essaysbysean.blogspot.com
You just never know.
If you are trying to be any sort of artist, of paint, print or song, then you just never know what the public
will like. Sometimes, it just doesn’t make sense.
I remember a young bookstore owner:
Greek features, long dark hair, thin, a good lady who loved wine and chocolate
with a good romance film or novel. What I found exciting was how her taste for
shelving books and things, for young and old, was the same as mine. I found out
my childhood favorite The Eagle of the Ninth, in theatres last year as The Eagle, had a sequel. I guess the public, unfortunately, had different tastes,
for the store is no more.
One day I was telling her how a
manuscript of mine wasn’t doing well. She said, “Don’t give up” after telling
me of when she was attending the provincial art college, here in town. One of
her pieces had not placed at the college competition. But when she entered it
at an outside competition, she won—and even beat out a piece by her instructor!
“You just never know,” she said.
I got my start in writing at my
university student newspaper, the Gauntlet. Of course this could include
attending far away “student university press” regional conferences, for my own
knowledge and fun, mostly, but also, in theory, for taking notes and reporting
back. As I recall, one of the seminars was on staff morale and retention. We
were advised on such simple, yet new-to-us, things as having a coat rack, and a message board
with individual names. (Reporters get calls from friends and sources) A few
years later, during a discussion, at a Gauntlet staff meeting, on the value of
conferences, I mentioned this seminar. People said sweet! They rushed to
implement everything I could remember.
But when Tony Sabo looked in the
files for my report, it wasn’t there. Why not? Perhaps the staff, or the
“regime,” of that year had not only disregarded all my feedback, but had
removed my report, too. Or perhaps, after feeling foolish at being so
disregarded, and not wanting to cast pearls before swine, I had quietly taken
it back. I don’t know. To the advice of “don’t give up” we can add, “Keep a
long perspective”: The public can change.
I’m still chuckling at a sweet lady
cursing at me over the telephone. I had lent her the DVD’s for a TV series that
“wasn’t good enough” to make it for even half a season before being canceled.
Maybe to the public it was “bad,” but that wasn’t why my friend was cursing
me—it was so good! She was hooked! And now it was over! I agreed it was good,
“It’s flying off the shelves at Amazon, from word of mouth.” As you may have
guessed, I am referring to the series Firefly by Joss Whedon, the
writer-director of this year’s summer blockbuster, The Avengers. The man who
made Angel, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer, must have had such high hopes for
Firefly… but sometimes you just don’t know.
Up in Edmonton on the weekend I saw
an art house movie, Searching For Sugarman, regarding a lyrical
singer-songwriter. Afterwards, people stood in the aisles to watch the film
credits, not wanting the show to end. Believe it or not: In South Africa they
listened for decades to a musician as well regarded over there as any big
household name over here. In the documentary made overseas, Searching For
Sugarman, some Cape Town music lovers are seeking to penetrate the mystery of a
gifted artist of the late 1960’s, a man who, according to legend, committed
suicide on stage. If the world wasn’t good enough for one as beautiful as he,
then no wonder he made no more albums.
The wonder is how his albums were
heard everywhere, with every music lover in Cape Town owning them…yet…—here’s
the kicker: He was American! No, I hadn’t heard of this man, named Sixto
Rodriguez, either. During the movie I was enthralled to hear his
music, played over scenes such as pretty skylines and historical civil rights
footage; simple musical scenes without any need for fancy “shaky cam” or rapid
scene cutting. Awesome. If you have to travel to another city to see it, then
do so: the movie is worth it.
I just don’t know, here in
“Amurica,” why “we-all” wouldn’t listen to such lyrical music, so pure, so
powerful, produced right here in our own backyard.
Sometimes, I just don’t know. It
must be painful, even unto suicide, to keep creating art the world disregards.
(Stormy, starry night) Poor Vincent died without selling a single piece… they
go for millions now. Having thought so much about it, I think I’m entitled to
create a little advice: Value your day job, as your art can only benefit from
contact with the real world. Enjoy your art, regardless of this painful world,
for it is real, and it is yours. My favorite painter, August Renoir, when asked
why he still painted despite arthritis in his hand, said it best: “The pain
passes, but the beauty remains.”
Sean Crawford
As winter deepens, and Christmas draws near
Calgary
2012
Footnotes:
~My buddy Blair, an avid reader
with little use for TV, felt so moved by Firefly that he composed a review: It
is still the best review at amazon; people who don’t know he has passed away
are still commenting to thank him.
~Any thoughts?
No comments:
Post a Comment