[blind-democracy] Re: 'Art is incompatible with lies, hypocrisy and conformity'

  • From: Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 05 Jan 2016 21:55:07 -0500

I'm curious. From where did you get the definition of art that you keep
referring to, the one that says that patterns define the object as art?  Is
it in a book or something?

Miriam 

________________________________

From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Roger Loran
Bailey (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
Sent: Tuesday, January 05, 2016 9:30 PM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: 'Art is incompatible with lies, hypocrisy and
conformity'


The rock in question consists of a larger domelike part with a couple of
smaller and more spirelike domes beside it. The whole sculpture is brown in
color. When it was first installed there was a newspaper article about it in
which it was said that it represented the mountains of West Virginia. If it
had not been for that article I would have never guessed that it represented
mountains or anything else. It communicates absolutely nothing to me and
causes no emotional reaction, positive or negative. I don't think I ever
heard anyone else say anything about it either, so I assume that it does not
communicate anything to other people either. Nevertheless, it is art. When I
had my eyesight I looked at it and without hesitation identified it as art.
It is clear that it was carved and not a natural formation and it is clear
that it was carved with the conscious intent to imbue it with a pattern.


On 1/4/2016 8:46 PM, Alice Dampman Humel wrote:


        are you sure about that? I did not read it that way, either.  
        And the rock sounds like an example of abstract,
non-representational art, and abstract art, indeed, abstraction in any form,
can express a hell of a lot...
        
        On Jan 4, 2016, at 10:19 AM, Miriam Vieni <
<mailto:miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:


                He was referring to representational art that makes a point
and he was
                making a joke.
                
                Miriam 
                
                -----Original Message-----
                From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                [mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
Roger Loran
                Bailey (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
                Sent: Sunday, January 03, 2016 10:26 PM
                To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: 'Art is incompatible with
lies, hypocrisy and
                conformity'
                
                
                That does not make sense. There is a piece of sculpture in
front of the
                library in my town. I saw it many times before I lost my
eyesight and I can
                see that it is what most everyone would call art. It is a
rock that has been
                sculpted into a pattern, but it is not a representation of
anything real
                like a statue would be. The pattern is clear, though, and it
is an example
                of art. Can I agree with it? I don't see how anyone could
either agree or
                disagree with it. It is just a carved piece of rock. It is
not expressing an
                opinion nor is it making a statement that is factual or
false. It just is.
                There is nothing about it that tries to persuade anyone of
anything, so I
                don't see how it could be propaganda even if someone could
figure out a way
                to disagree with it.
                On 1/3/2016 10:34 AM, Frank Ventura wrote:
                

                        When you agree with something it is art, when you
don't its propaganda.
                        
                        -----Original Message-----
                        From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
                        [mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Miriam 
                        Vieni
                        Sent: Sunday, January 3, 2016 10:02 AM
                        To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: 'Art is incompatible
with lies, hypocrisy
                        

                and conformity'
                


                        Well, that's a famous painting and everyone thinks
it's art.  If we accept
                        

                the negative definition of propaganda, than I suppose the
Fascists would
                have considered it to be propaganda back then.
                


                        Miriam
                        
                        ________________________________
                        
                        From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        [mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Abby 
                        Vincent
                        Sent: Saturday, January 02, 2016 10:54 PM
                        To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: 'Art is incompatible
with lies, hypocrisy
                        

                and conformity'
                




                        YYes.  A lot ofPicasso's art was one dimensional.
It never occurred to me
                        

                that he might have seen the world that way.
                


                        "Guernica", a depiction of the horrors of the
Spanish civil war, was 
                        his protest against war with mass civilion
casualties. It was drawings 
                        of body parts. If art expresses an opinion, is it
still art and not 
                        propaganda
                        
                        propaganda? Same question for "War is not healthy
for children and other
                        

                living things".
                


                        Abby
                        
                        From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        [mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Alice 
                        Dampman Humel
                        Sent: Saturday, January 02, 2016 6:05 PM
                        To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: 'Art is incompatible
with lies, hypocrisy
                        

                and conformity'
                




                        the cluelessness of that teacher has nothing to do
with art, but rather
                        

                only with cruelty and utter lack of imagination,
sensitivity, creativity,
                all essential components of artistic expression. It is
nothing short of
                tragic that his/her treatment of you led to your abandonment
of art in any
                or all of its manifestations.
                


                        It has been posited, for example, that great artists
like el Greco and
                        

                Picasso had some kind of visual conditions that made them
see, experience,
                and express the world in the way they painted it.
                


                        On Jan 2, 2016, at 7:55 PM, Abby Vincent <
<mailto:aevincent@xxxxxxxxx> aevincent@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        What I was taught in the classroom activity called
art made it
                        

                difficult to
                

                        appreciate what we're  talking about now.  I never
had two
                        

                dimensional
                

                        vision.  Our teacher tried to teach us how to depict
dimension on a
                        

                flat
                

                        paper.    There were four shapes  placed on a table.
We were given
                        paper
                        and charcoal and told to draw them.  The charcoal
helped to show 
                        shading.
                        
