Monday 22 February 2010

Art and purpose

""Art doesn't help anyone," Garp said. "People can't really use it: They can't eat it, it won't shelter or clothe them - and if they're sick, it won't make them well." This, Helen knew, was Garp's thesis on the basic uselessness of art; he rejected the idea that art was of any social value whatsoever - that it could be, that it should be."

I'm currently reading "The World According To Garp" by John Irving (that quote comes from chapter9). Irving's central character, Garp, is himself an author. At this point in the book, he's going through a confidence crisis about his writing. Irving portrays him as a character who believes literature, however determined his impulse to write it, is "a luxury item". So, with the addition of the confidence crisis, Mr Garp feels that he can't even do something of no practical account very well - as we might imagine a purveyor of bad truffles might feel for example. His mother is a nurse, entirely matter of fact, straightforward and practical; so, even when he felt at the height of his powers, we might imagine him always trying to out run a sense of uselessness - the shadow cast by his ever vigilant and caring mother, the role model, the quintessence of usefulness.

Enough about Garp (read the book), but he, or rather his creator, got me started.

Recession permitting - although they tell me it's over - I try to earn my living as a musician, and have done so for the last 39 years. I write my own music as well as performing that of others, so I have some pretensions to creativity. My father was however a very practical man, not without an artistic side, but great at making things. And, guess what, however much applause I get, and however gifted someone may tell me I am, somewhere there lurks a sense of uselessness and incompetence, which is why Irving's fictional author made me pay close attention. My blindness gives my sense of limitation an edge, but not crucially, since my father was also blind.

Enough about me, but that was my next thought.

So we have here a fictitious and a real person, both in thrall to the same irrationality. My head knows that I'm not as useless as I sometimes feel, but "feel" is the operative word. Some kind of home made behavioural therapy might perhaps cure this, whereby I would act with all the self belief exhibited by the denizens of reality television. But I don't think, in all conscience, I could inflict this sham version of me upon the human race. We've all met people who are trying to be something which they are not. I was once close to someone who decided it was high time to become empowered and assertive, when they had previously been quite shyand retiring. This eventually worked, but the transition phase was jarring and abrasive. Someone who is unsure about their physical strength may lack the confidence in their ability to subdue an opponent in a fight. This could lead him or her to kill the opponent first, if the opportunity presented itself, driven by fear of what might happen to them if the attack could not be stopped.
An extreme example, and a big digression, but I don't think a personality transplant is an option - less drastic management is the answer. In fact, I already do this, since every gig I do is a potential chance for a reassurance fix. It's clear that a lot of the motive force behind our irrationalities is personality driven. But, just in case it helps, what of the facts? Garp says art is, in a practical sense, useless and, with my father looming in the background, I know how that feels. But to proclaim that as a fact is paradoxically arrogant, because we are in no position to know whether what we do is useful, or of service, or not.

So, finally, what about art? We can discuss what art is, how it relates to the aesthetic sensibilities of those who create it, whether it should involve skill, like the Latin word "ars" from which it derives. the boundary between art and so-called craft is hopelessly blurred, as is the boundary between music written as a work of art, and music written to entertain. On all levels, art strikes me as, superficially and profoundly, "useful". Dumbing down literary and artistic education in this country is having very predictable results. And if you are content for people, who already feel disenfranchised, to live in an environment that looks like a concrete fortification, the outcome is equally predictable. So art of all kinds is as useful as the person on the receiving end of it thinks it is. Music enriches my life enormously, from Pete Johnson to Claude Debussy; from William Byrd to James Taylor. Shakespeare probably thought he was just a jobbing playwright. We cannot judge ourselves, either in terms of value or purpose. We just have to put our sense of what's wrong with the things about us which everyone else says are OK on the back burner and, as the Eagles say "get over it". We'll be rendered much less productive by worry than we ever will be by a suspiciously irrational sense of being useless, or, in contemporary jargon, "not fit for purpose".

5 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  2. Reg, it's lovely to see you writing again. Your broad musical tastes don't surprise me; they correlate with your wide-ranging curiosity.

    I can empathize. I'm assigned to teach a course next term that's in the field for which I'm trained (German history) but where I haven't taught in many, many years since I've been working in gender studies instead. I've got little time to prep it, and I'm already having anxiety dreams about arriving in the classroom completely unprepared.

    In other words, I'm getting a case of imposter syndrome in advance!

    Teaching is often disparaged much as art is. Both are said to be impractical, the refuge of people who can't really "do." And if we then fear we're not even functioning well in those marginalized areas, why then we must be truly useless.

    However! You've made a career of music, and that speaks for itself. I don't know if you've got anything up on YouTube, but if you do, it'd be really cool if you'd link to it sometime. Because I suspect you are probably pretty darn good at what you do.

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  3. Sungold thank you. For no good reason, I didn't have notification set up so I missed your comment until just now.

    I happen to get a blast out of entertaining people. In the past, friends who appreciate my ability have often told me I was wasting my talent, and should occupy some more rarified space. I certainly have no problem with those whose whole reason for composing or performing is that of the artist. Certainly, much of the music I listen to was produced by people who couldn't give a damn about whether their music was entertaining or not. The need that drives a self-confessed appreciation junky like me is not far to seek, and it happens to be the thing about playing which I enjoy most. In terms of applying any technical skill, knowledge, or creativity to performance in an entertainment context, I guess my jazz playing is where those things come closest to converging.. I guess we do what we do for our own reasons, and people like or dislike it for theirs. There's no necessary connection between the two.

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  4. The post on art and "usefulness" is excellent. As a writer wannabe, I wrestle with that all the time. Why should I add one more writer to the pool of millions?

    You humbly and neatly sidestep Sungold's request for your music. I think you should make your music more available on the internet; on Facebook or on your blog. I know we'd both like to hear it.

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  5. Sungold and Journalingwoman, I sidestepped the music question partly because I'm not sure how to post anything, and I don't have any original video, though I do have some audio of course, and partly because I find it really difficult to evaluate my own stuff, so what to post?
    But these are obviously things I should and will deal with, so thank you both for asking. I will take advice.

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