Zen and the Art of Self-Satisfaction

This review of The Artist’s Way was published first in the Baffler, then on my old group blog Eaten By Ducks, and is here again for those missed it the first couple of times. (I think this is, by the by, the first piece of criticism for which I was ever paid.)

Though The Artist’s Way claims “to tap into the higher power that connects human creativity with the creative energies of the universe,” what it really taps into is the same old shit. More specifically, The Artist’s Way sounds, at times, exactly like contemporary poetry; at other times like economic theory; and at still other times like a combination of management consultant jargon, NPR commentary, and friendly academic feminist anthropology. There are, in fact, several bleak moments in which The Artist’s Way sounds like all of these, and like everything else as well. Yet despite the motherload of verbal detritus which spills from its pages, the book never once compromises its truly awesome vacuity. It seems determined to make as little as possible from as much as possible: an ambition which, while amusing at first, quickly becomes seriously disorienting. The unwary reader may begin to feel that all that he has ever read or thought has been designed with the nefarious purpose of leading him to The Artist’s Way , and there abandoning him. One finds oneself clutching the edges of the book a bit too hard, as if to prevent oneself from pitching forward into the page and falling forever into a bottomless and eerily familiar abyss.
It is an abyss which has already swallowed a large number of people. Originally published in 1992, The Artist’s Way was marketed as “a spiritual path to higher creativity” — a workbook for anyone who wanted to learn to become an artist. Since then, it has sold over a million copies, inspired numerous sequels, and been praised by many artists, including singer Kathy Mattea, who credits it with giving her a “new direction.” It’s basic thesis — that everyone, deep down, is an artist — has proved enormously popular: almost as popular as such better-known theses as “everyone, deep down, is equal,” and “everyone, deep down, is free.” These slogans are noteworthy not because they are inspirational, beautiful, or true, but because they are self-fulfilling. To say, with our founding fathers, that everyone, deep down, is equal is to ignore all those people who, up here, on the surface, clearly aren’t. To say with The Artist’s Way that everyone is an artist is, therefore, to be guilty of more than stupidity; it is to be guilty of willful blindness, and manifest bad faith. Indeed, The Artist’s Way genuflects to the zeitgeist with such cunning efficiency that it attains a grandeur usually associated only with epoch-making documents like The Constitution of the United States and The Valley of the Dolls.
The Artist’s Way is written — to the extent that such a book can be said to be written — by Julia Cameron, with the help of Mark Bryan. Mark Bryan is Cameron’s former husband and an expert in “business creativity,” which is all, I think, that needs to be said about him. Julia Cameron — or “Little Julie” as she sometimes calls herself — has an even more improbable past; she is a recovering alcoholic, Martin Scorcese’s ex-wife, and a one-time writer for Rolling Stone, in approximately that order. That neither Cameron nor Bryan is an artist in the conventional sense may explain their utter disrespect for art in all its forms. Indeed, they seem to hate art, with a shallow, condescending hatred reminiscent of those grammar school teachers who loathe the unfortunate pupils they so mercilessly praise.
Duplicitous philistinism is, of course, a typically American vice, and notwithstanding its Mt. Fuji cover, The Artist’s Way is a very American book. Like most self-help gurus, Julia Cameron has an American belief in the efficacy of individual action coupled with an even more American contempt for the individual: everyone, she argues, can learn to be successful, because everyone is a failure to begin with. “[W]e are all creative,” she tells us in one breath, and then in the next, “all of us are [blocked] to some extent.” We are all, in other words, failing to live up to our full potential as artists, much as welfare mothers fail to live up to their potential as entrepreneurs. This, naturally, is where Cameron’s book comes in — job training, as it were, for the aesthetically underprivileged.