                        I was told my shadows were in the wrong place and
going in the wrong
                        direction.  So, the art of sighted kids is real,
                        So it is art.  The experience of a partially sighted
kid has no
                        

                value
                

                        because it's wrong.  I developed a  lack of
confidence in my ability
                        

                to know
                

                        and share what was around me.  It carried over to
the more
                        

                subjective
                

                        studies such as literature and poetry.  I
concentrated on math and
                        

                social
                

                        studies and later, French.
                        Abby
                        
                        -----Original Message-----
                        From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        [ <mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Miriam
                        

                Vieni
                

                        Sent: Saturday, January 02, 2016 1:55 PM
                        To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: 'Art is incompatible
with lies,
                        

                hypocrisy and
                

                        conformity'
                        
                        Roger,
                        
                        I'll start with your last point. I don't remember
that scene in The
                        

                Grapes
                

                        of Wrath. To me, the art of the book is in the way
that he tells the
                        

                story
                

                        of what happens to the family. The book communicates
on two levels:
                        the
                        intellectual one, i.e. what it was like for this
family when they
                        

                had to
                

                        leave their farm and travel west, looking for work,
at a time when
                        

                everyone
                

                        else was also leaving the Dust Bowl and traveling
west. And it
                        

                communicates
                

                        on an emotional level. I felt terrible for the
family, for what they
                        

                had to
                

                        go through, for what was happening to them. For me,
one of the most
                        

                moving
                

                        passages is when they're in a barn and no one has
anything to eat,
                        

                and they
                

                        encounter a stranger there who is hungrier than they
are. I won't
                        

                tell you
                

                        what happens because maybe you'll decide to read the
book.
                        
                        Now, as to symbolism. I don't get it either. But I
will tell you
                        

                that there
                

                        are a lot of wonderful books that are art because of
how effectively
                        

                they
                

                        communicate to the reader, and I don't pay attention
to the opinions
                        

                of
                

                        critics or literature professors when I make that
judgement. I know
                        

                that a
                

                        book is really good because of my reading experience
and my own
                        

                assessment
                

                        of the writing.  Also, there are times when I can
tell that a book
                        

                is
                

                        written very well, that it is fine literature, but I
don't enjoy it
                        

                and I
                

                        stop reading it. However, I don't assume that
because I don't like
                        

                the book,
                

                        it's worthless. I've learned that there are
limitations to my
                        

                ability to
                

                        appreciate certain kinds of literature. I've heard
interviews with
                        

                authors
                

                        and it turns out that often, the authors did not
have all of the
                        

                symbolism
                

                        in mind that the interviewers and other self styled
experts,
                        

                attribute to
                

                        their books.
                        
                        Last but not least, poetry. There are all different
kinds of poetry.
                        Poetry
                        is not always symbolic. Some of it is very literal.
Some of it is
                        

                funny. I
                

                        have never, however, chosen of my own volition, to
read a book of
                        

                poetry.
                

                        But I read a very long poem in high school which I
loved, and I
                        

                haven't
                

                        looked at it since. I think that, perhaps, you might
appreciate it
                        

                if you
                

                        can find it. It is, "The People, Yes" by Carl
Sandberg. See if you
                        

                can find
                

                        it and read it. It is not flowery or symbolic. If I
remember
                        

                correctly from
                

                        so many years ago, it should be right up your alley.
By the way,
                        

                did you
                

                        ever have to read The Illiad in high school or
college? It is the
                        

                story of
                

                        Ulysises' long trip home from the Peloponesian Wars
and it is in
                        

                verse.
                

                        There's another one, I think about Helen of Troy.
                        
                        Miriam
                        
                        -----Original Message-----
                        From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        [ <mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Roger
                        

                Loran
                

                        Bailey (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
                        Sent: Saturday, January 02, 2016 4:11 PM
                        To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: 'Art is incompatible
with lies,
                        

                hypocrisy and
                

                        conformity'
                        
