Thursday 23rd February, 2012 – Confusion Harms The Arts

I’ve touched upon my ideas on communication in the arts before in my blog postObjectivity in Art’  last December. Among other related ideas, I talked about the use of objectivity to enable an artist to see their message from the outside.  I believe this enables efficient targeting of an audience and therefore efficient communication.

I still see art as a method of communication and art’s main purpose, whether you are communicating the beauty of your subject or, for example, some kind of abstract message on nihilism and it’s relevance to today’s society: if the message is lost then what has been created is just an object or sound like any other and therefore deserves the same amount of attention as any other sound or object.

However, I don’t think that poor communication is always the lack of ability to see the bigger picture.  Sometimes people use the arts to just make money or gain respect among their peers and, for me, this is an area where a message can get confused: intentions become part of the message no matter how far removed they are.  I think that it is hard to hide the real intentions behind any action, and even if this intention is being cloaked by an artistic ideal, the real intention will still be subtly visible.  Those looking for inspiration or just soaking up experience will take all aspects of a revered source on board, and such aspects will only serve to detract attention away from the real message that is being given.  Such aspects may even harm the production of future art if, for example, people start to see money-making as a factor in the making of relevant art.

I cant really comment on why she started out but take Lady Gaga as an example.  The image she seems to project is one of sticking to values and not caring what others think of you while saying that it’s OK to be yourself.  These are very worthy ideals but the message is mixed:  is being yourself continually re-inventing yourself?  A cynic may say this a great way to keep your brand fresh but a fan may say that’s just how she is.  If this is ‘just how she is’, her music, her main method of communication doesn’t seem to follow the idea of reinvention.  The ideas may be in her lyrics but her craft is song-writing, not being a lyricist.  This leads me to not being able to take anything at all from her work, as the message given   is not very consistent at all.

These very issues are part of the reason why I don’t really follow much music at all.  A little strange for a musician, but it seems that most of the time the image comes first.  Once the image is set in place, some music is made but this generally follows taste and not whatever message the image is striving to portray.  Sometimes it is the other way around, some great music is made but to make it saleable an image is created on top of this.  Again this generally seems detached as the music and image are two are separate entities.  This could very well be an odd quirk of my personality but I believe that if you should have something to say, every part of you should be saying it, otherwise all you give out are mixed messages.  Of course, not all bands and singers (and artists etc) are like this and many marry all aspects about them to enable great singular communication of their ethos. Personally, it turns out that things interesting to me generally aren’t attached to genre or a certain media outlet so most of the time, i just cant be bothered to wade through it all!
This shows just how these mixed messages could damage art: I am probably missing out on a lot great experience by not investigating further, and I may find that there are some messages out there that I could have a valuable contribution to.  If I feel this way, I’m sure many others do too…

Thursday 1st December 2011 – Objectivity in Art

First, here is a definition:  (to be) Objective - Not influenced by personal feelings or opinions in considering and representing facts: historians try to be objective and impartial

Objectivism is something I strive towards and therefore it filters through to everything I do.  My beliefs here have nothing to do with the organised movement that calls itself Objectivism as I don’t have sufficient knowledge on what these people believe in and whether or not I fit in with that, so these ideas are just what I have thought about personally.  The space here doesn’t really do such a huge subject justice but I’m hoping this post will at least get some conversation going so I can develop my ideas further.

Anyway, Science is the search for truth about the universe; factual reality that will enable us to interact with the universe around us in a safe and efficient way.  To achieve this, Science needs to be objective.  Letting your emotions and own thoughts about a subject get in the way of fact will not tell you about that subject, only of your own perceptions of it.  If you’re unsure of the importance of these ideas or want to know more about them do have a read of science journalist and medical doctor, Ben Goldacre’s blog/newspaper column Bad Science‘.  He also wrote a book of the same name which I really recommend.

I think these ideals should spread to life in general.  It seems pretty obvious that getting angry or violent over anything that isn’t life-threatening is silly and acting on emotion in this way can be very harmful.  Next time you get angry, step outside of your own mind and see how it looks in the grand scheme of things; it’s likely the whole issue will seem more insignificant and thinking in this way will convince you to let it go.  If people think less about themselves and more about the world around them then it follows that the world will be a better place to live in.

If objectivity is important in life, to me it follows that art should be a bastion of this concept usually reserved for the sciences because it is a means of communication.  The whole point of communicating is to make others understand something so using situations and ideas that only you or a small portion of the world are familiar with is very inefficient and destroys the validity of your message (ie. trying to get an important point across using French when nobody speaks it- why are you bothering?).  Of course, it is possible that you may only want to communicate to a small number of people, making the style of communication more specialist but art as self-expression assumes the rest of the world cares about how sad you are about breaking up with your girlfriend/boyfriend.  The rest of the world may not care how sad you are but may be interested in how they can feel less sad themselves and looking objectively at reality would help solve this quandary.  Also, if art is targeting a small section of people then it needs to address them and not just be an attempt to spew the artist’s emotions out randomly into the world.  This is what gives art the reputation of being self-indulgent and elitist.  We may even see that the right art marketed to the right crowd would progress the artists far more as effort would be spent communicating to the people that are relevant and not just targeting people randomly (musicians are usually guilty of this!).

Also, art to be something that communicates the objective state of the world to the people in it seems to make more sense to me in a moral sense.  In this case, art wouldn’t convey issues that are incorrect as it will be based on fact and also be less of a vehicle for those that just want to manipulate others for whatever gain they may be interested in (think about how Simon Cowell calls his singers ‘artists’ and the actual, true focus of what his shows are about). This is far more abstract in terms of art conveying objectivity, but if objective thinking is used in art, it’s use would filter into other walks of life.  This means that misinformation and people manipulating others through making up their own ‘facts’ would become more scarce as people in general would have been given the tools to sort out the correct from the incorrect and manipulative.  Also, if an artist thinks about their work in an objective manner it will allow them to figure out to whom their work is actually targeted.  If you think this reeks of ‘selling-out’ because it seems a bit like marketing, think about those men and women that wander the streets shouting random phrases at people and then think about how society treats them…