Content VS Art
I’ve written quite a bit here at Memoirous about being a content hack. Not really—though that’s how it feels, sometimes.
My last post and this one are about process. An attempt at
clarifying or explaining to myself what it is I do. I am honored to once again
receive a grant from the Illinois Arts council, but along with awards comes a
tandem inferiority complex. Do I actually deserve this? Is it a fluk—an accident—and
will be withdrawn once “they” discover I am a charlatan?
These emotions (or is it faulty reasoning? Either way I am
convinced), by the way, are NOT helpful to the process.
I’ve been writing since age 7. Even before I acquired
reading, I wrote in a code—hoping later to remember what those little symbols
stood for. I desperately wanted to write a story. I believe my first poem was
about a tree. It was wonderful! I was at the same time delighted to discover
that many words rhyme with tree. The symbol for tree was very literal—it was
more difficult finding the appropriate sign to represent the “filler” words,
the ones that connected the visual ones.
I continue to have problems with those. I have the nut of
what I am trying to say. Adding leaves to the tree and making it look, well,
like a tree is the hard part.
So since age 7 writing has been my identity. Writing things
down helps me to remember, record (journaling), and process life. Writing has
helped to nourish me and as I feed it.
I’ve been reading Susan Sontag’s journal/notebook As
Consciousness Is Harnessed to Flesh 19640 1980. True much of what she says can
be reduced—she seems to take the hard way around a subject. Is that convoluted?
But she is very logical, which makes the path easier. She has random riffs on
writing—always seeing it as an art form. That’s very encouraging.
Because technology seems to have rendered much of today’s
art into content. Content, a word devoid of art. Content sounds so—utilitarian,
a means to an end, an end to a mean. As someone who blogs I am constantly aware
that I need stuff to make it happen. Often, to enhance a post, I’ll go on-line
and “borrow” a photograph or download a video. Some bloggers embed music—a blog
soundtrack—borrowed from the WORLD WIDE WORLD. It’s out there, all of it,
anything we want. Photos, music, clips, snips, content. And, it has very little
value.
Musicians are poorer today than ever before. Who now can
actually make it in the arts—when much of the arts is considered FREE. Granted
much, much, much more work is getting out there, being seen, going viral.
I love the www, the internet. My question is what’s next?
How will the next generation of artists get funding—because even commercial
artists are scraping by and mainstream publishers (please God!) are just now
realizing that hefty advances to known celebrities are not paying out. Things
go away to come back as something else—or they used to. But, maybe with global
warming, they will simply go extinct. Exist in a Wii world, inside a game.
Newspapers
Radio
TV
Books
Theater
Dance
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