I
live in Woodstock, New York. In addition to being “that Woodstock,” it has been
host to an arts colony since 1903 and it’s full of musicians and writers and photographers
and others of that ilk. Every
year the Woodstock Guild of Artists holds a particularly charming exhibit, the
“5X7 show.” That’s inches. There’s
a $10 admission, all the pieces sell for just $100, and it raises money for the
Guild. This
year there were 152 pieces. Some were very clever. Some amusing. A few exhibited
very precise draftsmanship. A couple used words and images. There were sculptures
– the only rule is size, there’s no restriction on the number of dimensions you
can try to reach into. There were hazy landscapes and precise landscapes and some
portraits. What
struck me the most was what was not there. Not
a single piece was political. Or about economics or religion or the environment
or mass delusion or science or the media. Five
Americans and seventy-eight Iraqis died violently today. The shoes on your feet
were likely put together by workers on slave wages. Christian activists who went
to Iraq to rescue people are being held hostage. The poppies are blooming in Afghanistan
and the warlords are getting rich. In Bolivia a leading candidate is running on
a platform of the legalization of coca growing. The polar ice cap is melting.
New Orleans was destroyed this year. It will not be rebuilt under this administration.
Nineteen billion dollars was lost, misplaced, stolen from Iraq while Paul Bremer
III was in charge of it. He got the Medal of Freedom afterward. The treasury is
being looted. We’re living in the age of the crusades, Christian against Muslim,
the 11th Century coming back in the 21st. The Catholic Church is opposing the
use of condoms in a country where the rate of HIV infection is 38%. Suburban sprawl
is not merely unchecked, it is accelerating. McMansions grow larger . SUV have
grown into Humvees and the price of gas goes up. There
will be people who freeze to death this winter due to the cost of oil. I don’t
know if any of them will be from our town, but I do know that there will be people
who are wearing their long johns and sweaters inside their homes as December crawls
through the cracks and they’ll keep them on through the nasty fringes of March.
Our
public dialogue is anemic. The Right has hijacked the pulpits. Public relations
speech and imagery are the order of the day. Public policy is sold the same way
as cheap goods at Wal-Mart, with no regard for their quality or utility, or our
need for them, but only to move product and contribute to the grosses of the grossest.
It
would have been a relief if their had even been a piece celebrating Rush Limbaugh,
or the advance of American Imperialism – Bravissimo Pax Americana! - or in favor
of the War in Terror, or to Support the Troops. Something to show that people
who regard themselves as artists think that maybe, sometimes, art could be about
something. This
is Woodstock? 152
artists were given an opportunity to show a small piece of work. Each and every
one of them, individually, made a decision not to be political, social, religions
or scientific. This
is not to say the art must be “relevant.” This is not to say we should return
to Soviet realism and show Heroic Workers planting new flowers on the village
green. It
is to note that is this case, the artists abdicated. Universally. No
czar or commissar told them to, no corporate sponsor paid them to, nobody from
Homeland Security came around and hinted that they would be taking names, no influential
critic said the age of relevance is dead, no greedy gallery owner said I can’t
sell anything with a political or social theme. It
is to suggest that this is symptomatic of “art” in general. It
is content to leave political image making to Karl Rove and Osama bin Laden. To
leave social statements to Target and Toyota – yes, “consume, consume, consume”
to the neglect of anything else, is a social statement. Leave spirituality to
Focus on the Family and the Pope who graduated from Hitler Youth. Leave the issue
of education to the anti-tax zealots and the privatizers. Those
people – and thousands of others who toil at image making and persuasion for corporations
and politicians and major religious institutions – think in all the terms of art.
They think of images and aesthetics, materials and textures, color and line, allusions,
delusions and illusions – and they use them to sell their products. If
the “artists” – and this is addressed to artists everywhere, not just in our little
town - prefer to use their craft for it’s own sake, or to show how clever and
how able they are, then that, of course, is up to them. Which
is why the nature of the world that they are not engaged with belongs to those
they have abdicated to. Larry
Beinhart is the author of Fog
Facts: Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin, Robert McChesney called it
the book on the subject "against which all others will be measured." His novels
include Wag
the Dog, on which the film was based,
and The
Librarian which Rolling Stone described as "John Grishom meets Jon Stewart."
He was a Fulbright Fellow, he's won an Edgar, been nominated for two more, a Gold
Dagger, an Emmy. He's been a political consultant, made commercials, lectured
at Oxford and he's a part time ski instructor. His email is beinhart@fogfacts.com.
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