                        I suppose I could include poetry as art. Like I
said, art is
                        

                characterized
                

                        by patterns that are imparted to it by the artist
and in all the
                        

                meters and
                

                        rhymes poetry does have patterns. As a means of
communication,
                        

                though, it is
                

                        terrible. As I understand poetry it is virtually
required for it to
                        

                be good
                

                        poetry for it to be filled with symbolism and then
it is supposed to
                        

                be
                

                        better poetry if the symbolism is represented by
more symbolism and
                        

                that the
                

                        more layers of symbolism the better the poetry is.
This sounds like
                        

                a word
                

                        puzzle and if it was a word puzzle it would have
more legitimacy. I
                        

                used to
                

                        enjoy working crossword puzzles and acrostics. I
have even in the
                        

                past
                

                        bought entire puzzle magazines full of word puzzles
and logic
                        

                problems. It
                

                        can be a fun pastime. However, another thing I have
always heard
                        

                about
                

                        poetry is that anyone's interpretation is just as
good as another
                        

                person's
                

                        interpretation. That removes all the rules from the
puzzle and
                        

                renders it
                

                        not a puzzle at all. If your solution to the puzzle
is correct no
                        

                matter
                

                        what it is then you have not solved anything and you
may as well
                        

                just make
                

                        up interpretations. I could spend all day making up
interpretations
                        

                and I
                

                        would not even have to read the poem. I could skip
the poem entirely
                        

                and
                

                        just write up an interpretation for a poem that I
had no idea of
                        

                what was in
                

                        it and my interpretation would be as good as that of
anyone who
                        

                carefully
                

                        read it. But if the author has anything to actually
say then he or
                        

                she is
                

                        defeating him or herself. If you hide what you have
to say behind a
                        

                lot of
                

                        symbolism then you have not communicated. I remember
being in an
                        

                English
                

                        class once and we were studying a unit on poetry and
I was
                        

                expressing some
                

                        of these same views.
                        I was saying that if you have something to say then
what is the
                        

                problem with
                

                        just coming out and saying it instead of engaging in
deliberate
                        obscurantism. The teacher decided to try a bit of
comparing to show
                        

                some
                

                        advantage to poetry. She read a line of poetry. I
forget now how it
                        

                was
                

                        worded, but she then translated it into straight
prose saying how
                        

                would this
                

                        sound. The translation was, the ship came over the
horizon. My
                        

                response was,
                

                        it wasn't worth saying in the first place. I really
was not
                        

                intending to be
                

                        funny, but the classroom burst into laughter.
                        Anyway, if some people enjoy poetry for the patterns
like they do a
                        painting, a sculpture or a piece of music then that
is okay. Those
                        

                forms of
                

                        art don't do a lot of communicating either. And, in
fact, in certain
                        

                forms I
                

                        can enjoy poetry too. A song is a poem accompanied
by music and, in
                        

                fact, in
                

                        a song the human voice can be regarded as another
instrument
                        

                contributing to
                

                        the patterns that make music art. There are
certainly songs that I
                        

                like. In
                

                        that sense I enjoy poetry. But I have still noticed
that when you
                        

                strip a
                

                        song of its music and just read the words straight
forward as you
                        

                would read
                

                        a poem songs are simplistic nonsense.
                        They really do not convey much meaning. So, insofar
as anyone claims
                        

                that a
                

                        poem is communicating some profound message I think
they are
                        

                deluded.
                

                        As for prose literature being art, like I have said,
when I have
                        

                read
                

                        fiction that has been identified as art I usually
find myself
                        

                reading
                

                        something else that is obscurantist. This is the
kind of fiction
                        

                that wins
                

                        awards and I suspect that it is because it is full
of symbolism
                        

                again and
                

                        deliberately filling something up with symbolism
serves no real
                        

                purpose but
                

                        to make it hard to understand. You used The Grapes
of Wrath as an
                        

                example. I
                

                        will have to admit that I have never read that one.
It is famous
                        

                enough that
                

                        I have an idea of what it is about and I think it
might be something
                        

                that I
                

                        might like to read, but I have just never gotten
around to it. I did
                        

                read a
                

                        fairly long excerpt though. I was reading an
anthology of nature
                        

                writing and
                

                        the scene from The Grapes of Wrath describing the
turtle crossing
                        

                the road
                

                        was included. I remember when I was in high school
there was a
                        

                fellow
                

                        student exclaiming about how John Steinbeck could
write about a
                        

                turtle
                

                        crossing  a road and make it interesting. It took me
decades before
                        

                I
                

                        finally got around to reading that scene, though,
and it was because
                        

                it was
                

                        a part of that nature writing anthology. It was
interesting if only
                        

                mildly
                

                        interesting to me. It struck me as a straight
forward narrative
                        

                though. If
                

                        there was any hidden symbolism in it I did not
detect it and I did
                        

                not look
                

                        for it. Insofar as I found it interesting it was
because it was a
                        

                straight
                

                        forward narrative. If it had been written in a way
such that it had
                        

                been
                

                        hard to understand I would not have found it
interesting. So I ask,
                        

                did you
                

                        find that part of the novel to be art and if you did
what about it
                        

                made it
                

                        art? Bearing in mind that I have not read the rest
of the book, but
                        

                do have
                

                        an idea of what it is about, what made the book as a
whole art?
                        
                        On 1/2/2016 9:55 AM, Miriam Vieni wrote:
                        
                        
                        
                        I think that this is, you should excuse the
expression, your
                        

                blind spot.
                

                        Certainly, literature is categorized as art and
certainly,
                        

                poetry is art.
                

                        Although you and I may not appreciate poetry, very
many
                        

                intelligent
                

                        and sophisticated, and not so sophisticated people
do. There
                        

                are all
                

                        kinds of poetry, some easier for me to understand
than
                        

                others. Whole
                

                        stories have been told in verse like the famous
Greek ones
                        

                and
                

                        Evangeline or, The People, Yes. As for fiction not
being
                        

                informative
                

                        or being poor fiction if it is, that is a very
debateable
                        

                opinion.
                

