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We need art to inspire work.
Everybody needs work.
Right now, we need art to inspire work.
Here's how it happens:
First, humans find themselves on earth. We're like, "Get busy; survive. Gather stuff to eat."
We learn a few things along the way. We plant seeds, instead of just finding them already in the ground. We manage. This becomes agriculture, man's first industry.
That's part of it. Meanwhile, our neighbor down the road, across the street or across town or across the ocean, is doing something different: there's animal husbandry--raising animals for their milk or meat, not to mention their dung (valuable stuff, that dung.)
There's mining, metallurgy, mercantilism, chemistry, industry and study.
Humans use their intelligence to manage earth resources--minerals,plants and animals. We devise ways to increase yields, making our efforts and our resources more productive. Old-fashion way of managing agriculture was done through accumulated generational farmer smarts and responsible stewardship of the land and its resources. In the modern way of doing things, this could mean genetic engineering. We shall see how all that pans out. Some folks are not into it. They'd rather have God's little acre and organics. Hopefully we can maintain a society where techies and earthies can coexist and not ruin each others' trip. We get along.
We innovate. We invent tools. We fine-tune things. This is art; art is not just something that hangs on the wall at the Met.
When man has more produce and goods that he, his family and/or community, can consume, there is surplus. What to do with it? Save it for leaner times. Fine. Some stuff doesn't save so well, or could be put to better use by some other person or entity.
Trade surplus for other stuff. This is very important. It's the basis of commerce, economics and modern life.
Surplus accumulated and well-managed becomes wealth. Wealth on your day(s) or week(s) off becomes leisure. Does leisure produce anything? Yes.
Art.
Art is the human's response to having a little free time.
A few thousand years pass by. Cut to the chase: Modern society has arranged for folks' needs to be met collectively. We have devised various systems for doing this--capitalism, communism, and everything in between. That's oversimplifying it, but blogosphere denizens prefer simplicity.
But here's the rub. Once we've established economic systems, it turns out that everything works in cycles: day and night, sunrise/sunset, rise and fall of tides, seasons, spring planting and fall harvest. Just like the old days. Economics is no exception to every other activity in the world. Boom or bust, like it or not. Shit happens. So we're deep in it now.
Got job?
What our present cycle is revealing is that our era of financed leisure is over. Kaput. Our levels of languor, our revels of being being entertained on the couch are tanking. The easy money is spent. This lifestyle maintained for too long by too many has become unsustainable.
Unsustainable:
Time to get back to work. And if you don't have a job, can't find one, now is the time to stop waiting around for something to happen. The government may bail you out somewhat with some fake money, but the real question is: What are you going to do with your life? Get busy finding new ways to make your life productive. That's where the art to inspire work comes in.
Art is life; life is art. Get creative. Get busy. What can you do today to improve the life of yourself, your family, loved ones, community, nation?
Carey Rowland, author of Glass Chimera
Right now, we need art to inspire work.
Here's how it happens:
First, humans find themselves on earth. We're like, "Get busy; survive. Gather stuff to eat."
We learn a few things along the way. We plant seeds, instead of just finding them already in the ground. We manage. This becomes agriculture, man's first industry.
That's part of it. Meanwhile, our neighbor down the road, across the street or across town or across the ocean, is doing something different: there's animal husbandry--raising animals for their milk or meat, not to mention their dung (valuable stuff, that dung.)
There's mining, metallurgy, mercantilism, chemistry, industry and study.
Humans use their intelligence to manage earth resources--minerals,plants and animals. We devise ways to increase yields, making our efforts and our resources more productive. Old-fashion way of managing agriculture was done through accumulated generational farmer smarts and responsible stewardship of the land and its resources. In the modern way of doing things, this could mean genetic engineering. We shall see how all that pans out. Some folks are not into it. They'd rather have God's little acre and organics. Hopefully we can maintain a society where techies and earthies can coexist and not ruin each others' trip. We get along.
We innovate. We invent tools. We fine-tune things. This is art; art is not just something that hangs on the wall at the Met.
When man has more produce and goods that he, his family and/or community, can consume, there is surplus. What to do with it? Save it for leaner times. Fine. Some stuff doesn't save so well, or could be put to better use by some other person or entity.
