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ART
Is it really all that important?
Because the arts are such an essential part of the "educated" human experience, I am including the
following . It makes the case much better than I, and I agree with every syllable.
Prepared text of June 17, 2007, Stanford Commencement
address
by Dana Gioia, chairman of the National Endowment for the
Arts
Good morning.
Thank you, President Hennessy.
It is a great
honor to be asked to give the Commencement address at my alma mater. Although I
have two degrees from Stanford, I still feel a bit like an interloper on this
exquisitely beautiful campus. A person never really escapes his or her
childhood.
At heart I'm still a working-class kid—half Italian, half
Mexican—from L.A., or more precisely from Hawthorne, a city that most of this
audience knows only as the setting of Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction and
Jackie Brown—two films that capture the ineffable charm of my hometown.
Today is Father's Day, so I hope you will indulge me for beginning on a
personal note. I am the first person in my family ever to attend college, and I
owe my education to my father, who sacrificed nearly everything to give his four
children the best education possible.
My dad had a fairly hard life. He
never spoke English until he went to school. He barely survived a plane crash in
World War II. He worked hard, but never had much success, except with his
family.
When I was about 12, my dad told me that he hoped I
would go to Stanford, a place I had never heard of. For him, Stanford
represented every success he had missed yet wanted for his children. He would be
proud of me today—no matter how dull my speech.
On the other hand, I may
be fortunate that my mother isn't here. It isn't Mother's Day, so I can be
honest. I loved her dearly, but she could be a challenge. For example, when she
learned I had been nominated to be chairman of the National Endowment for the
Arts, she phoned and said, "Don't think I'm impressed."
I know that
there was a bit of controversy when my name was announced as the graduation
speaker. A few students were especially concerned that I lacked celebrity
status. It seemed I wasn't famous enough. I couldn't agree more. As I have often
told my wife and children, "I'm simply not famous enough."
And that—in a
more general and less personal sense—is the subject I want to address today, the
fact that we live in a culture that barely acknowledges and rarely celebrates
the arts or artists.
There is an experiment I'd love to conduct. I'd like
to survey a cross-section of Americans and ask them how many active NBA players,
Major League Baseball players, and American Idol finalists they can name.
Then I'd ask them how many living American poets, playwrights, painters,
sculptors, architects, classical musicians, conductors, and composers they can
name.
I'd even like to ask how many living American scientists or social
thinkers they can name.
Fifty years ago, I suspect that along with
Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays, and Sandy Koufax, most Americans could have named,
at the very least, Robert Frost, Carl Sandburg, Arthur Miller, Thornton Wilder,
Georgia O'Keeffe, Leonard Bernstein, Leontyne Price, and Frank Lloyd Wright. Not
to mention scientists and thinkers like Linus Pauling, Jonas Salk, Rachel
Carson, Margaret Mead, and especially Dr. Alfred Kinsey.
I
don't think that Americans were smarter then, but American culture was. Even the
mass media placed a greater emphasis on presenting a broad range of human
achievement.
I grew up mostly among immigrants, many of whom never
learned to speak English. But at night watching TV variety programs like the Ed
Sullivan Show or the Perry Como Music Hall, I saw—along with comedians, popular
singers, and movie stars—classical musicians like Jascha Heifetz and Arthur
Rubinstein, opera singers like Robert Merrill and Anna Moffo, and jazz greats
like Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong captivate an audience of millions with
their art.
The same was even true of literature. I first encountered
Robert Frost, John Steinbeck, Lillian Hellman, and James Baldwin on general
interest TV shows. All of these people were famous to the average
American—because the culture considered them important.
Today no
working-class or immigrant kid would encounter that range of arts and ideas in
the popular culture. Almost everything in our national culture, even the news,
has been reduced to entertainment, or altogether eliminated.
The loss of
recognition for artists, thinkers, and scientists has impoverished our culture
in innumerable ways, but let me mention one. When virtually all of a culture's
celebrated figures are in sports or entertainment, how few possible role models
we offer the young.
