Posts Tagged ‘Contemporary Art’

Old Arts, New Audiences, and Why Artists Are Not Snobs

Friday, January 14th, 2011
Natalie Dessay - Amina, La Sonnambula MET
Image by dapertuttotrubadur via Flickr

What New Audiences are Expecting

Via Andrew Taylor at The Artful Manager,

During the ‘lightening round’ session at the Arts Presenters conference, performing arts facility consultant David Taylor pointed us to the challenge of traditionally designed and constructed performing arts spaces, particularly in the face of evolving consumer trends. At the heart of his presentation was the ‘Ten Trends of 20-Somethings” identified by Marian Salzman in the Huffington Post last year…they are:

1. Real-time expectations
2. More intensely local lives
3. Radical transparency
4. Expecting cheap or free everything
5. Demanding entertainment
6. Worrying about the planet
7. Seeing luxuries as standard
8. Pro-business, anti-multinational stance
9. Wanting to regulate the heck out of media bias
10. Naturally Me but aspiring to We

Among the most compelling for the performing arts are 1, 3, and 4, that challenge the traditional professional performing arts organization — which is highly scheduled, opaque in administration and process, and costly to run.

Reading this, I immediately thought of two performing arts experiences that I thought fit the “What a 20-Something Wants” bill. The first was a 2009 Met live broadcast of La Sonnambula featuring Natalie Dessay (with brilliant Mary Zimmerman direction, I might add), the second was an interactive modern dance performance choreographed by Peter Sparling, where dancers performed via live feed from a remote studio, “controlled” by Sparling’s hands manipulating them from the live stage. (By the way, it seems Sparling has evolved this concept over the years and fully embraces new technology and its interplay with his art and audiences.)

What both had in common was “live feed” and a “behind the scenes” feel. As an audience member, I felt more intensely connected to the stage action than if the third wall was more rigidly constructed such as during a more “traditional” opera or dance performance. Philistine that I am, I actually prefer the Met broadcasts to being at the Met. Not only is the price tag cheaper, you can see more stage details, to the point you feel like you might just be a lucky chorus member participating in the action. Close-ups revealed the labored breathing and singing of what sounded like a vocally struggling Dessay (my fellow audience members mused about whether an understudy would take over after intermission.) During the Sparling performance, an all-black clad videographer was on stage, shooting the choreographer’s hands, which appeared on the walls of the Kresge Auditorium in Ann Arbor, inspiring the remote dancer’s movements from afar. In short – the effect was super cool, conceptually, and artistically. Again, I was reminded of the days of being behind the scenes myself, and the prototypical “tech guys” who always wore all-black to blend in with the darkened stage during scene changes.

Why Connecting with Audiences Is Critically Important, and Why (I think) Artists are Bad at It

Audiences do not want to be treated as somehow beneath the artists. Indeed, we do not want to get the impression we actually are philistines, which artists could do a much better job at. Is it just me, or do artists often-times appear remote and snobbish? I say appear because it is so rarely the case that they are (with the exception of the primi donne e uomini who are amusingly full of themselves). I believe that more often than not, artists are not narcissists, parading on stages to self-glorify, but to glorify the art. They may seem remote off-stage because they may have just spent every ounce of their energy, and post-performance have very little left to give, or because their on-stage personality is truly pretend, an outlet, and they could be quite shy in real life.

I am focusing on this no-really-artists-aren’t-snobs issue, because I know that I usually wanted nothing more than to duck out the back door after a performance, rather than do the requisite meet-and-greet of the audience. I was usually experiencing an exhausted kind of buzz, you know the kind, like when you’ve had too much caffeine? My body would feel like it was on fire, my mind would be completely blank, and I would have to plaster a smile on my face, turn back into Milena, and somehow muster charm? Not only that, I would begin to feel guilty accepting any compliments that came my way because I never really felt responsible for whatever talent I happened to be acknowledged for, and I think many artists would share this opinion with me – we feel inspired by something greater, and that our talents are just a gift, our bodies simply the receptacle through which that talent is miraculously allowed to flow.