Like job training, too, The Artist’s Way, teaches no actual skills. Cameron avoids making even the most basic suggestions about the mechanisms of art — nowhere does she indicate, for instance, that painters should learn how to mix paint, or that violinists need to practice regularly, or that poets should, at least occasionally, read poetry. This is because Cameron doesn’t think of art as a craft, or even as a hobby — she thinks of it, instead, as a health issue. If you are not an artist, you are unwell; to become an artist therefore requires not practice, but convalescence and “recovery.” Cameron does not want to teach — she wants to “daub and soothe and cool,” and, in accordance with this desire, she has crafted a program based loosely on her own experience with Alcoholics Anonymous. Through twelve easy steps, blocked artists recovers a sense of “safety,” “power,” “abundance” — a sense, in other words, that they have a rightful place at the center of the universe. This centrality is literal, not figurative: God himself is an artist, Cameron maintains, and “artists like other artists.” With friends in such high places, one might think that artists were a pretty hardy group, but this is not the case: Cameron’s book takes it for granted that the artist is barely held together by “self-nurturing” and self-pity. Spend quality time alone with your own “inner artist-child,” Cameron says, or the little fella will curl up and die. Buy yourself “luxuries” like expensive perfume and “gold stick-’em stars” or your creativity will wither. Do what you want because “Artists cannot be held to anybody else’s standards!” A good first act of self-assertion, Cameron suggests, might be dyeing your hair. (Cameron does not suggest getting a tattoo — presumably this would be too far out, even for artists.)
Given their frailty, it should come as no surprise that criticism is very dangerous to most artists. Some criticism, Cameron reluctantly admits, can be useful, but most is “artistic child abuse,” and “all that can be done with abusive criticism is to heal from it.” As damaging as criticism from others is, however, self-criticism is worse. Artists need to think with their “artist brain,” not with their “logic brain.” The “Censor” — the part of the mind which criticizes artistic output — needs to be outwitted, and the way to do this is through the “morning pages”: three pages of stream-of-consciousness writing to be done every morning for the rest of your life. To write morning pages, you put down on paper whatever comes into your head, without going back over it. In other words, the morning pages are freewriting, a staple of high school English courses, and a well-established way for writers to generate ideas. For Cameron, though “morning pages” are not the beginning of the writing process; they are, rather, a metaphor for all artistic endeavor. Art comes out of people naturally and unreflectively, like urine. The artist should not think about his work; he should, as minor filmmaker Martin Ritt says, “just do it.” Cameron quotes Ritt several times in her book; she also quotes just about everyone else, from Oscar Wilde to Albert Einstein to Duke Ellington. She does not, however, quote Jonathan Swift, nor James Baldwin, nor Public Enemy, nor, for that matter, any other satirists or social critics. The reason is clear enough: for people like James Baldwin art is a form of thought, a way of engaging society by criticizing it, arguing with it, and challenging it. For Julia Cameron, on the other hand, art takes place outside of thought, outside of society, in a pseudo-Zen emptiness which would chill its inhabitants’ blood if any of them could feel.
Cameron, of course, believes that she feels. To what has she sacrificed thought, history, and insight, if not to feeling? “Use your anxiety,” she urges, “use your anger….gain in compassion by reparenting your wounded artist-child.” Cameron believes that the artist should luxuriate in feeling, licking his dry lips in anticipation of each original emotional quiver. Unfortunately, such quivers are rarely either original or emotional — save in the cramped, desperate way in which masturbation is emotional. Nothing exists in a vacuum, and feelings are no exception. One cannot disconnect art from society and expect it to be rewarding, emotionally or otherwise. Compare Kate Chopin, for example, with somebody like Jack Kerouac. Kerouac is arguably the better writer — he has, at least, a better ear for language than Chopin does. But Chopin’s stories are grounded in American society: in the ways in which Americans of different classes, races, and genders relate to one another. Kerouac, on the other hand, has nothing to talk about but his own peeved rebelliousness — against what it is never clear — and his vague desire to get away from everyone else so he can nurse his injuries in private. As a result, Chopin’s writing is exhilarating, thought-provoking, funny, and occasionally moving, while the only emotion Kerouac inspires is a sort of lukewarm distrust — a vague wish that he had taken the whole “on the road” thing a bit more seriously and had gone far, far away, preferably to a land without typewriters.