There are so many other ways to lead a successful
and meaningful life that are not denominated by money or fame. Adult life begins
in a child's imagination, and we've relinquished that imagination to the
marketplace.
Of course, I'm not forgetting that politicians can also be
famous, but it is interesting how our political process grows more like the
entertainment industry each year. When a successful guest appearance on the
Colbert Report becomes more important than passing legislation, democracy gets
scary. No wonder Hollywood considers politics "show business for ugly people."
Everything now is entertainment. And the purpose of this
omnipresent commercial entertainment is to sell us something. American culture
has mostly become one vast infomercial.
I have a reoccurring nightmare. I
am in Rome visiting the Sistine Chapel. I look up at Michelangelo's incomparable
fresco of the "Creation of Man." I see God stretching out his arm to touch the
reclining Adam's finger. And then I notice in the other hand Adam is holding a
Diet Pepsi.
When was the last time you have seen a featured guest on
David Letterman or Jay Leno who isn't trying to sell you something? A new movie,
a new TV show, a new book, or a new vote?
Don't get me wrong. I love
entertainment, and I love the free market. I have a Stanford MBA and spent 15
years in the food industry. I adore my big-screen TV. The productivity and
efficiency of the free market is beyond dispute. It has created a society of
unprecedented prosperity.
But we must remember that the marketplace does
only one thing—it puts a price on everything.
The role of culture,
however, must go beyond economics. It is not focused on the price of things, but
on their value. And, above all, culture should tell us what is beyond price,
including what does not belong in the marketplace. A culture should also provide
some cogent view of the good life beyond mass accumulation. In this respect, our
culture is failing us.
There is only one social force in America
potentially large and strong enough to counterbalance this profit-driven
commercialization of cultural values, our educational system, especially public
education. Traditionally, education has been one thing that our nation has
agreed cannot be left entirely to the marketplace—but made mandatory and freely
available to everyone.
At 56, I am just old enough to remember a time
when every public high school in this country had a music program with choir and
band, usually a jazz band, too, sometimes even orchestra. And every high school
offered a drama program, sometimes with dance instruction. And there were
writing opportunities in the school paper and literary magazine, as well as
studio art training.
I am sorry to say that these programs
are no longer widely available to the new generation of Americans. This once
visionary and democratic system has been almost entirely dismantled by
well-meaning but myopic school boards, county commissioners, and state
officials, with the federal government largely indifferent to the issue. Art
became an expendable luxury, and 50 million students have paid the price. Today
a child's access to arts education is largely a function of his or her parents'
income.
In a time of social progress and economic prosperity, why have
we experienced this colossal cultural and political decline? There are several
reasons, but I must risk offending many friends and colleagues by saying that
surely artists and intellectuals are partly to blame. Most American artists,
intellectuals, and academics have lost their ability to converse with the rest
of society. We have become wonderfully expert in talking to one another, but we
have become almost invisible and inaudible in the general culture.
This
mutual estrangement has had enormous cultural, social, and political
consequences. America needs its artists and intellectuals, and they need to
reestablish their rightful place in the general culture. If we could reopen the
conversation between our best minds and the broader public, the results would
not only transform society but also artistic and intellectual life.
There is no better place to start this rapprochement than in arts
education. How do we explain to the larger society the benefits of this civic
investment when they have been convinced that the purpose of arts education is
mostly to produce more artists—hardly a compelling argument to either the
average taxpayer or financially strapped school board?
We need to create
a new national consensus. The purpose of arts education is not to produce more
artists, though that is a byproduct. The real purpose of arts education is to
create complete human beings capable of leading successful and productive lives
in a free society.
This is not happening now in American
schools. Even if you forget the larger catastrophe that only 70 percent of
American kids now graduate from high school, what are we to make of a public
education system whose highest goal seems to be producing minimally competent
entry-level workers?
The situation is a cultural and educational
disaster, but it also has huge and alarming economic consequences. If the United
States is to compete effectively with the rest of the world in the new global
marketplace, it is not going to succeed through cheap labor or cheap raw
materials, nor even the free flow of capital or a streamlined industrial base.
