Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Artist and Viewer

The separation of artist from audience has been something I've been thinking about recently.  To what extent do the preferences of viewers affect the kind of work I produce or offer for exhibition or purchase?  How have viewers communicated these preferences to me? Do mediators (curators, gallery owners, publishers) affect the choices and decisions I make as an artist?  Do I have a role in defining who my audience will be?

In a recent email newsletter from the Shambhala Meditation Center of Atlanta there was .included a copy of a letter written in 1974 by Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche.  I found it to be so appropriate, I include it in its entirety below.  I highlighted some sentences in bold type for emphasis.


The Dharma Art Letter

A letter written by Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche on the occasion of the Naropa Institute’s first summer program in Boulder Colorado, July 1974. Pgs. 1-2, True Perception.

The term dharma art does not mean art depicting Buddhist symbols or ideas, such as the wheel of life or the story of Gautama Buddha. Rather, dharma art refers to art that springs from a certain state of mind on the part of the artist that could be called the meditative state. It is an attitude of directness and unself-consciousness in one’s creative work.

The basic problem in artistic endeavor is the tendency to split the artist from the audience and then try to send a message from one to the other. When this happens, art becomes exhibitionism. One person may get a tremendous flash of inspiration and rush to “put it down on paper” to impress or excite others, and a more deliberate artist may strategize each step of his work in order to produce certain effects on his viewers. But no matter how well-intentioned or technically accomplished such approaches may be, they inevitably become clumsy and aggressive toward others and toward oneself.

In meditative art, the artist embodies the viewer as well as the creator of the works. Vision is not separate from operation, and there is no fear of being clumsy or failing to achieve his aspiration. He or she simply makes a painting, poem, piece of music, or whatever. In that sense, a complete novice could pick up a brush and, with the right state of mind, produce a masterpiece. It is possible, but that is a very hit-and-miss approach. In art, as in life generally, we need to study our craft, develop our skills, and absorb the knowledge and insight passed down by tradition.

But whether we have the attitude of a student who could still become more proficient in handling his materials, or the attitude of an accomplished master, when we are actually creating a work of art there is a sense of total confidence. Our message is simply one of appreciating the nature of things as they are and expressing it without any struggle of thoughts and fears. We give up aggression, both toward ourselves, that we have to make a special effort to impress people, and toward others, that we can put something over on them.

Genuine art—dharma art—is simply the activity of nonaggression.

1 comment:

  1. I arrived at your blog via a forwarded e-mail blast from the NH Art Association photo group. As someone who's informally studied Miksang, I enjoyed reading your blog entry on Dharma art. If you haven't found seeingfresh.com yet, I highly recommend it.

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