So, What Can Artists Do?

As always, I try to emphasize that if you hope to make a living in the arts – business must come first, and you should not harbor any delusions that your talent alone can carry you. Artists need to recognize the above issues and find a way to overcome the challenges of performing in the 21st century, particularly if they practice old world arts. Often times, the way to stay relevant is to stay connected, and for today’s audiences, that might mean reaching beyond your limitations as well as your personal autonomous zone. You need to let audiences in, in a way that will likely make you very uncomfortable. You may have to take this quite literally and reveal far more personal aspects of yourself than you would like: start a blog, post YouTube videos of your practice sessions, accept all the friend requests you can on Facebook and Twitter, admit your faults, your fears. Audiences respond to this like a child might if their favorite doll came to life, with enthusiasm and eager for more.

If this all sounds exhausting, well, it is. If it sounds largely unnecessary, well, it’s not. It’s just what people are demanding these days. You have to muster all the energy you can, not only for your art, but for the longevity of the business side of your career or for the organization you represent.

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More Loveland to Love

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

For those of you who caught my original post about Jerry Paffendorf’s Lovelandhe’s since been featured on NPR as well as announced he’s coming out with Loveland Season 2 Pre-Game: The Legend of the Ghost Inches which means, in plain english,

The second property hasn’t been purchased yet, so Jerry calls the investments “ghost inches.” When you purchase an inch, you get a nice little deed package containing a magnifying glass to better survey your territory. The little money from deed sales goes back into the project. He also hopes to use the “profits” to provide microgrants to other innovative urban development projects in the city.

Again, I’m a fan of this quirky idea. I only wish the property being inch-auctioned off was the glorious ruins of Michigan Central Station. Then again, would having tons of micro-investors help the historical site fare any better?

I’ll be curious to see how, and if, the micro-investing concept evolves. What kind of steps will micro-owners take to develop their tiny plots, if any? Or will it be just a novelty like when your high school boyfriend bought a star and named it after you? (Yes, there is a star out there with my name on it, I even have the coordinates.)

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Detroit Gets It Wrong with Arts Audiences

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

Living in Detroit, this story about a police raid at the Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit was not surprising, but one more in a long list of problems with the metro area I live in. Detroit was recently been named one of Forbes America’s Most Miserable Cities for at least the third year in a row (though we’re no longer No. 1) and it’s for reasons such as this:

Jason Leverette-Saunders said he thought he was being robbed when masked gunmen crashed a party at the Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit at about 2 a.m. May 31, 2008.

But the intruders were Detroit cops who stormed the gallery and ticketed more than 100 mostly young and suburban college students for loitering, seizing their vehicles, because they were attending a private, after-hours party where alcoholic beverages were served. Attendees each had to pay $900, plus towing and storage fees, to get their cars back, even though their loitering tickets later were dismissed.

I’m not familiar with the details of the evening, but at first glance, punishing a bunch of college-aged contemporary art gallery-goers seems like an outlandish activity for Detroit police, compared to other legitimate crimes that were likely being committed in Detroit that night.

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Make Loveland

Monday, February 15th, 2010

I cannot say I entirely grasp the concept of so-called “micro real estate investing” but it sounds interesting and is the type of innovation-via-the-arts I enjoy hearing about.

According to the Associated Press,

A Web designer is hawking square inches of an empty lot in Detroit for a dollar each to show what can be done with vacant spaces.

Jerry Paffendorf says nearly 600 “inchvestors” have bought some of the 10,000 plots for sale in the “Loveland” art-and-real-estate project on Detroit’s east side.

The 28-year-old says he bought the lot for $500 and that profits are fed back into the project.

He says some inchvestors buy one plot while others have taken 1,000, and that they may do with the land as they wish. He says some plan to construct tiny buildings.

Paffendorf told The Detroit News that he is making a statement about what can be done with foreclosed property. He told the Detroit Free Press he will stream video of the site this spring.

The project is called Loveland and the first micro-colony has been cheekily dubbed Plymouth. While both the website and the idea may induce brainfever – I kind of want my own square inch. There is a page that shows the names of donors to date, and it made me feel like this thing has some legs.