                        John Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath is a wonderful
novel. It's
                        

                art. And
                

                        it was written to inform about what was happening to
                        

                midwestern farm
                


                        families during the Depression.
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        Miriam
                        
                        -----Original Message-----
                        From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        [ <mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
                        

                Roger Loran
                

                        Bailey (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
                        Sent: Friday, January 01, 2016 11:40 PM
                        To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: 'Art is incompatible
with
                        

                lies,
                

                        hypocrisy and conformity'
                        
                        I don't discount it. I suppose you can learn
something from
                        

                any book.
                

                        The difference is that in fiction the learning is
                        

                incidental. The main
                

                        purpose of a work of fiction is to entertain.
Insofar as a
                        

                work of
                

                        fiction tries to teach rather than entertain it
becomes poor
                        

                writing
                

                        and the more it strives to educate the poorer the
writing
                        

                becomes. If
                

                        your intention is to be entertained you read a novel
and if
                        

                you are
                

                        lucky you just might learn something along the way.
If your
                        

                intention
                

                        is to learn something you do not go to a work of
fiction. As
                        

                for
                

                        fiction being art, I have heard that many times and
I think
                        

                it is
                

                        loose use of the word art. However the books that
are most
                        

                frequently
                

                        called works of art are the ones that it is hard to
read.
                        Poetry is
                        frequently called art and it strikes me as a
deliberate
                        

                effort to
                

                        obscure and to make it hard for the reader to
understand.
                        The prose
                        that is called art suffers from the same kind of
thing. It
                        

                tends to be
                

                        dense, to make little sense and to be less than
entertaining
                        

                to myself
                

                        at
                        
                        least.
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        On 1/1/2016 11:02 PM, Miriam Vieni wrote:
                        
                        
                        
                        Many people would disagree with you about writing
                        

                not being art.
                

                        Probably most of the books that I read aren't art,
                        

                but great
                

                        literature
                        
                        surely is.
                        
                        
                        
                        And don't discount the information about real life
                        

                that appears in
                


                        novels.
                        
                        
                        
                        I've read pieces of fiction and pieces of non
                        

                fiction that told me
                

                        precisely the same things about certain issues. But
                        

                film has
                

                        certainly been used very effectively, as has also
                        

                video on TV and now
                

                        the internet, to influence people's point of view.
                        Often, it works
                        better than words because people respond immediately
                        

                and emotionally
                

                        to what they see and they don't have to read or try
                        

                to comprehend a
                

                        spoken argument. I suspect that Trump is as
                        

                successful as he is
                

                        because he uses few words to create images in
                        

                people's heads, like
                

                        Mexican rapists or Muslims celebrating on 9/11.
                        People aren't
                        persuaded by his
                        
                        arguments. They just envision what he says.
                        
                        
                        
                        Miriam
                        
                        -----Original Message-----
                        From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        [ <mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
                        

                Behalf Of Roger
                

                        Loran Bailey (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for
                        DMARC)
                        Sent: Friday, January 01, 2016 9:21 PM
                        To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: 'Art is incompatible
                        

                with lies,
                

                        hypocrisy and conformity'
                        
                        Don't forget that you said that you are reading
                        

                novels. That is fiction.
                

                        And also don't confuse writing with art. Writing
                        

                actually
                

                        communicates and so it is an excellent medium for
                        

                propaganda.
                

                        Nevertheless, nothing else of what you said refutes
                        

                that art is used
                

                        to reinforce concepts that have already been
                        

                inculcated by other
                

                        means. Persuasion comes first, then reinforcement.
                        Note that in the
                        article that started this thread Trotsky is coming
                        

                out against the
                

                        misuses of art that you describe
                        
                        from your novels.
                        
                        
                        
                        On 1/1/2016 4:14 PM, Miriam Vieni wrote:
                        
                        
                        
                        I've read fiction that takes place in
                        

                various authoritarian states,
                

                        nazi gtermany, the Soviet Union for example,
                        

                and in those books,
                

                        I've read descriptions of how writers and
                        

                visual artists and song
                

                        writers were used to support the mindset
                        

                that the State wanted the
                

                        people to have. Certain kinds of books and
                        

                music were forbidden.
                

                        Artists were encouraged to produce works
                        

                that glorified the
                

                        political theories that underlay the
                        

                government. And here in the US,
                

                        there are people who want to forbid certain
                        

                kinds of art. There was
                

                        a big fuss about an art piece in Brooklyn
                        

                several years ago because
                

                        some people considered it to be anti
                        

                Christian. And remember those
                

                        hooten annies I
                        
                        mentioned?
                        
                        
                        
                        They were advertised as folk song concerts
                        

                but that's not exactly
                

                        what they were. They were socialist or
                        

                communist talking points
                

                        interspersed with songs. And then there was
                        

                the rule that
                

                        interracial
                        
                        relationships between men and women could never be
                        

                shown in films or
                

                        on
                        
                        TV.
                        
                        
                        
                        Art is used to support conceptions of public
                        

                decency and acceptable
                

                        behavior.
                        