To compete successfully, this country needs continued creativity, ingenuity, and
innovation.
It is hard to see those qualities thriving in a nation whose
educational system ranks at the bottom of the developed world and has mostly
eliminated the arts from the curriculum.
I have seen firsthand the
enormous transformative power of the arts—in the lives of individuals, in
communities, and even society at large.
Marcus Aurelius believed that
the course of wisdom consisted of learning to trade easy pleasures for more
complex and challenging ones. I worry about a culture that bit by bit trades off
the challenging pleasures of art for the easy comforts of entertainment. And
that is exactly what is happening—not just in the media, but in our schools and
civic life.
Entertainment promises us a predictable pleasure—humor,
thrills, emotional titillation, or even the odd delight of being vicariously
terrified. It exploits and manipulates who we are rather than challenges us with
a vision of who we might become. A child who spends a month mastering Halo or
NBA Live on Xbox has not been awakened and transformed the way that child would
be spending the time rehearsing a play or learning to draw.
If you don't
believe me, you should read the statistical studies that are now coming out
about American civic participation. Our country is dividing into two distinct
behavioral groups. One group spends most of its free time sitting at home as
passive consumers of electronic entertainment. Even family communication is
breaking down as members increasingly spend their time alone, staring at their
individual screens.
The other group also uses and enjoys
the new technology, but these individuals balance it with a broader range of
activities. They go out—to exercise, play sports, volunteer and do charity work
at about three times the level of the first group. By every measure they are
vastly more active and socially engaged than the first group.
What is
the defining difference between passive and active citizens? Curiously, it isn't
income, geography, or even education. It depends on whether or not they read for
pleasure and participate in the arts. These cultural activities seem to awaken a
heightened sense of individual awareness and social responsibility.
Why
do these issues matter to you? This is the culture you are about to enter. For
the last few years you have had the privilege of being at one of the world's
greatest universities—not only studying, but being a part of a community that
takes arts and ideas seriously. Even if you spent most of your free time
watching Grey's Anatomy, playing Guitar Hero, or Facebooking your friends, those
important endeavors were balanced by courses and conversations about literature,
politics, technology, and ideas.
Distinguished graduates, your support
system is about to end. And you now face the choice of whether you want to be a
passive consumer or an active citizen. Do you want to watch the world on a
screen or live in it so meaningfully that you change it?
That's no easy
task, so don't forget what the arts provide.
Art is an irreplaceable way
of understanding and expressing the world—equal to but distinct from scientific
and conceptual methods. Art addresses us in the fullness of our
being—simultaneously speaking to our intellect, emotions, intuition,
imagination, memory, and physical senses. There are some truths about life that
can be expressed only as stories, or songs, or images.
Art delights,
instructs, consoles. It educates our emotions. And it remembers. As Robert Frost
once said about poetry, "It is a way of remembering that which it would
impoverish us to forget." Art awakens, enlarges, refines, and restores our
humanity. You don't outgrow art. The same work can mean something different at
each stage of your life. A good book changes as you change.
My own art is poetry, though my current daily life
sometimes makes me forget that. So let me end my remarks with a short poem
appropriate to the occasion.
[PRAISE TO THE RITUALS THAT
CELEBRATE CHANGE]
Praise to the rituals that celebrate change,
old
robes worn for new beginnings,
solemn protocol where the mutable
soul,
surrounded by ancient experience, grows
young in the imagination's
white dress.
Because it is not the rituals we honor
but our trust
in what they signify, these rites
that honor us as witnesses—whether to
watch
lovers swear loyalty in a careless world
or a newborn washed with
water and oil.
So praise to innocence—impulsive and
evergreen—
and let the old be touched by youth's
wayward astonishment at
learning something new,
and dream of a future so fitting and so just
that
our desire will bring it into being.
Congratulations to the Class
of 2007.
© Stanford University. All Rights Reserved.
Stanford, CA 94305. (650) 723-2300.
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