Screenshot from Jerry Paffendorf's Loveland

Anyone else have some interesting ideas for Loveland?

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The Art and Economics of Epilepsy

Saturday, November 28th, 2009

The British online magazine TimesOnline.com reports about a fascinating trend in the arts and epilepsy:

The Arts Council has given a epileptic dancer £14,000 to stop taking her medication and have a seizure on stage.

Rita Marcalo’s 24-hour performance, involving strobe lights and sleep deprivation, is billed as a study of the “conceptual and physical interfaces between dance, movement and epilepsy”.

Rita Marcalo - dancer, epileptic
Rita Marcalo – dancer, epileptic

I think this show has the potential to be an interesting experiment, a study, but not a completed work of art. So much of contemporary art falls into this category for me. I have been told I ascribe to the formalist theory of art, in that I believe art requires some level of technical ability applied in such a way as to achieve a specific artistic outcome. So, given my limited understanding of art philosophy, I don’t believe anyone having a seizure, even a trained dancer, qualifies as art. It would seem the seizure is distinct from what may or may not be her talent at dancing.

Of course, I’m open to arguments I have not considered and I do understand the appeal of and find value in this type of quasi-art event: engage, entertain, and educate. Still, the event should be interesting, if not artistic. Plans include inviting audience members to capture a possible seizure on their mobile phones.

The Playhouse [the venue where the performance will take place] says: “At any point in the event Marcalo might have an epileptic seizure. Whenever this happens, a loud alarm will sound, lights will brighten, music will stop and a series of cameras will start recording her seizure. Audience members will be encouraged to record it on their mobile phones.”

As an economist I wonder whether The Arts Council’s use of funds for this project does much to serve either art or epilepsy? Looks like I’m not alone.

Stage fighting coach Jonathan Hartman shares a recent job he got, courtesy of funding from The Arts Council,

…when an actress whose demise I had once staged (gunshot wound to the head, brains on the backdrop) rang to ask if I could spare some time from my impossibly crowded schedule to teach two mature acting students some stage combat, I was delighted.

Then she offered a suspiciously high fee for the job – £500 – and I waited for the catch.

‘They’re both legally blind,’ she said casually.

At first I was sure that this was a wind-up – then afraid that it wasn’t. ‘Is there a disability grant involved?’ I sighed.

‘Yes. That’s where the money for teaching is these days,’ came the reply.

Hartman continues that the profligate expenditures of The Arts Council don’t stop there,

I wondered how teaching blind actors to fight would rank alongside the more ridiculous excesses of the Arts Council over the years – £75,000 spent on a festival in which people could take striptease and poledancing lessons; another £70,000 on changing its own name from The Arts Council of England to Arts Council England.

Most recently, it asked British artists to invite their counterparts from countries such as Afghanistan, Libya, Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Syria to spend two weeks here – with no pressure to actually produce anything. As the advert stated: ‘The emphasis is on the development and research process rather than production, free from any obligation to produced a prescribed outcome.’

Is public funding for the arts really serving the needs of public in these cases?

Spreading the Wealth for Artists Series: Take 1

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009
Hubert at Tyree Guyton's "The Dotty Wotty House"

Hubert at Tyree Guyton's "The Dotty Wotty House"

About a week ago, I invited a handful of creative types, econ types, or both, to participate in a blog series I’ll be featuring here on Art and Avarice called, “Spreading the Wealth for Artists.” I’m writing this in coordination with a book release from Professor and Economist David Breuhan entitled, Spread the Wealth: More Haves, Fewer Have Nots, which is going to be released November 1st.

I asked a variety of questions relating to how artists can earn a living in their craft, and why do they often fail to do so? A subset of labor economics, this inquiry into cultural economics is particularly fascinating to me because the incentives for artists are quite unlike other fields, where the primary motivators are intrinsically linked to financial success. In the arts, financial success can ironically mean failure as an artist! Let that sink in while you read Hubert Sawyer III’s (@HubertGAM and blogger at Frying in Vein) take.