                        Miriam
                        
                        -----Original Message-----
                        From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        
                        [mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Roger
                        Loran Bailey (Redacted sender
                        "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
                        Sent: Friday, January 01, 2016 3:18 PM
                        To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: 'Art is
                        

                incompatible with lies,
                

                        hypocrisy and conformity'
                        
                        My comments were made in response to Miriam
                        

                who said that she didn't
                

                        know what art is, so I explained what it is,
                        

                basically patterns of
                

                        just about anything. I forgot to mention
                        

                something else, though. She
                

                        also said that art was used as propaganda. I
                        

                don't think that is true.
                

                        Propaganda is an argument intended to
                        

                persuade someone of something.
                

                        As an attempt to persuade propaganda is
                        

                usually written as an essay
                

                        with evidence to back up the main argument.
                        It is usually explained
                        by contrasting it to agitation. That is, to
                        

                put is simply,
                

                        propaganda makes a lot of points for a few
                        

                people and agitation
                

                        makes one or a very few points to be
                        

                distributed to many people.
                

                        Rather than get involved in explaining that
                        

                in greater detail just
                

                        try to think of the
                        
                        implications of that simplistic way of putting it.
                        
                        
                        
                        With that in mind, though, art is not really
                        

                either agitation nor
                

                        propaganda. It is reinforcement. Bear in
                        

                mind what I have already
                

                        said about how one's taste in art - that is,
                        

                one's affinity for
                

                        patterns of patterns - is acquired. That
                        

                shows that by the time a
                

                        person has fixed on a particular genre of
                        

                art the person is already
                

                        persuaded of the ideology or other milieu of
                        

                thinking that the genre
                

                        of art is identified with. By indulging in
                        

                appreciating the art one
                

                        is persistently reminded of what one has
                        

                already been persuaded of.
                

                        That is, one is reinforced. Think of
                        

                medieval European art. It is
                

                        almost all religious art. But can you really
                        

                imagine anyone who has
                

                        not already been indoctrinated in the
                        

                religion being persuaded by
                

                        looking at the art? It neither persuades as
                        

                it would if it was
                

                        propaganda nor does
                        
                        it compel one to take action as it would if it was
                        

                agitation.
                

                        
                        
                        
                        On 1/1/2016 2:49 PM, Carl Jarvis wrote:
                        
                        
                        
                        Very interesting, Roger.
                        All I can say is that I am so very
                        

                glad that I was born long, 
                

                        long
                        before Heavy Metal.
                        Actually, my brother-in-law, who
                        just turned 65, immerses himself
                        in Heavy Metal.  I never criticize
                        

                others choices in music, but
                

                        I'll get down with Benny Goodman or
                        

                Ella Fitzgerald.  Cathy leans
                

                        toward the pop music of the 60's and
                        

                70's, and leaves the room if I
                

                        stay with the 40's too long.  As you
                        

                said, it's what we grew up on.
                

                        There is no, "Better" nor is there,
                        

                "Worse".  In music appreciation
                

                        it is that which is pleasing to the
                        

                ear of the listener.
                

                        
                        Carl Jarvis
                        
                        On 1/1/16, Roger Loran Bailey
                        <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
                        
                        
                        
                        Art is pattern. This includes visual
                        

                and audio art, also known as
                


                        music.
                        
                        
                        
                        I suppose it might also apply to the
                        

                other three senses, but it is
                

                        harder to create something in a
                        pattern for touch, taste and
                        smell, even though some chefs do
                        consider themselves to be
                        artists. In visual art a pattern of
                        

                colors, lines or whatever is
                

                        created that the structure of our
                        

                brains happen to find pleasing.
                

                        In the case of music it is a pattern
                        

                of sound. These patterns can
                

                        be highly variable to the point of
                        

                near infinitude, so there are
                

                        also patterns of
                        
                        patterns.
                        
                        
                        
                        The patterns of patterns that are
                        

                found to be pleasurable vary
                

                        from culture to culture and may vary
                        

                from subculture to subculture
                

                        and from individual to individual. I
                        

                have personally observed that
                

                        the favored patterns of patterns
                        seem to be imprinted on people
                        when they are in the age range of
                        

                about fourteen to eighteen. 
                

                        That
                        is, once one is exposed to a certain
                        

                genre of music or school of
                

                        visual art while in that age range
                        

                it becomes what one favors for
                

                        life. In my case, for example, I
                        became interested in heavy metal
                        rock at that age. I think it had
                        something to do with both what I
                        was being exposed to and the
                        subcultures with which I was
                        identifying at the time. For years
                        

                now I have paid very little
                

                        attention to music at all, but if I
                        

                do hear various samples of
                

                        music in my daily life I perk up and
                        

                notice and like it if I
                

                        happen to
                        
                        hear some heavy metal.
                        
                        
                        
                        I have certain ideas of visual art
                        

                that I like and had imprinted
                

                        on me at the same time too. I favor
                        

                the kind of art that used to
                

                        appear on the covers of fantasy
                        paperback novels. I say used to
                        because I know things like that
                        change over time and I have not
                        seen the cover of a paperback book
                        

                for many years now. In general
                

                        I prefer more abstract art than
                        realistic art. Of course, I am
                        talking about personal preference,
                        

                but I have noticed that most
                

                        everyone's personal preferences were
                        

                formed at about the same time
                

                        in life and had something to do with
                        

                not only what they were
                

                        exposed to, but to what subcultural
                        

                milieu they identified with.
                

