On the vocation of an artist: Part I
Before reading this post, if you wish, go ahead and fill out the following sentence: "The vocation of an artist is...." Keep your answer in mind as you read this first of several entries exploring the vocation of an artist.
For an artist to choose to enter seriously into her calling is to enter into a very confused world. In the world at large, beyond the walls of Christendom, one encounters a babel of opinions.
The auteur filmmaker David Cronenberg, author of cult favorites such as The
Fly and Videodrome as well as the
mesmerizing one-two punch of A History of
Violence and Eastern Promises, offers this off-the-cuff resume for his vocation: "At the time you’re being an
artist, you’re not a citizen. You have, in fact, no social responsibility
whatsoever." This echoes at some level, even if hyperbolically, the advice that Jacob Khan gives
the young Asher Lev, in My Name is Asher Lev:
“Listen to me, Asher Lev. As an artist you are responsible to no one and
to nothing, except to yourself and to the truth as you see it. Do you
understand? An artist is responsible to his art. Anything else is propaganda.
Anything else is what the Communists in Russia call art. I will teach you
responsibility to art. Let your Ladover Hasidism teach you responsibility to
Jews. Do you understand?”
While this novel is on my all-time top ten novel list, I'm afraid that I cannot agree
with the counsel given, though I'm acutely aware of the kinds of reasons that
motivate the character (and perhaps Potok too) for giving it.
Adam Gopnik, in an article for The New Yorker, hints at the kind of calling
that many artists in the contemporary art scene perceive for themselves when he
writes, “Post-modernist art is, above all, post-audience art.” It is art,
that is, that nearly exclusively disregards the needs of the audience in favor of the
artist’s needs. While this of course does not describe all contemporary
artists, it does describe enough of them to warrant a measure of concern or at
least a reassessment of what is at stake in society’s experience of such art—as well as society’s responsibility to the
artist.
The British
Post Punk rocker Philip “John” Brennan
spews—well, yes, because that’s usually what punk rockers do—this opinion (circa early 1980s):
“It’s self-explanatory, isn’t it? Rock’n’roll, by definition, is against Thatcherism. And if it isn’t, it’s not rock’n’roll. . . .
I’d say rock’n’roll should always be anti-establishment—whatever the
establishment is.”
It's the distinction between wanting two spheres either separated or differentiated. Where Lambert and company want the former, O'Connor and saner heads plea for the latter, often, and rightly so, against the naive wishes of fellow Christians. Where O'Connor envisions a symbiotic relationship between artists and pastors, or the community of artists and the church, Lambert lacks an equivalent social institution to partner with on behalf of the good of society.
Lady Gaga, the
sartorially hyper-imaginative alter ego of Stefani Joanne
Angelina Germanotta, continuing the theme of separable spheres, perceives her
task as an artist this way:
“We are nothing
without our image. Without our projection. Without the spiritual hologram of
who we percieve ourselves to be or rather to become, in the future. When you are lonely, I will be lonely too.
And this is the fame.”
This is said
by the woman who, at last count, has amounted 52,049,063 “friends” on Facebook. While taking her comments with a large pinch of poetic salt, Lady Gaga epitomizes the artistic practice of generating two versions of oneself: the person and the persona. At a relatively benign level, this has included the historical habit of picking a pseudonym for public representation. Samuel Clemens chose Mark Twain. Mary Anne Evans adopted the pen name George Eliot. Robert Matthew van Winkle took the infamous nickname Vanilla Ice, while Paul David Hewson sounds much cooler as Bono than, well, Paul David Hewson. At a more hazardous level, artists like Lady Gaga lose the capacity to be their "regular" selves in public and resort to elaborate and often expensive means to hide behind the public image. It begs the question: What does it mean for an artist to be at home with herself and with others?
Finally, David Morgan, professor of religion at Duke, describes one
branch of contemporary philosophical aesthetics in strong language, when he
states (rather than spews) that, for this party, the arts are “ideological
constructs that serve the privileged in human society. Beauty, ugliness, truth, value, authority—all
are constructed by the class, race, gender, or state that seeks to enforce its
dominance.” True in some cases, perhaps not in all cases, and perhaps not as
simply as that. But still, it is worth a friendly reminder, especially when we recall
the attitudes of Madison Avenue and of 18th century missionaries to
Africa who brusquely imposed organs and hymnals upon people groups whose musical
forms were regarded as liturgically “lesser,” if not perverse.
I could go on. But you get the point.
When you
enter into discussion with fellow Christians, the situation unfortunately isn’t
much better...especially when we encounter the all-too-ready appeal to the notion of artist as prophet (per our nifty representation above).
Comments
I don't think art HAS to be anti-establishment and I would hate to think it is always "an ideological construct serving the privileged class" although that idea sometimes clouds my way.
I'm grateful for your work, David. Keep it up. I am a "viewer" of your art and it helps me.
It seems to me that the vocation of "artist" and the vocation of "prophet" easily overlap (though they are not the same - I really appreciated your distinction of "separation" vs. "differentiation"). "Artist as prophet" can work if the artist remembers that the prophet:
1) speaks the word of God, not his own word
2) speaks to the community as a member of the community (though he is often rejected by the community, he does not reject them first)
3) speaks the word of God to the community for the benefit of that community (e.g., to encourage them to repentance)
Unfortunately, "artist as prophet" too often means:
1) the artist speaks his own word (his own artistic vision)
2) the artist *must* be on the outside of the community, and must reject the community's values (e.g., the Brennan "anti-establishment" quote)
3) the artist speaks his word whether or not it's of any use to the community, and has the right to speak it even if it's harmful to the community (and, in some versions, the community even has a responsibility to enable him to do so, and/or to listen to him, even if the artist's word is harmful to or contemptuous of the community)
Drama professor Scott Walters (UNC-Asheville) has an excellent post on the relationship between the artist and community and the role of offense: http://theatreideas.blogspot.co.uk/2009/04/offending-audience.html.
Cole: loved reading your reflection on the topic. I'll certainly look forward to reading the longer version. I'm devoting an entire blog entry to the idea of artist as prophet (it'll probably part #3) and would welcome your feedback. You've already identified some of my concerns and qualifications to the idea, and I'm keen to read what Scott Walters has written on the relation between artist and community. Keep up the good work!
My sister has invited me to hear you speak in a few weeks - and I am not sure - as an artist, and a Christian - it makes me uncomfortable to see the "Church" as the wellspring of artistic expression - it was art's greatest accomplishment to break free from the constraints of the Church. How could one possibly have full freedom of expression if being "watched" by the Church???
Linda Stratford
As I read history I would agree with you that there was something good that resulted when art was able to explore interests beyond the aegis of the church, or of the royal courts or privileged classes for that matter. At the same time, the notion of the artist as self-determined by her own self-expression is a relatively new idea historically and one that would represent a minority perspective in global cultures (outside of western influence, that is).
Many artists, of course, see this new turn as a great thing. Others see it as problematic, and my hope is to explore some of these issues both in this series of blog entries as well as, in part, in my talks in Austin.
If you're around and having nothing else to do, please do stop by. I'm a big fan of Austin and a big fan of artists in Austin, so it'd be nice to meet you and hear what you're up to.
Thanks again!
How can I get a copy of that 2008 issue of SEEN?
Thanks,
Cole