Question: Why Are Artists Poor? (a great question, I think, and the title of a book by economist Hans Abbing)

a. Why are so many people who pursue “art” for a living poor, or simply unable to lead a stable financial life?

b. What do you think is the greatest roadblock to artists being able to make a steady living in their craft? Do they trap themselves into thinking financial success=selling out?

Hubert’s Response:

A. I think it has been an age-old exercise for artists to try to keep their influences pure – as money tends to put a cloudy haze on one’s perspective, at least in contemporary times. The moment you realize you are creating art for money, the question become “Is the art earnest?” As most artists are a passionate bunch, they would rather not deal with that existential question, so they would rather starve that pollute their artistry.

Some artists are fortunate enough to have financiers, who allow them to create without worrying about when their next meal is coming or if they can afford to buy more material to create. This is an outlier group though, so you have legions of artists who are forced to make a hard choice of doing what they love for little or no money or get a job to keep a roof over their heads.

B.  I think the greatest roadblock is the perception that the arts is not an industry where people can really make money while they are earning a living.  With so many posthumous success stories, how can one believe they could make a living creating art? Even in the music arena, where it was a lot easier to sell wares, you hear the success stories of pop stars selling millions of albums, not many of those in more modest situations that still are able to live comfortably with less sales.  It would help if artists were given more stories of ambitious, hard-working individuals who made it their business to build sustainable careers.

I don’t think there are as many artists who worry about “selling out” as there are cynical artists who do not mentally commit to being career artists.  It is not all their fault though.  Mass media does not share much about the arts, so how could they think differently?

Question: Property rights are a hallmark of a free society. How do property rights affect an artist’s ability to make a living? How can we balance the freedoms of globalization and technology and protecting artist interests online?

a. Is “crowd-sourcing” killing the individual artist?

b. How has creative commons changed art, music, and social media?

Hubert’s response:

A. Heck no, crowd-sourcing isn’t killing the individual artist!  If anything, crowd-sourcing has galvanized individuals as crowd-sourcing makes it easier for one to get engaged. Now this has decreased the cost of entry, so the quality of the art has diminished somewhat. Crowd-sourcing has its pros and cons, but I feel that it is good. It just means new jobs need to be commissioned to control/curate the content being made, so we can pull out the genius when it’s createdand it does not get lost in the white noise.

B. Creative Commons forced the status quo to consider what art really is.  We now have a community of folks that believe that sharing is good and it is better to build something great than capitalize on something that hasn’t reached its full potential.  The open source movement has been successful because of similar ideology.

On the question of property rights and the arts, that presents a slippery slope.  Talk about instability, there is no reason anyone should really feel that they deserve to make money off of material that is normally judged with subjective methods.  This question is what ties this entire discussion together, because while we want to encourage artists to make a go at being financially-stable, we also need to make it clear that it is quite possible that they may never be.  How do you do that without resetting the status quo?

It is a delicate situation.  You want to encourage content creation, but you cannot ensure a financial reward.  I think this is where crowd-sourcing and community-driven initiatives help, but there needs to be some semblance of leadership to keep things going in the right direction.  Build communities for artists to foster and sustain creation and let the communities champion those that really deserve to see commercial gain.

The Art and Economics of Rape-Rape

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Rape and The Polanski Effect

There has been a lot of talk about rape lately. As Jonah Goldberg mentions, this is surprising due to the fact there should not be considerable talk, debate, or open discussion about rape. Rape is rape. Rape is not sex. There is no distinction between rape or Whoopi Goldberg’s bizarre definitions of “rape-rape” versus mere rape.

For those of you just tuning in, yes, she said that. I, too, thought, “There is no way she meant what it sounds like she meant.” Watch the video. Not only did she mean to say it wasn’t “rape-rape,” but she goes into a thorough (yet indefensible) personal opinion about what rape is and isn’t.

Can’t make up your mind? Swayed by Whoopi’s cogent analysis? Try reading the actual 1977 Grand Jury transcripts first.