                        On a worldwide basis few people
                        really like the art and music from
                        another part of the world, but they
                        

                are often attracted to it as
                

                        an exotic novelty. The main point of
                        

                art, though, is that it must
                

                        be patterned. If you hear sound
                        without pattern it is called noise.
                        If you see something visually with
                        

                no pattern it is called a 
                

                        mess.
                        And even though a lot of people like
                        

                sophisticated art - that is,
                

                        art with highly complex patterns -
                        

                if the patterns become too
                

                        complex to the point that the
                        pattern cannot be discerned quickly
                        then it is rejected as art and
                        called noise or a mess. I think I
                        have seen that tendency even when
                        

                the pattern is not overly
                

                        complex, but just alien. For
                        example, I have ever so often heard
                        the music that I favor called noise.
                        What I think is going on is
                        that the person who says that is not
                        

                used to it and so
                


                        does not detect the patterns immediately.
                        The patterns are too
                        complex to be picked out immediately when
                        

                hearing something that to
                

                        them is
                        
                        unusual.
                        
                        
                        
                        An alien music that is simple might
                        

                be recognized as music, but
                

                        add complexity to it being alien and
                        

                it will be heard as noise
                

                        while the person who is used to it
                        

                and has it imprinted on him or
                

                        her will clearly hear music and
                        enjoyable music too.
                        
                        On 1/1/2016 12:43 PM, Miriam Vieni
                        wrote:
                        
                        
                        
                        I have attended college and graduate
                        

                school and I read lots of books.
                

                        I've
                        visited museums and been to europe,
                        

                in particular, to Italy twice.
                

                        And i don't have a clue about what
                        

                art truly is. I know what
                

                        music I enjoy hearing and what music
                        

                I don't like and what I like
                

                        includes folk, country, popular
                        songs from the days before rock
                        and roll, and some classical music.
                        My appreciation of the visual
                        arts was hampered by poor vision,
                        

                but I did like impressionist
                

                        paintings, and paintings that tended
                        

                toward being representational.
                

                        On some of the trips arrange for
                        blind people in which I
                        participated, I was subjected to art
                        

                and explanations of art by
                

                        specialists in various museums, and
                        

                I always felt like the
                

                        specialists were being patronizing
                        

                and I was being stupid. I've
                

                        read a number of novels which dealt
                        

                with the experience of
                

                        artists, particularly contemporary
                        

                artists and the ways in which
                

                        they express themselves in various
                        

                art forms. I haven't been able
                

                        to truly relate to most of what I've
                        

                read. I'm aware that what
                

                        artists do is related to, and
                        influenced by the societyies in
                        which they live and the culture that
                        

                informs their sensibilities.
                

                        And I know that some governments
                        have used art as propaganda.
                        Also, many years ago, I had friends
                        

                who were professional
                

                        classical musicians. Some of their
                        

                friends made a steady living
                

                        as music teachers in public schools
                        

                and they played in orchestras
                

                        at concerts when they were able to
                        

                get this work. My friends did
                

                        not have steady teaching jobs. They
                        

                might teach at a community
                

                        college for a semester or at a music
                        

                school, but making a living
                

                        involved a constant scramble for
                        work. It meant networking and
                        staying alert to every possibility
                        
                        for making a bit of money.
                        
                        
                        
                        True, after a concert, there was
                        some discussion about the skill
                        or lack thereof, of other musicians,
                        

                but I don't think I ever
                

                        heard a discussion of music per se.
                        I assume that most of us on
                        this list are somewhere at the same
                        

                level as I am in terms of
                

                        understanding true art or what makes
                        

                an artist.
                

                        
                        Miriam
                        
                        -----Original Message-----
                        From:
                        blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        
                        [mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Carl
                        Jarvis
                        Sent: Friday, January 01, 2016 11:34
                        

                AM
                

                        To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                        Subject: [blind-democracy] Re:
                        [blind-democracy] Re:
                        [blind-democracy] [blind-democracy]
                        

                'Art is incompatible with
                

                        lies, hypocrisy and conformity'
                        
                        Good New Years Day Alice and All,
                        

                Probably I haven't much of a
                

                        grasp on anything.  Take my theories
                        

                regarding the Creation of
                

                        God, or my grasp on the need to have
                        

                a one people, one people's
                

                        government and a united respect for
                        

                all life, World.
                

                        No grasp on any of those topics, and
                        

                many other crazy notions I
                

                        conjure up.
                        But then I also don't have much of a
                        

                grasp on this blind
                

                        democracy list, either.  I figured
                        

                we might simply toss out ideas
                

                        and explore our thinking, rather
                        than make character judgements.
                        Most of what I put out on this list
                        

                is straight off the top of my
                


                        mind.
                        
                        
                        
                        I don't often research my opinions,
                        

                nor do I expect you all to do
                


                        likewise.
                        
