|
Sculpture Okay, so I was
supposed to come up with text for this page so that Camille could put
up images of the new pieces. Recently, I got a letter from a gallery
asking how to be a famous artist and how to promote art so that the
art world would notice. Here is what I more or less I recently read an interview with Bill Gates. The question was asked, "Don't you feel it ironic that you tell kids to stay in school, yet you're a college dropout?" The gist of his answer was, "Yes." But he went on to explain that he was in the middle of a paradigm shift at the time he left and meant to leave for only a year while he "explored" it. But if you're not as lucky as he and other people of that time were, then staying in school could possibly be a good idea. The Quick Answer. I was likewise
in the middle of a paradigm shift. Camille and I have a theory that
we refer to as "The Wave" for lack of anything better. I talk a little
about it on this page: archived
sculpture page 2 Please go to that page to understand what I'm
talking about here. Basically, The Wave So, the short
answer is that I was lucky. I was part of a paradigm shift. That's how
I became a successful artist. The time was right and I walked into it.
Artists, collectors, gallery people and art historians were all making
waves in the same direction that later formed the paradigm shift called
Bay Area Funk Art. So, if you want to be "successful in promoting your
art and getting In other words, you need to work. And be lucky. And maybe, there's talent. Now for the long answer. I believe that you make your own luck and talent is just hard work. So, here's the other answer, the long one, which I hesitate to include because people just don't believe it. I happen to be a Scientologist and most of what follows (my thoughts) is from a book "Introduction to Scientology Ethics" by L. Ron Hubbard. You can order it from Amazon.com. Make sure you get a 1998 or later edition if you're so inclined. But, here's the long answer. Ethics. That's all.
Ethics are defined as long-term survival with minimal destruction along any of the dynamics. The dynamics are: 1.) survival through self, 2.) survival through a family, 3.) survival through a group, 4.) survival through mankind, 5.) survival through plants and animals, 6.) survival through matter, energy, space and time, 7.) survival through spirituality, and 8.) survival through the Supreme Being. If you want to get into this more, get the above mentioned book. That's the big picture and oddly enough, the little picture, too. The big picture is that being an artist is an ethical decision for me. It helps me survive along all of the dynamics. The little
picture is that the goal in art is to make pieces that communicate to
people. It has been my experience that the easier it is for people to
interpret your piece the easier it is to sell the piece. However, the
piece is also less satisfying spiritually. In other words, it's harder
to sell an abstract painting than it is to sell a painting of a clown,
but the painting of the clown is Money is not a goal in art. Money is a symbol for goods and services. As students, we used to have what we called, pot sales, to make money. We'd make pots, bowls, and cups in exchange for money. They were fast and easy, not very satisfying spiritually (making art is after all a purely spiritual act), but people bought them. Your audience does not require you to perform great spiritual acts. It is up to you to give it to them anyway. Since people most readily buy things that are easy to interpret, they can become annoyed when you ask too much of them. Tough. The pot sales enabled us to persist in art long enough for people to catch on to the art we were making. Fame is not
a goal in art. If you work towards fame you end up being mostly the
sixth dynamic and people will treat you like a thing. Example: most
rock stars, many actors. The saying, "The show must go on", is one of
the most aberrated things I can think of. To me, it means the performer
(the famous person) is a tool and no matter how broken or tired this
tool is, we are going to use it until it is so broken than it can no
longer be used. Tools are made from moulds and usually have only a few
specific uses. Tools are not allowed to change or grow and when If you pay attention to the right goal, money and fame automatically attach and come along for the ride without your having any attention on them at all and hopefully by the time the money and the fame do come to you, they are inconsequential because your attention is on the doing of the work; in other words, the creating. Creating anything is the most excellent thing we do. And there are lots of things to create like businesses, children who can go out into the world, dinners, gardens. Example: We
have a 14 year old who plays the piano. When he first started out, the
performances were way too important to him. My wife had him examine
his goals. It turned out that he wanted the audience to love him. She
pointed out that that was a wrong goal. First of all, you can't make
the audience love you. Second of all, who cares if the audience loves
you? The first point was real to him the second was not. So, we told
him he couldn't do anything about making the audience love him. What
he could do was study his theory and practice his pieces. That's all.
Those were the only two factors in his control as far as we could see.
He came up with another; listening to CDs. So we added that and realigned
his goal to playing his pieces very, very well with a short term goal
of being really ready for each lesson. I also told Having arrived is boring. The journey is what makes life interesting and worth living. Our son got
his ethics in by studying and practicing on a regular basis. This attitude
leaked into his other studies. He also started helping around the house
more. He became personally excellent. When he had the slightest feeling
that he should be practicing he went and practiced. If he didn't understand
a musical term he looked it up. He read about the lives of some of his
favorite composers (found his place in history). He started composing.
He has recently changed to a new teacher. My wife contacted this teacher
and asked if he was interested at all in having our son as a student.
This teacher told her, "That's like asking me if I want to drive a Rolls
Royce". So, he's achieved "audience love" without You can't make people love you, you can't make people love your work and you can't make people buy your work. The only thing that's under your control is to create the work as excellently as you can. Pay attention to the small things. Ethics is actually doing what should be done in the time you notice that it needs doing. For most of us ethics does not mean don't steal or don't murder people. Those sort of things don't apply to the vast majority of the people on this planet. The ethics that do apply are the smaller things like "clean your room", "do your laundry" or "change the light bulb". If there's a towel on the floor, pick it up. You actually knew you shouldn't have thown it down in the first place. If the piece isn't looking right, fix it; don't just leave it. If you need to learn how to draw better, learn. If you feel like you really should be working in the studio, go to the studio and work!! Fame and fortune come by themselves as long as you persist in creation.
Created
01 June 2004 |