Whoopi is not the only name in entertainment to show support. On The Polanski Effect* from NPR’s Jack Dunphy,

So it has come to this: Drugging and raping a 13-year-old is now a “so-called crime,” for which artistic talent, the approbation of peers, and the passage of time can coalesce to earn the rapist immunity from official sanction, if indeed any was called for in the first place.

“Whatever you think about the so-called crime, [Roman] Polanski has served his time,” says film producer Harvey Weinstein in The Independent. His piece is notable not only for its moral obtuseness but also for its sickeningly unctuous tone. “I was with him the day he won the Legion of Honour in France,” writes Weinstein, “which was a spectacular day. I remember the incredible love and affection that people have for him.”

Mr. Weinstein overlooks the fact that the history of mankind is liberally dotted with despicable men who could draw an adoring throng. Even so, there is another, more compelling (at least to Weinstein) reason Polanski should be freed: His peers in show business demand it. “I hope the US government acts swiftly,” he writes, “because film makers are looking for justice to be properly served. I will be organizing the effort myself by emailing everybody I know to sign the petition.” [FYI - Big Hollywood has started acounter-petition.]

By justice being properly served, Weinstein means that Polanski should be freed from Swiss custody and the original rape charge against him should be dismissed. This opinion is evidently shared by a growing number of people affiliated with the movie business, including Martin Scorsese, David Lynch, and that paragon of virtue Woody Allen, all of whom have added their names to a petition in which they “demand the immediate release of Roman Polanski.”

*This goes back to a post I wrote recently regarding what I called The (other) Wagner Effect. We can update it now to The Polanski Effect. As in, the effect someone’s artistic skill has in sanctifying their crimes or otherwise heinous personal dogma. To be clear, I have no problem with people enjoying his movies, or even giving him awards based on artistic merit. Whether or not he is deserving of art prizes and approbation for filmmaking is distinct from whether or not he is deserving of punishment for the crime he committed, and from which he then fled the country. What I have a problem with is people thinking his talent makes him innocent or undeserving of punishment for rape. The fact anyone would make this connection is troubling and conflating the two is leading to some bizarre thinking among Hollywood and feminist elite.

The Economics of Rape

That’s right, even feminists are supporting the release of Polanski. How delightfully forward-thinking. From the LA Times, quoting feminist leader Peg Yorkin,

“My personal thoughts are let the guy go,” said Peg Yorkin, founder of the Feminist Majority Foundation.”It’s bad a person was raped. But that was so many years ago. The guy has been through so much in his life. It’s crazy to arrest him now. Let it go. The government could spend its money on other things.”

Yorkin’s appeal to the economics of the matter is sickening. The expense to put Polanski on trial is insignificant compared to the precedent that would be set that no matter how famous, rich, or important you are, the law will still apply. That benefit would far exceed the cost in my opinion.  The government’s job is to protect its citizens from aggression. There is not a time limit on this. If there ever was a legitimate use of taxpayer dollars, it is for arresting criminals who harm others and jailing them!

Rape as Art

Despite my backward thinking that rape and art don’t mix, Rape-as-Art may not be as far-fetched as some think. A contemporary art piece, The Rape Tunnel, was recently featured in Artlurker article indicating the artist would try his best to rape anyone who entered a tunnel he constructed as an installation. Most thankfully, this has turned out to be a hoax, and yet, was picked up by a variety of news sources. Though astonishing, The Rape Tunnel seemed entirely believable. Artlurker (who’s site is down, hence, no link) said, “Our intention was to spark conversation.” The fact the story enjoyed even 24 hours of serious consideration is a sad commentary on art today.

If art is to serve the issue of rape and violence against women at all, it is should not be to make light of it, or claim that exceptionally talented artists should be allowed to rape freely. As artists, we should not let the tradition of art serving to alert society of serious deficiencies in the treatment of social issues move towards acceptance of heinous crimes.

What’s more, the fact that I have even been moved to type these words is incredibly alarming, and I do hope to see more vocal opposition to Polanski among artists. If you write a blog post, please link to it in the comments section here as a virtual petition against Polanski and the Hollywood elite who want to set him free.