                        
                        
                        So having babbled around for a
                        while, I want to return to this
                        topic of artistic sensibilities.
                        Art is created within the brain of
                        

                individuals.  Some folks are
                

                        far more creative and talented than
                        

                others.  Still, even the most
                

                        creative are influenced by the world
                        

                around them.  In some
                

                        cultures art
                        
                        is encouraged.
                        
                        
                        
                        This was the case in the early days
                        

                of this nation.  But Madison
                

                        Avenue, an Oligarchy form of
                        government, a Corporate Empire,
                        pressure to seek financial gain as a
                        

                measure of success, and much
                

                        more have warped what we consider to
                        

                be Art, or Creative Talent.
                

                        Indeed, we are far closer to the
                        Roman Empire in our creative
                        talents, than to the Glory Days of
                        

                Greece.
                

                        So is this what was bothering you,
                        

                Alice?  If so, then I stand on
                

                        my statement.
                        
                        By the way, anyone wanting to set me
                        

                straight privately, or tell
                

                        me to shut up, can do so privately.
                        I am at:
                        <mailto:carjar82@xxxxxxxxx> carjar82@xxxxxxxxx
                        
                        Carl Jarvis, who is heading for a
                        

                bacon and egg and toast with
                

                        jam breakfast.  First one of the new
                        

                year.  Hopefully not the last.
                

                        
                        On 12/31/15, Alice Dampman Humel
                        <alicedh@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
                        
                        
                        
                        Carl,
                        I'm afraid you do not have a very
                        

                good grasp on artistic
                

                        sensibilities, personalities,
                        expressions, lives, etc.
                        No artist worth his/her salt will be
                        

                stifled. alice On Dec 31,
                

                        2015, at 11:12 AM, Carl Jarvis
                        <carjar82@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        It is hard for me to imagine what
                        

                pure art would look like in a
                

                        Land that is so controlled that the
                        

                Masters corrupt artistic
                

                        expression, or stifle it altogether.
                        
                        Freedom of expression is not to be
                        

                tolerated by the Empire.
                

                        
                        Carl Jarvis
                        
                        On 12/31/15, Roger Loran Bailey
                        <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
                        
                        wrote:
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        http://themilitant.com/2016/8001/800149.html
                        The Militant (logo)
                        
                        Vol. 80/No. 1      January 4, 2016
                        
                        (Books of the Month column)
                        
                        'Art is incompatible with lies,
                        hypocrisy and conformity'
                        
                            Art and Revolution by Leon
                        Trotsky, a central leader of
                        the
                        1917 October Revolution, is one of
                        

                the Books of the Month for
                


                        December.
                        
                        
                        
                           From the vantage point of a
                        leader in the early Soviet
                        republic along with V.I. Lenin, and
                        

                then its defender against
                

                        the political counterrevolution
                        after Lenin died led by Joseph
                        Stalin and the bureaucracy he spoke
                        

                for, Trotsky examines the
                

                        place of art and artistic creation
                        

                in building a new,
                

                        socialist
                        
                        society.
                        
                        
                        
                        Expelled from the Soviet Union in
                        

                1929, Trotsky got asylum in
                

                        1936 in Mexico with the aid of Diego
                        

                Rivera, the country's
                

                        leading artist. The excerpt is from
                        

                "Art and Politics in Our
                

                        Epoch," originally published as a
                        

                letter to the August
                

                        1938 Partisan Review, a political
                        

                and cultural magazine
                

                        published in the U.S. Copyright C
                        

                1970 by Pathfinder Press.
                

                        Reprinted by permission.
                        
                        
                        BY LEON TROTSKY
                        
                            You have been kind enough to
                        invite me to express my
                        views on the state of present-day
                        arts and letters. I do this
                        not without some hesitation. Since
                        my book Literature and
                        Revolution (1923), I have not once
                        returned to the problem of
                        artistic creation and only
                        occasionally have I been able to
                        follow the latest developments in
                        this sphere. I am far from
                        pretending to offer an
                        
                        exhaustive reply.
                        
                        
                        
                        The task of this letter is to
                        correctly pose the question.
                        Generally speaking, art is an
                        expression of man's need for a
                        harmonious and complete life, that
                        is to say, his need for
                        those major benefits of which a
                        society of classes has
                        deprived
                        
                        him.
                        
                        
                        
                        That is why a protest against
                        reality, either conscious or
                        unconscious, active or passive,
                        optimistic or pessimistic,
                        always forms part of a really
                        creative piece of work. Every
                        new tendency in art has begun with
                        
                        rebellion.
                        
                        
                        
                        Bourgeois society showed its
                        strength throughout long periods
                        of history in the fact that,
                        combining repression and
                        encouragement, boycott and flattery,
                        

                it was able to control
                

                        and assimilate every "rebel"
                        movement in art and raise it to
                        the level of official "recognition."
                        But each time this
                        "recognition" betokened, when all is
                        

                said and done, the
                

                        approach of trouble. It was then
                        that from the left wing of
                        the academic school or below it -
                        i.e., from the ranks of a
                        new generation of bohemian artists -
                        

                a fresher revolt would
                

                        surge up to attain in its turn,
                        after a decent interval, the
                        steps of the
                        
                        academy.
                        