Trade surplus for other stuff. This is very important. It's the basis of commerce, economics and modern life.
Surplus accumulated and well-managed becomes wealth. Wealth on your day(s) or week(s) off becomes leisure. Does leisure produce anything? Yes.
Art.
Art is the human's response to having a little free time.
A few thousand years pass by. Cut to the chase: Modern society has arranged for folks' needs to be met collectively. We have devised various systems for doing this--capitalism, communism, and everything in between. That's oversimplifying it, but blogosphere denizens prefer simplicity.
But here's the rub. Once we've established economic systems, it turns out that everything works in cycles: day and night, sunrise/sunset, rise and fall of tides, seasons, spring planting and fall harvest. Just like the old days. Economics is no exception to every other activity in the world. Boom or bust, like it or not. Shit happens. So we're deep in it now.
Got job?
What our present cycle is revealing is that our era of financed leisure is over. Kaput. Our levels of languor, our revels of being being entertained on the couch are tanking. The easy money is spent. This lifestyle maintained for too long by too many has become unsustainable.
Unsustainable:
Time to get back to work. And if you don't have a job, can't find one, now is the time to stop waiting around for something to happen. The government may bail you out somewhat with some fake money, but the real question is: What are you going to do with your life? Get busy finding new ways to make your life productive. That's where the art to inspire work comes in.
Art is life; life is art. Get creative. Get busy. What can you do today to improve the life of yourself, your family, loved ones, community, nation?
Carey Rowland, author of Glass Chimera
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Oh, crap, no offense. Workers have increased their productivity while their (our) wages declined. I can just picture the Soviet-style wall art. If you want to say, "Put arists to work creating Art in the public shere, I will buy that.
October 23, 2009 2:26 PM | Reply | Permalink
You've got a good point, wendy, about productivity and wages. It seems to me the extremity of our present scenario has rearranged those dynamics a little more than usual, a little bit like getting back to go in Monopoly, only your 40 hours or whatever don't cover what it used to.
As for the Soviet style wall art, we had some of that here that was painted back in the '30s--the old post office where I live here in Boone NC, and also Allen Hall at LSU where I studied English back in the day.
But a lot of this posting came out of a mental comparison I was doing yesterday between two extremes of art. One was the communist-style large stone statues at the south end of Tianenmen square. We had seen them this past summer while visiting Beijing. The other was an ornate, baroque pitcher that I had inherited from my grandmother. Two very different worlds represented by two very different schools of art. It takes all kinds to make a world.
Thanks for the comment.
October 23, 2009 4:13 PM | Reply | Permalink
Hey Carey. Congrats on the new book. Half-full to chimera though? Mixing your beverages here?
October 23, 2009 3:28 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thanks, Saladin. My choice of title for the first novel, Glass half-Full has left some room for interpretation. It's actually a fairly realistic depiction of life in the early 21st century, and happens in the suburban Washington DC area. But it is a "good cop" tale.
Perhaps the "bad cop" counterpart story is found in the second novel, Glass Chimera, which has a more sinister connotation. But not really. They are both about some pretty good people who have bad things happen to them.
"Chimera" in ancient Greek mythology was a creature having physical characteristics of several animals. In modern microbiology, however, the term may refer to an organism genetically engineered in a petri dish, and comprised of DNA from two different species.
Want to know any more than that, have to read the books to discover it.
October 23, 2009 4:30 PM | Reply | Permalink
So mixing indeed.
Half full sounds a little bit too cheery for me these days. And I tend to like damaged protagonists in my fiction (I relate better), but I might pick up your Chimera book one of these days. Are you offering TPM discounts?
October 23, 2009 4:39 PM | Reply | Permalink
Glass Chimera is on kindle now, not in print yet, although you can read the first four chapters on here . It starts out with a microbiologist sitting under an oak tree in Louisiana as he takes a break from trying to clone a cow.
In a few more weeks or months I hope to have it published on paper. I'll send you a free copy if you like.
My protagonists are definitely damaged, like me.
October 24, 2009 10:05 AM | Reply | Permalink