Communism, Capitalism, and The (other) Wagner Effect

Thursday, September 17th, 2009
Photo of "Crossroads" before its destruction.

Photo of "Crossroads" before its destruction.

Like most things I see on the internet, I have no recollection how I came across this Glenn Beck clip on the art at Rockefeller Center, but I was intrigued to hear what he had to say because of the topic and the notoriety surrounding him. It appears he is using Rockefeller Center as a high profile example for the argument that socialist propaganda surrounds us and affects us though we do not notice it. He claims even presumed capitalists like John D. Rockefeller are part of a large-scale movement supporting oppressive messages from Communist leaders via Communist artists by weaving them into the fabric of American life, and that their influence is pervasive and dangerous. Even if this sounds incredibly far-fetched, I believe the claim is worth exploring, as it would give support to the idea that art, and artists, can influence us deeply and profoundly, even without our knowing it.

As a professional performing artist, I often wonder what is it that makes the audience pay attention or not, and when they leave, what impact has my singing had on them, if any? Keeping all this in mind, I’d like readers to consider some facts about the art at Rockefeller Center, its creators, and its content.

The Art of Rockefeller Center

According to Wikipedia (which seems to have a well-cited article on this topic),

[Rockefeller Center] was the largest private building project ever undertaken in modern times.[7] Construction of the 14 buildings in the Art Deco style (without the original opera house proposal) began on May 17, 1930 and was completed on November 1, 1939 when he [Rockefeller?] drove in the final (silver) rivet into 10 Rockefeller Plaza.

Principal builder, and “managing agent”, for the massive project was John R. Todd and principal architect was Raymond Hood, working with and leading three architectural firms, on a team that included a young Wallace Harrison, later to become the family’s principal architect and adviser to Nelson Rockefeller.

This synopsis indicates that Rockefeller, despite being the raison d’etre and source of funding for this project, was not its main conceptual architect. Any accusation of Rockefeller’s supposed desire to spread socialism via subliminal art messages rings hollow. What is more likely is that Rockefeller and his associates wanted significant art contributions by famous artists of the time to add to the prominence of the already-impressive undertaking.

One of the artists mentioned by Beck who had been commissioned for Rockefeller Center was Diego Rivera, a long-time beneficiary of generous funding from Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, John D. Rockefeller, Jr.’s wife. He was to paint a mural for the lobby of the then RCA, now NBC building.

Diego Rivera's signature with hammer and sickle

Diego Rivera's signature with hammer and sickle.

The fact that Rivera was a prominent supporter Communism, as a member of the Mexican Communist Party,  and intellectual and artistic supporter of The Soviet Revolution is well-documented. (The Agitator, left.) However, whether or not Rockefeller or his associates knew or cared about Rivera’s involvement appears to be debatable.

In either case, once Rivera’s controversial depiction of Man at the Crossroads showing an iconic male figure led by Lenin and other Soviet leaders away from American Capitalism toward the light and triumph of Soviet Russia was revealed, it was promptly destroyed by Rockefeller. Clearly he was not keen on explicit exaltation of the Communist state and marginalizing his own image. (A replica called Man, Controller of the Universe is located in Mexico.)

So, what of the remaining supposedly Communist art at Rockefeller Center mentioned by Beck? In my brief research on the topic, it seems the pieces are only a small part of the impressive Art Deco oeuvre that is Rockefeller Center. The website for the Center itself contains a lovely section on all the works of art displayed there, explaining,

John D. Rockefeller Jr’s resolution to make Rockefeller Center contemporary and innovative can be felt with every artwork and attraction. Take a look through the Gallery and get to know a remarkable collection of treasures, themed “New Frontiers”, signifying man’s development in spirit, science, industry and more.

I can only conclude that any Communist influence in the other works of art was too subtle for Rockefeller to detect, or he simply did not care to destroy every piece created for his laborious project which may have had the slightest taint of socialism. But as a nod to those in agreement with Beck, if the art is Communist in nature, we are still left with the issue of how it is influencing us, if at all.