                        
                        
                        Through these stages passed
                        classicism, romanticism, realism,
                        naturalism, symbolism,
                        
                        impressionism, cubism, futurism. .
                        
                        
                        
                        Nevertheless, the union of art and
                        the bourgeoisie remained
                        stable, even if not happy, only so
                        long as the bourgeoisie
                        itself took the initiative and was
                        capable of maintaining a
                        regime both politically and morally
                        

                "democratic." This was a
                

                        question of not only giving free
                        rein to artists and playing
                        up to them in every possible way,
                        but also of granting special
                        privileges to the top layer of the
                        working class, and of
                        mastering and subduing the
                        bureaucracy of the unions and
                        workers' parties. All these
                        phenomena exist in the same
                        
                        historical plane.
                        
                        
                        
                        The decline of bourgeois society
                        means an intolerable
                        exacerbation of social
                        contradictions, which are transformed
                        inevitably into personal
                        contradictions, calling forth an ever
                        more burning need for a liberating
                        art. Furthermore, a
                        declining capitalism already finds
                        itself completely incapable
                        of offering the minimum conditions
                        for the development of
                        tendencies in art which correspond,
                        

                however little, to our
                

                        epoch. It fears superstitiously
                        every new word, for it is no
                        longer a matter of corrections and
                        reforms for capitalism but
                        of
                        
                        life and death.
                        
                        
                        
                        The
                        
                        oppressed masses live their own life.
                        
                        
                        
                        Bohemianism offers too limited a
                        social base. Hence new
                        tendencies take on a more and more
                        violent character,
                        alternating between hope and
                        despair. .
                        
                        The October Revolution gave a
                        magnificent impetus to all types
                        of Soviet art. The bureaucratic
                        reaction, on the contrary, has
                        stifled artistic creation with a
                        totalitarian hand. Nothing
                        
                        surprising here!
                        
                        
                        
                        Art is basically a function of the
                        nerves and demands complete
                        sincerity. Even the art of the court
                        

                of absolute monarchies
                

                        was based on idealization but not on
                        

                falsification. The
                

                        official art of the Soviet Union -
                        and there is no other over
                        there - resembles totalitarian
                        justice, that is to say, it is
                        based on lies and deceit. The goal
                        of justice, as of art, is
                        to exalt the "leader," to fabricate
                        

                a heroic myth. Human
                

                        history has never seen anything to
                        equal this in scope and
                        
                        impudence. .
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        The style of present-day official
                        Soviet painting is called
                        "socialist realism." The name itself
                        

                has evidently been
                

                        invented by some high functionary in
                        

                the department of the
                

                        arts. This
                        
                        "realism"
                        
                        
                        
                        consists in the imitation of
                        provincial daguerreotypes of the
                        third quarter of the last century;
                        the "socialist" character
                        apparently consists in representing,
                        

                in the manner of
                

                        pretentious photography, events
                        which never took place. It is
                        impossible to read Soviet verse and
                        

                prose without physical
                

                        disgust, mixed with horror, or to
                        look at reproductions of
                        paintings and sculpture in which
                        functionaries armed with
                        pens, brushes, and scissors, under
                        the supervision of
                        functionaries armed with Mausers,
                        glorify the "great" and
                        
                        "brilliant"
                        
                        
                        
                        leaders, actually devoid of the
                        least spark of genius or
                        greatness. The art of the Stalinist
                        

                period will remain as the
                

                        frankest expression of the profound
                        

                decline of the proletarian
                


                        revolution. .
                        
                        
                        
                        The real crisis of civilization is
                        above all the crisis of
                        revolutionary leadership. Stalinism
                        

                is the greatest element of
                

                        reaction in this crisis. Without a
                        new flag and a new program
                        it is impossible to create a
                        revolutionary mass base;
                        consequently it is impossible to
                        rescue society from its
                        dilemma. But a truly revolutionary
                        party is neither able nor
                        willing to take upon itself the task
                        

                of "leading" and even
                

                        less of commanding art, either
                        before or after the conquest of
                        power. Such a pretension could only
                        

                enter the head of a
                

                        bureaucracy - ignorant and impudent,
                        

                intoxicated with its
                

                        totalitarian power - which has
                        become the antithesis of the
                        proletarian revolution. Art, like
                        science, not only does not
                        seek
                        
                        orders, but by its very essence,
                        cannot tolerate them.
                        
                        
                        
                        Artistic creation has its laws -
                        even when it consciously
                        serves a social movement. Truly
                        intellectual creation is
                        incompatible with lies, hypocrisy
                        and the spirit of conformity.
                        Art can become a strong ally of
                        revolution only insofar as it
                        remains faithful to itself. Poets,
                        painters, sculptors and
                        musicians will themselves find their
                        

                own approach and methods,
                

                        if the struggle for freedom of
                        oppressed classes and peoples
                        scatters the clouds of skepticism
                        and of pessimism which cover
                        the horizon of mankind. The first
                        condition of this
                        regeneration is the overthrow of the
                        

                domination of the Kremlin
                


                        bureaucracy.
                        
                        
                        
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