardment, which both deadens our sensibilities and makes us fear what is not instant, approachable, consumable. The solid presence of art demands from us significant effort, an effort anathema to popular culture. Effort of time, effort of money, effort of study, effort of humility, effort of imagination have each been packed by the artist into the art. Is it so unreasonable to expect a percentage of that from us in return? I worry that to ask for effort is to imply elitism, and the charge against art, that it is elitist, is to often the accuser?s defense against his or her own bafflement. It is quite close to the remark ?Why can?t they all speak English?? , which may be why "elitist" is the favorite insult of the American and the British. But you may say, how can I know what is good and what is not good? I may wince at the cheap seascape over the mantelpiece but does that necessarily mean I should go to the Tate gallery and worship a floor full of dyed rice? Years ago, when I was living very briefly with a stockbroker who had a good cellar, I asked him how I could learn about wine. ?Drink it? he said. piece, mike p.s. if you want to read the whole thing (which was way too long for me to type) look up the book. _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org