Big Words, Bigger Ideas

lasso.jpg

I'm cruising (okay, okay, more like trudging) through the end of next week's blogger book club book: The Invisible Dragon, by Dave Hickey. I've found it to be a great read, brimming with ideas I want to try out in the context of music, but it's also been a challenge. There are a considerable number of visual art scene insider references and grad-school vocabulary words. Seriously, it's really only at times like these that I think I may have missed out by passing on getting an advanced degree. I haven't done a lot of reading or argument analysis in this style of rhetoric, as the pace at which I have consumed this slim 120-page volume attests.

Still, Hickey's thinking has brought out some interesting concepts that I'm greatly looking forward to exploring with the gang next week. I'll give you a taste of what we're in for with this quote from the book's final essay (One of the more easily digestible ones, promise):

As Americans, we are citizens of a large, secular, commercial democracy; we are relentlessly borne forth on the flux of historical change, routinely flung laterally by the exigencies of dreams and commerce. We are bereft of the internalized commonalities of race, culture, language, region, and religion that traditionally define "peoples." As such we are social creatures charged with inventing the conditions of our sociability out of the fragile resource of our private pleasures and secret desires. So, lacking the terms for communication, we correlate. We gather around icons from the worlds of fashion, sports, the arts, and entertainment as we would about the hearth. We trace infinite lines of transit around these strange attractors. We organize ourselves in nonexclusive communities of desire. We stay or go according to the whims of romance or the climate of the times. This "weather map" model of social organization may be construed as beguiling or appalling, but there us no denying its efficacy, its appropriateness, or its provenance.

Okay, yeah, obviously. But still, isn't that a concept that our average audience expansion and development initiatives in the arts seem never to have fully acknowledged/integrated? Enjoyed, when it happens for them, sure, but not really taken advantage of or (successfully, artificially) engineered. Maybe it can't be, but something about The Bachelorette still being on the air makes me think it can.

June 16, 2009 8:14 AM | | Comments (1)

Categories:

1 Comments

I agree that it is possible but I don't believe the arts are ready to make it happen. The decades-old marketing model we use is rigidly linear and top-down. We package our messages (usually into neat rectangles), place them in media and send them to the public.

But this model calls for a fluid, immersive, holistic, flexible, non-linear approach that has no hierarchy, no defined shape and no 'direct lines of communication.'

Until we're ready to live in this messy, erratic, impulsive, fleeting, populist world and learn to use its own intrinsic energy to nudge and cajole it (I don’t think engineering is the right metaphor), we’re probably not going to coalesce the communities of desire we think we deserve.

Leave a comment

Blogger Book Club II

Coming June 22-26: The bloggers start in on this summer's non-required reading list and discuss The Invisible Dragon: Essays on Beauty, Revised and Expanded by Dave Hickey

- Blogger Book Club II: Painfully Normal and Incredibly Sincere
- Blogger Book Club II: Something I Liked
- Blogger Book Club II: I don't know if she's beautiful, but she's HOT
- Blogger Book Club II: Two-Lane Flattop
- Blogger Book Club II: Does a Dragon Eat Its Tail?

more entries

Blogger Book Club

March 16-20: Bloggers discuss Lawrence Lessig's Remix: Making Art and Commerce Thrive in the Hybrid Economy Participants: Marc Geelhoed Steve Smith Alex Shapiro Matthew Guerrieri Marc Weidenbaum Corey Dargel Brian Sacawa Lisa Hirsch

- Blogger Book Club: We Love Amateurs
- Blogger Book Club: Bangers and Mash-ups
- Blogger Book Club: Taking What They're Giving, 'Cause I'm Working For a Living
- Blogger Book Club: The Art of Imitation
- Blogger Book Club: Dust In the Wind

more entries

Me Elsewhere

Blogroll

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Mind the Gap published on June 16, 2009 8:14 AM.

Messages from the Future was the previous entry in this blog.

The Art of Lady Gaga is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

AJ Ads

Introducing
AJ Arts Blog Ads

Now you can reach the most discerning arts blog readers on the internet. Target individual blogs or topics in the ArtsJournal ad network.

Advertise Here

AJ Blogs

AJBlogCentral | rss

culture
About Last Night
Terry Teachout on the arts in New York City
Artful Manager
Andrew Taylor on the business of arts & culture
blog riley
rock culture approximately
critical difference
Laura Collins-Hughes on arts, culture and coverage
Dewey21C
Richard Kessler on arts education
diacritical
Douglas McLennan's blog
Dog Days
Dalouge Smith advocates for the Arts
Flyover
Art from the American Outback
Life's a Pitch
For immediate release: the arts are marketable
Mind the Gap
No genre is the new genre
Performance Monkey
David Jays on theatre and dance
Plain English
Paul Levy measures the Angles
Real Clear Arts
Judith H. Dobrzynski on Culture
Rockwell Matters
John Rockwell on the arts
Straight Up |
Jan Herman - arts, media & culture with 'tude

dance
Foot in Mouth
Apollinaire Scherr talks about dance
Seeing Things
Tobi Tobias on dance et al...

jazz
Jazz Beyond Jazz
Howard Mandel's freelance Urban Improvisation
ListenGood
Focus on New Orleans. Jazz and Other Sounds
Rifftides
Doug Ramsey on Jazz and other matters...

media
Out There
Jeff Weinstein's Cultural Mixology
Serious Popcorn
Martha Bayles on Film...

classical music
Creative Destruction
Fresh ideas on building arts communities
The Future of Classical Music?
Greg Sandow performs a book-in-progress
On the Record
Exploring Orchestras w/ Henry Fogel
Overflow
Harvey Sachs on music, and various digressions
PianoMorphosis
Bruce Brubaker on all things Piano
PostClassic
Kyle Gann on music after the fact
Sandow
Greg Sandow on the future of Classical Music
Slipped Disc
Norman Lebrecht on Shifting Sound Worlds

publishing
book/daddy
Jerome Weeks on Books
Quick Study
Scott McLemee on books, ideas & trash-culture ephemera

theatre
Drama Queen
Wendy Rosenfield: covering drama, onstage and off
lies like truth
Chloe Veltman on how culture will save the world

visual
Aesthetic Grounds
Public Art, Public Space
Another Bouncing Ball
Regina Hackett takes her Art To Go
Artopia
John Perreault's art diary
CultureGrrl
Lee Rosenbaum's Cultural Commentary
Modern Art Notes
Tyler Green's modern & contemporary art blog
Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.