Today, alas, Chopin is largely ignored while Kerouac is a cultural icon whose banality and glibness seem in large part responsible for his popularity. Certainly Cameron’s banality and glibness have stood her in good stead: The Artist’s Way has made her a millionaire. American artists, it seems, desperately want to believe that they are outside society — that they are, on the one hand, persecuted by their culture and, on the other, that they are connected to a secret, special source of power which makes them superior to their crass, misguided peers. Like Jesus or John Wayne, the artist wants to be both the persecuted outsider and the savior, both despised and worshipped. You must acknowledge and heal the injuries inflicted by those around you, Cameron tells her eager audience, so that you can become better than all of them.
Yet, though Cameron’s artists are free of all social connections, they are also rather helplessly bourgeois. Art does not pay very well, and its practitioners, therefore, tend to be people who can afford to be frivolous. Among those who have successfully used The Artist’s Way, according to Cameron are “Edwin, a miserable millionaire…Timothy, a …curmudgeon millionaire,” and “Phyllis, a leggy, racehorse socialite.” A large part of the purpose of The Artist’s Way, then, is to reassure Edwin, Timothy and Phyllis that, despite their vast wealth, they are really very nice; indeed, they are enormously talented and wonderful. The reason that they feel worthless is not because they have built their lives on treachery, deceit, and callousness, but because they were unjustly “wounded” by parents, teachers, and friends who told them that they could not have absolutely everything they wanted. The reason that things come easily to them is not because they are rich, but because the universe is organized to benefit artistic people like themselves. “…God is unlimited in supply and everyone has equal access… we deprive no one with our abundance,” says Cameron. Through bitter experience, the people of the world have come to learn that such slogans are not a promise but a threat. They know that when we say that they are our equals, what we really mean is that we will take from them whatever we desire, and that we will not be sorry.
Some might argue that all of this is beside the point. The Artist’s Way is, after all, a self-help book, not a philosophical treatise. It does not claim to offer political insight: what it claims is that it will make us more creative, and that it will make us happy. Most people who pick up The Artist’s Way don’t want to know if the book is good or bad; they want to know if it will help them — that is, if it works. Many of us tend to forget that the list of things which work is long and not particularly glorious. Capitalism works. So does western medicine, fascism, advertising, and polling. So does slavery. Anything, in fact, will work, as long as you believe in it. But few Americans accept this. Instead we have allowed economists and therapists to convince us that the only way to judge everything from ideology to art to detergent is on the basis of whether it works and whether it makes us happy.
Let me say in its defense, then, that The Artist’s Way works, and that it will make you happy. Some day, I feel certain, it will work so well that, across the country, men and women everywhere will rise, write their morning pages, and spend the rest of the day brimming with creative energy. On that day, painters, writers, performance artists and filmmakers will blissfully explore their childhood traumas and arrive at public healing strategies. Policemen will be filled with joy as they inventively and playfully beat a black man who has wandered into a gated community. Photographers will take rich, zesty pictures of anorexics, and publishers will think up exciting ways to convince female readers that they should look like those models. Lawyers heady with God-flow will brainstorm ways to legally drop people from the rolls of HMOs. But more than that, I see a day when the black man who is beaten doesn’t mind, and the women who starves herself doesn’t mind, and the cancerous child without health insurance doesn’t mind either. For they, too, will be cultivating their own creativity. The man will aesthetically modulate his screams and be happy. The women will stick her fingers down her throat, vomit in an attractive pattern, and be happy. And the child’s brain will be slowly, inevitably, and painlessly eaten away, as across his face spreads a comforting and meaningless smile.

