Tuesday, June 28, 2011

l'art pour l'art or ars gratin artis

For the most part, I think of myself as an artist. I would even venture to say that I am a "Renaissance Man" except that the Renaissance ended some time in the 16th Century and that I actually produce very little. This makes me something more akin to Jeremy from the Beatles' movie Yellow Submarine.

I would love to be able to paint more, write more, play more music, perform more, but, I am a busy stay at home dad and to take time for this would be selfish.

Or is this just a convenient way of not doing the hard work involved in producing art?

See, my struggle with this is that everything I do has to be good. I am competing with my peers, or at least avoiding looking bad in front of them. And the funny part is that I know the only way to make great things is to fail along the way. And even what some might consider to be great I will find to be below par.

This puts me in a crazy little cycle. I can't fail so I won't do. The standard that hold for myself far outranks my ability and my ability will not improve unless I take those chances.

"Do I dare to eat a peach?" (The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock by T. S. Eliot)

I have a little tiny business doing freelance graphic art. My only real client is Undermain Theatre for whom I design postcards and posters. (There was a mention of my last design in the review of their production of The Shipment on Theater Jones.) I would love to do more. It's difficult. I have a good relationship with the Undermain and there is a great opportunity to make some good, creative, meaningful art. I'm afraid that other clients won't get that. They'll just want something to stick on a card or website that looks like what everyone else has and that's it.

This fear doesn't pay the bills. Or, moreover, doesn't make for better creativity.

Years ago I was a "personal chef" to a couple of families. What I found after a while was that I didn't like cooking for strangers. They didn't "get it", the love and soul that I put into what I was making for them. They we're just standing in front of the 'fridge eating out of the Tupperware™.

So now I cook for free and this makes me very happy. I don't know if I could afford to do this with art.

2 comments:

  1. I love when you cook for free for me! And I also love your art for The Undermain. "Market yourself" YO! How to go about doing that....i am not entirely sure.

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  2. "I would love to be able to paint more, write more, play more music, perform more, but, I am a busy stay at home dad and to take time for this would be selfish.
    Or is this just a convenient way of not doing the hard work involved in producing art?"


    The latter for sure.. While being the main caregiver to the youngins, AND maintaining self fulfillment is not easy, it is far from selfish. It's actually necessary for your soul, and great for the kids to see. I believe that being a role model and showing your kids how to follow their passion by following your own is almost as important as spending quality time with them and giving them love. ~Andrea

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