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ixion Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-11-04 11:22 AM
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“A Cry of Absence”: Whither Our Artists?

by Gary Corseri

“A cry of absence, absence in the heart.” --William Faulkner (Absalom, Absalom!)

Way back when, Willie Nelson had a song about his heroes always being cowboys. For me, at least from my teenage years, they were writers, painters, sculptors, composers. They were the kind of people who wouldn’t take guff from anyone, and who would tell it like it was—and is. Hemingway, for example, at the height of his fame, taking a principled stand against Franco, addressing a New York audience of progressives at a pro-Spanish Republic event organized by poet Archibald MacLeish. The writers’ works would lead me to their lives—and much as they tell you now to forget about the bios, much as this 1930’s New Criticism still gluts the academic milieu, so much do I know in my viscera that the life and the work form a whole: one informs and completes the other.

But a strange thing has happened. Almost half my lifetime—some thirty years-- ago, the kinds of people who became artists began to change. While Kerouac was dharma-bumming the country, Ginsberg reciting to his harmonium, Baldwin speculating brilliantly with those darting, exophathalmic eyes, and Sylvia—my God, It still hurts!—sticking her beautiful head in an oven—a lot of my contemporaries were exercising their gluteus maximus in writing workshops while postulating visions of tenure-track sugar plums.


<snip>


In a few short years we’ve gone from artist-as-recreant, miscreant, Colin Wilson-outsider, to artist as consummate insider: slick, snake-oil salesman Administration-shill, able to hobnob with D.o.D. Secretary Cohen at bigwig party events the night the bombs start raining over Kosovo, or do a two-step Uncle Tom-thank you Massa’ Daddy Warbucks, jes’ keep the money flowin’ an’ I won’t bring up the W.M.D.’s, the C.E.O. robberies, the child-bashing-education-stealing, the health-care-environment-depleting, multi-multi shenanigans and depredations that would break the hearts of stone-cold statues had I the courage to open my mouth and wail about what I see so clearly around me day by day by day.

It’s a damn shame. It’s a goddamn, crying shame. No doubt there are first-rate artists out there, struggling to put it down in verse and drama, painting and sculpture, immortal music seizing the energy of creative change that Stravinsky captured in “The Firebird,” that Giacometti welded into screeched-out bronze, that Arthur Miller sizzled to perfection in The Crucible, All My Sons, and Death of a Salesman. When we bewail the loss of our public airwaves to the pirates of Faux News, the Conservative Bullshit Service (CBS) or Clear Channel, we go only halfway if we fail to recognize how we have lost our Arts—highbrow and populist—over these past thirty years.



http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0210-03.htm



I've been saying this for the past 20 years now, that (my generation in particular ) does not seem to be producing the types of artists we've seen in the past. Having been a writer for many of those years, I can tell you first hand why this is happening: no one is interested in art for art's sake anymore. The only types of books that sell are non-fiction and genre fiction trash. Society now treats art as disposable art of the moment (vis a vis American Idol). It's truly sad, because the highest of concepts, beyond religion, beyond science, beyond government is art, in my opinion.


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Donating Member ( posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-11-04 11:27 AM
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1. which generation?
Just curious, because I've thought about that a lot regarding my generation & I think there are a variety of reasons for it.

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ixion Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-11-04 11:44 AM
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3. I'm on the cusp
Edited on Wed Feb-11-04 11:46 AM by ixion
between 'baby boomers' and 'generation X', being born in 1964, but I've always considered myself a member of the latter. And for all the rebellion that gen X produced, it has really amounted to nothing substantial artisically speaking, IMO.

The baby boomers did manage to produce some artists of substance, although they seem to be on the wane rather than waxing as they age.

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Atman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-11-04 11:33 AM
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2. He's looking in the wrong places
Quit hanging out at literary parties and gallery openings, and get back into the trenches. I think the writer has moved on to another social strata, and now as a part of his own new "status" he hangs out with a different crowd than the romantic artists he yearns for.

I've devoted the last three years of my life to doing almost NOTHING but speaking out, and giving away my goddamn art just to get my message across. I went from a six-figure income as a creative consultant to the likes of International Paper and GE...and still can't wash the blood off my hands. So I now I give back. And I don't make a fucking penny doing it. No one has made a donation to my site...it cost me more to run my site last year than I made. I don't get government grants...I've never taken ONE DIME from the government in my 45 years. Not one unemployment check or food stamp. I've lived on saltines and margerine, and I've stayed in Category 10 suites at fine resorts. But I've always worked and remained outspoken. Because I HAVE to.

This guy just seems to be hanging with the wrong crowd. Come to my place. Buy MY art. Support some hard working artists instead of bitching about artists not changing the world enough for you.
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Donating Member ( posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-11-04 11:46 AM
Response to Reply #2
4. nice looking web site
in the link in your sig line.

Also, I agree with what you're saying. There's a lot of art going on, it's not getting the exposure currently, is all. & it is more dispersed. In the Fifties it was possible to live in New York City, for example, without a lot of money. These days, everything is becoming gentrified so it is harder for "common-man" artists to live in urban centers than it was before.

I would say from a literary standpoint that there has yet to be a writer in my generation (which is close to yours, I'm 47) that has reached a universal timeless level. Just my opinion of course. The last one up on that level I think was Pynchon, perhaps Delillo.
Hmmm. Just remembered about Richard Powers and William Vollman. Ok, I take it back.

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DavidDvorkin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-11-04 11:53 AM
Response to Original message
5. Being heard is the hard part
A lot of us are doing the work, but the word isn't getting out.

I only know about the publishing industry. In that industry, decades of conglomeration have squeezed out smaller publishers and independent bookstores. One can write, one can even be published by a small publisher, but that's where the hard part begins. How do you get your books reviewed in major papers? How do readers find the actual books? (Yes, there's Amazon.com, which for all its faults does make many books available to many people, but it's not the sort of bookstore in which people browse the shelves!)

I think the music industry has gone through a similar process.
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thebigidea Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-11-04 05:07 PM
Response to Original message
6. right here, Gary
http://www.terminalproduct.com

there ya go, Gary.

rants like this make me want to ask: "Well, what about YOU, Mr. Corseri?"
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Karenina Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-12-04 04:57 AM
Response to Original message
7. Hmmm...
:kick:
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