On 08/16/2013 07:18 PM, James Harkins wrote:
Ralf wrote:
There's a difference between art and tools
released for the public.
Art, excepted of the crap on the radio, should not suit to
anything.
Interesting comment, off topic from the original thread so I'll spawn a
new one.
I don't entirely agree that art should not suit to anything. I come to
feel more and more that art doesn't exist without a subculture, and
people make art/music/fashion etc to appeal to one or more subcultures.
There are possible exceptions (Harry Partsch, perhaps) but I'd argue
those are extremely rare.
Many western classical composers in the early twentieth century argued
for "music for its own sake" -- music that captures a glimpse of the
Eternal and thus whose artistic merit transcends human relationships.
But of course, it's all tap-room banter without a community of musicians
and listeners who agree with that idea! So this was just another musical
culture (which sought to pretend that it was beyond culture).
This is, of course, not to say that artists must obey subcultural
expectations and have no autonomy. Most (western) musical subcultures
value surprise (except the aforementioned generic radio pop). I think
artistic autonomy is always in a balance, or tension, with the artist's
chosen scene. One of the decisions an artist has to make is where to
position herself on the continuum between participating in a musical
community (adhering to its standards) and critiquing its norms or
expanding the subculture's boundaries. Many are not aware that this is a
choice -- hence the bands or singers who sound just like everybody else
in the genre. But part of my point is that participating in a musical
culture is not "less than" breaking molds.
All this is from a western perspective, of course. Some non-European
musical cultures (I'm thinking of the amazing music of the Aka pygmies)
seem to place no value at all on individual autonomy in music... that
is, autonomy is not a universal value.
In the Western music history, music was very much part of the culture
and community (not a subculture!), universally part of building cultural
cohesion. Look at folk and dance music going way back. Modern example,
for me, is square dance music. The "modern" disco-style emphasis on
individuals standing out is a late arriving alien.
Nothing made by humans is beyond culture, since all humans are embedded
in at least one culture. Even if an individual is rebelling against
their culture, their rebellion is formed by the culture they're
rebelling against.
My non-musical artist daughter says that if a piece of art doesn't
communicate, it's not art; it's just a "spot on the wall."
--
David
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community
http://dancingtreefrog.com
http://clanjones.org/david/
http://dancing-treefrog.deviantart.com/