Art is never dangerous, unless it tells the truth

The movie, Cradle Will Rock, about the Federal Art Projects of the 1930′s depicts the controversies in the arts world at the time, including the Rivera-Rockefeller fight over the Man at the Crossroads. I must point out that as a private donor, Rockefeller had final say in what kind of art he commissioned, and there can be no further commentary upon his “rights” to destroy Rivera’s art. He had every right to do so, as the art was effectively his own private property.

However, the film attempted to portray the tenuous relationships between artists, donors, and the public during the Great Depression when art was not considered a necessity. Federally-funded art laborers supported by the famous Works Progress Administration (WPA), felt they were being silenced not because of funding shortfalls, but because oppressive government bureaucrats and capitalists were trying to destroy their message.

According to Wikipedia,

The film [provides] a picture of life in the 1930s where some people wait in endless unemployment lines attempting to get work, while others enjoy their wealth engaging in parties and purchasing expensive works of art. As the musical nears production, the WPA cuts the budget for the [Federal Theater Project] FTP, and puts a halt to all new productions. This announcement comes following the House Committee on Un-American Activities’ questioning of many of those involved in the FTP, and the musical [Cradle Will Rock] itself due to its leftist themes around labor and union organizing.

Despite being canceled, the director, Orson Welles (Angus Macfadyen) and producer, John Houseman (Cary Elwes), lead the cast to another theater that they were able to secure at the last minute. The cast is forbidden to perform by their union, so Blitzstein takes the stage alone at an upright piano to perform the show himself, only to be joined by many of the cast members who deliver their lines from the audience. Robbins juxtaposes this final triumphant moment of the theater with images of the destruction of a mural commissioned by Nelson Rockefeller (John Cusack) because the artist, Diego Rivera (Ruben Blades), refused to remove the image of Lenin’s face from the piece.

The movie’s tagline, “Art is never dangerous, unless it tells the truth” can be taken as a trite and treacly nod to the novelty of the theatre, or it can be taken as something far more powerful. Did the art and performances of the 1930′s with a purportedly (little-c) communist message influence future generations? Did the art “tell the truth” and did the government and others in power sense its “danger” in presenting it to the public? It appears Tim Robbins and Glenn Beck, though on different sides of the argument, feel similarly about the power of art to convey, deeply and purposefully, the intentions of the artists who bring the messages to the public. Again, from Wikipedia,

In tying together stories of labor issues and steel strikes, censorship in painting and theater, and the disparities of wealth and power, [Director Tim] Robbins is able to paint a picture of the 1930s that goes beyond simply recounting past events and questions the boundaries between art, power and politics.

What do my readers think about this? What is the impact of art? Of Communist art? What, if any, lasting impact does the art of the 1930′s have on us today?

The (other) Wagner Effect

Could it be art can stand on its own, without the taint of its creator? This is what we could coin, The Wagner Effect (distinct from the Wagner effect in entomology, but of the composer, Richard Wagner): the phenomenon where art is enjoyed purely for its aesthetic value, not for any additional meaning imbued by its creator. What do I mean? Wagner is famously regarded as an anti-semite. Yet, his music is still widely performed, even by Jewish artists, though it is boycotted by many others. Why is this? Can art created by despicable people still hold aesthetic value important for a society to experience? Are the dividing lines between aesthetic value and intended value blurred or distinct?

We could perhaps conclude that those who listen to and appreciate Wagner’s music, do not do so because of his depraved personal life, but in spite of it. This theory could apply to Communist artists like Rivera, as his murals are considered some of the greatest works of contemporary art, in spite of his controversial messages. Of course there may be those who appreciate the art because of the message. I am not the final arbiter here, but am interested in these questions.

It would appear society is willing to look past the personal lives of artists, and judge their creations for purely aesthetic value. But should they?

Wish I Had Thought of This First

Friday, August 21st, 2009

I just had to post about a new blog I discovered called Bad at Sports

Bad at Sports
Bad at Sports

which presents topics related to contemporary art. I chuckled to myself because isn’t that how so many artists describe themselves, almost apologetically?

“Well, I was always really bad at sports, but I did great in art/music/interpretive dance class.”

 
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