Edra Soto and Arriver

Last week I reviewed a show by Edra Soto at Rowland Contemporary for the Chicago Reader. Here’s the full review:

Identity art tends to be repetitively earnest–my ethnicity is spiritual! my people have suffered!–but Edra Soto realizes that putting your tongue in your cheek can stimulate your brain. Though her new show at Rowland Contemporary–“The Chacon-Soto Show: Featuring ‘The Greatest Companions'”–ostensibly focuses on Iris Chacon, an iconic Puerto Rican TV star, Chacon is almost never glimpsed. A bunch of apelike action figures with painted masks perch on a filing cabinet in one corner of the space, while giant, labial paper flowers squat before the gallery attendant’s table. The paintings on the wall mostly feature anonymous simians and the occasional fluffy dog, all flamboyantly dressed and gyrating on nightclub stages that vanish into garish abstractions. Everything drips tackiness–except, surprisingly, the faces of the apes in the paintings, which are sharply and evocatively rendered. Here a she-ape kicks up her hindquarters with a look of exquisite delight, there an apparently adolescent missing link furrows his brow in what looks like constipation. Elsewhere two females bend over provocatively, their faces obscured, while in the background lurks a blurred, masked figure. What would we see if they turned toward us? Are they human or not? In the context of the room, their identity becomes not a celebration or even a statement but a question–funny, sexy, mysterious, and more than a little uncomfortable.

Lot’s of great images from the show at Edra’s blog here

I also reviewed the fabulous Chicago metal outfit Arriver (coincidentally, the band of Dan Sullivan, Edra’s husband.) Here’s a slightly longer version of the review that ran in the Reader.

Getting older means significant others, kids, jobs, and not a ton of time to spend writing preposterously intricate metal songs and practicing them till you’re so tight it hurts. Don’t tell that to the guys in Arriver though; guitarists Dan Sullivan, and Dan MacAdam, bassist Rob Sullivan, and new-to-this-band drummer Joe Kaplan (Viza Noir) have been playing together in various combinations and under various names for more than a decade, now, and they have no intention of stopping. Their second album, scheduled hopefully for sometime next year, will include not one but two rock operettas: the first about the Russo-Japanese war and the second about Simon Mann, a British officer who engineered a failed coup in Equatorial Guinea. Whatever the topic, though, their music is a smorgasbord of heavy, touching on doom, thrash, and prog, with just enough classic rock heroism thrown in to give it a “fuck-you” swagger. A thunderous new song titled “Simon Mann” keeps trying to lock into a stolid trudge and then lurching into jerky rhythms and weird dissonances, like a death metal band suffering a series of painful seizures. It just goes to show that middle-age doesn’t have to turn you into an embarrassing dinosaur. Instead you can get smarter, more accomplished, and more disciplined as you march towards the perfect metal apocalypse.

At Last, Head Shop Posters Made of Garlic

A fellow in England named Carl Warner assembles tableaux, very elaborate tableaux, from common foodstuffs. The pieces resemble landscape paintings (plus the occasional still life) and are the damnedest things. You can see 14 of them here.

For the leadoff I chose one that might be a trippy prog-rock album cover. There are some others in that vein, but most of the pieces are more traditional. Warning: all of the works are lush stuff, so stay away if you have a low banality threshold. Also stay away if you’re weirded out by camp mimicry.

Via Andrew Sullivan and Ezra Klein.

UPDATE: Holy, shit, there are two people in England doing this crap. I guess everyone got tired of writing good comics.

The other one is named Gayle Chong Kwan and a few of her works are here, along with some pointless photos of London Metro crowds looking at the works. You’ll see that Ms. Kwan doesn’t try to fool the eye the way Mr. Warner does. Her stuff is obviously a lot of pasta arranged with care. You’re supposed to experience the food on its own terms even while it functions within … oh, never mind. The title of her exhibition is Cockaigne, after the magic medieval land of food everywhere. Kind of a pretentious choice, but she put in the time gluing pasta and she did it well, so she can be forgiven.

Ms. Kwan comes to us by way of a commenter at Ezra Klein’s site. Thanks, Marc!

UPDATE: Now it’s knitting. Again by way of Andrew Sullivan, who I’m beginning to suspect is homosexual.

