@clareartista curious what your take is on this, with your background as a painter and someone who exhibited their art and who went through many transitions.
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@clareartista curious what your take is on this, with your background as a painter and someone who exhibited their art and who went through many transitions.
My path is certainly not to exhibit my Art. any more.
The 'art' world and people 'witnessing' Art. is simply inverted and toxic.
Art. is not meant to be separate from Life, nor from people: it is meant to be in the heart and at the hearth of community.
But we live in a time of such peak disconnect of each and every one from their creativity, that such situations - as described by Ronthroop above - are so common for artists: being exposed, whilst our creativity, meaning and hard work remains completely invisible. Being put on a bizarre torture-pedestal where we're simultaneously 'adored' and treated like a performing dog - or the village idiot. But given all kinds of accolades, lip service and plastic golden keys and statuettes ... and zero recompense for our immense workload.
I feel that our 'art world' in particular is one of the areas of culture which most needs to crumble 🙏🌟🤲👣🍷
Wow, I couldn’t agree more. I can only add that all art is local (and local can mean international as long as there is open, back and forth communication). I have been so rewarded intangibly by folks in my community. Somehow I have fashioned this wonderful balance between village idiot and creative “wise” person. I think it’s because the greatest reward for any artist is freedom, which gets elaborated on in art practice. Of course I’m not totally free of ALL the headaches of modern living. I believe some artists are terribly wounded with societies’ diseases—canaries in the coal mine. And who wants to exhibit beauty and disease in the same room?
One more add by Kurt Vonnegut from his novel Bluebeard:
That quote made me smile. It makes a lot of sense though :<)
Right?
It’s one of the few by the “world’s champions” that keep me going:)
I have read loads but must admit I haven't read any of his work. Will put it on my To Read list or even search for an audio book as I consume loads of spoken word too, these days.
Slaughterhouse Five was the book that made him famous overnight. I really like his sense of humor and take on the human tragi-comedy. One he wrote before popularity, which is also a great, is Cat’s Cradle.
Cheers for the info. I definitely heard of Slaughterhouse Five. I don't think I've read it but am not 100% sure. Have a great Sunday!✨