Why It’s Tough to Be an Interviewer

I’m reading I Am Not Spock by Leonard Nimoy. From it:

While being interviewed by Dick Cavett, Katherine Hepburn said: “You come into town with your box of goodies and that box of goodies is you, and you start to use it and sell it and eventually the box of goodies gets used up and then you must go back to something else to fill up the box with some new goodies.”

Imagine listening to her deliver that whole sentence in her quacking Katherine Hepburn voice. How could anyone do it and not tell her to shut up?

Two Hangings.

Lately I’ve been thinking not of Noah, but an article of his in TCJ #291 on fine artists Ryan Christian and Neil Whitacre. Lazy executive summary: they cross-pollinate with comics– go look.

Two exhibits now at the Cincinnati Art Museum present two more artists ripe for cross-pollination. I’d love to see what kind of comics they’d do, or you’d do after seeing them.

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First, Ryan McGinness fills a room with blacklights and canvasses. Big in Japan, McGinness is well known to Giant Robot readers and design fans. Aesthetic Comfort overflows with his trademark icons– like the blue man of the restroom, except it’s a stormtrooper and a skater.

As if to put the lie to Damien Hirst’s spin paintings, McGinness turns in three large discs overflowing onto the wall. Each holds dozens of silkscreened images, repeated over and over. His fluorescent acrylic colors can’t be reproduced digitally, and each icon rests on layers of other icons, layers of paint. It certainly makes the notional rather tactile.

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Upstairs, Ji?í Anderle has prints. Drypoint, mezzotint, etching. I bought the catalogue like a sinner, because the book’s printing loses all the glorious details of where paper met the plate. (And the pages aren’t three feet tall.)

Anderle, one of the few in the Czech avant-garde who occasionally got out of the country under Communism, draws half Old Master, half avant-garde. Since this blog’s on comics, I can point to Barron Storey and his lineage, like Bill Sienkiewicz and Dave McKean. The media are different, and Storey et al. draw from punk rock as much as Klimt. But they all share radical experimentation based on a classical foundation. (And Anderle’s 1980s series of Commedia dell’arte images have a grotesque king presaging Metalzoic-era Kevin O’Neill, the only artist whose style itself got rejected by the Comics Code). But while comics (and its printing processes) treat each image as a commodity for the narrative, Anderle’s reward deeper looking.

I want to write more on Anderle. On his minute steps through space and time, punning on the states of an etching. But I need a few more hours with the prints. Fortunately, Illusion and Reality runs until January 4 and costs nothing.
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And while I would like to see both these artists do a comic or two, Anderle’s contemporary Jan Krej?í did at least a page:

More Leftwing Comics

I was complaining about them here. Now there comes news that Japan will produce a manga version of Das Kapital. Will it be better than Howard Zinn’s American Empire? Not likely, because all manga sucks (bid for controversy). The Independent reports here.

(I should note that the link comes by way of Ezra Klein.)

A Holy Event in the Spiral of Life

Again we sample From Sawdust to Stardust: The Biography of DeForest Kelley, Star Trek’s Dr. McCoy. (See here for the last sampling.) I was going to call the post “Pseuds Corner,” but that’s been done. Anyway, the author isn’t a pseud. What she shares with us isn’t pretension, just the authentic wonder of her soul.

A reflection on Star Trek III:

The new energy created an archetypal gravity now invested in the three heroes and their story. The Star Trek crew had crossed from static icon to active mythology through the passion play, once introduced in 1968 with “The Empath.”

I especially like bringing in “The Empath.” (Good episode!) Because she figures it’s where the Star Trek passion play got started and she wants us to be clear on that point. She’s conscientious.

Fans worried that Star Trek III downplayed women. But the author feels they missed the point because, after all, the Enterprise blew up in that movie:

The Enterprise herself was a mother goddess. The mother’s sacrifice for the sake of the children is one of the oldest and highest myths of ancient humanity. The Enterprise destroyed herself so that the crew might live on, a holy event in the spiral of life.

And it is. A holy event in the spiral of life produced by Harve Bennett. So you know it was on budget.