Saturday, December 1, 2012

Richard Godwin; Wondering where Art comes from

It's like you, as a writer, constantly run across other writers who just bedazzle you with their talent.  Their talent so sharp, so clear, it forces you to consider the idea of giving up writing and becoming a plumber.  Or . . . if you're lucky . . . an accountant.  Or maybe a trapeze artist.  Or a crash test dummy.
 
 
Richard Godwin is that kind of talent.   I read his material and walk off with my head down and mumbling to myself like a Coptic monk suffering through a religious crisis.  Yeah, he's that good.  His style, the way he slings words on the screen or paper, the ability to lure the reader deep into a story, all the hallmarks of a writer with exceptional talents.
 
 
It's not that I'm jealous or envious of his abilities (HELL! Who am I kidding!!) . . . it's just that why does my friend have to be so damn talented AND so gosh durn handsome at the same time!  The world is a cruel, cruel mistress, me buckeroos.  And Karma . . . Karma is a bitch. (I must have been a very bad boy in a previous life to get the mugshot I claim as my own currently.  Very bad)
 
Anyway.  Richard is always a fascinating conversation to wade into so I thought I'd ask him to share some thoughts over whatever struck his fancy.  What struck his fancy is a miniature thesis on what is Art and where does it come from.  It is both fascinating and thought provoking.  So sit back and take your time perusing through the writing.  I think you'll find yourself enthralled.
 
(Damn!  Talented AND good looking AND an intellect!!  Karma . . . you bitch!)
 
 
THE DIVIDE, Richard Godwin.
 
There have been many debates about art and where it comes from and what rules govern it and at the end of the day maybe no one knows.
Friedrich Nietzsche posited the theory that it stems from a basis tension between the old Greek gods Apollo and Dionysus, Apollo representing law and Dionysus chaos.
In his first seminal work ‘The Birth of Tragedy’ he wrote:
‘...we have considered the Apollonian and its opposite, the Dionysian, as artistic energies which burst forth from nature herself ...first in the world of dreams, whose completeness  is not dependent upon the intellectual attitude or the artistic culture of any single being; and then as intoxicated reality...’.
This idea of intoxicated reality runs like an undercurrent through all the theories of creativity.
Rimbaud used it for his poetry.
Keats wrote of imagination that it was Like Adam’s dream ‘he awoke and found it true’.
There is a central issue of control.
If you paint with watercolour you have to let go of control, or you will paint shit.
The colours run.
That is why Turner is probably the greatest watercolourist and a great oil painter, he knew his media. He also cleverly created many paintings of the sea, which is fluid.
 It’s like tipping the monster out of the pot.
The ego stands in the way.
What are you evoking?
During the 1960’s and 1970’s in the US a number of works were performed which transgressed the traditional boundaries of Western genre in the arts.
Jim Morrison urged his fans to ‘ride the snake’. Morrison also spoke of his reading in ‘The Birth of Tragedy’ of the primal Dionysian art as the spirit of music.
Morrison moved his performances towards shamanistic theatre.
Interestingly Mircea Eliade, author of Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy writes of shamans:
‘they express on the one hand the diametrical opposition of two divine figures sprung from one and the same principle and destined, in many versions, to be reconciled at some illud tempus of eschatology, and on the other, the coincidentia oppositorum in the very nature of the divinity, which shows itself, by turns or even simultaneously, benevolent and terrible, creative and destructive, solar and serpentine.’
Morrison’s ‘The Lizard’ took nearly half an hour to perform in concert and is an act of descent.
We’re into the underworld and back to the same divide.
 Aristotle based much of his philosophy around a basic opposition and Alfred Korzybski, the Polish semanticist argues in ‘Science and Sanity ’ that mental pathology within Western cultures stems from a basic confusion of signifier with signified, in other words thinking that a table is identified with the verbal label we attribute to it.
He used to thump the table in his lectures and say ‘this is not a table’.
He also saw the basic either/or basis for Western thinking as its primary flaw.
Hegel moved it on in ‘Phenomenology of Sprit’ where he sought a unity stemming from the synthesis resulting from the uniting of his thesis and antithesis, although his may be a variation on the Christian trinity.
Like John Cage, Morrison was drawn to the Lord of Misrule’s carnival.
David Bowie said ‘I know one day a big artist is going to get killed on stage.’
Alice Cooper enacted much of the Dionysian on stage, throwing live chickens into the audience, axing dolls to death.
The acid trip, under the influence of Timothy Leary became a religious experience a sign for the Trips Festival read: ANYBODY WHO KNOWS HE IS A GOD GO UP ON STAGE.
There is a strong sexual element to this, as Euripides’s play ‘The Bacchae’ illustrates, Bacchus being the Roman version of the Greek God.
When Dionysus sheds Eros his energy turns negative.
  He becomes the Devil, as Norman O. Brown shows in ‘Life Against Death’ as the form of excrement, waste and ‘filthy lucre’.
Then something happened at Altamont.
After Santana opened a freaked out kid tried to get on stage. The Rolling Stones had hired Hell’s Angels as body guards, they dived into the crowd with five-foot pool cues.
While the Rolling Stones waited for darkness the Hell’s Angels taunted the crowd with contempt. Then they parodied the rituals of religious cults. Sol Stern, a former Ramparts magazine editor, wrote: ‘One of them, wearing a wolf’s head, took the microphone and played the flute for us – a screeching, terrible performance; no one dared to protest or shut off the microphone.’
Why?
Why didn’t they protest?
Because they were caught up in group psychology.
Why do leaders use it?
It’s good for business.
The Mediterranean wolf cuts and the flute music of Dionysus, the wild music of the joujouka – the vestigial music of the God which had entranced Brian Jones, Bryan Gysin, William Burroughs, Paul Bowles and Ornette Coleman – had come to this, a preparation for a star.
Into the darkness of Altamont, through the protective circle of the Angels on the blood-spattered stage, came the Stones, led by Mick Jagger in a black and orange cape and tall hat.
They played well but their music spoke out the interface between savagery and erotics, between the controls of art and the controls of magic, between Apollo and Dionysus. Jagger began ‘Sympathy for the Devil’ – ‘They call me Lucifer and I’m in need of some restraint’. The earlier Angels’ attacks now climaxed. In the spotlights, when Jagger went on singing this number, they stabbed to death a black youth from Berkeley named Meredith Hunter. Panic-stricken Jagger tried to cool the screaming people, but the death ritual operated as part of his own performance.
The antithesis maybe at the root of art and sexuality.
Blood may flow from its veins.
Cultures create their own paradigms.
The scientists are the new priests if you believe in their religion.
Korzybski believed that hieroglyphic sign systems are healthier than ours because they use images.
Consider flint.
Strike it and there’s a spark.
We are as Shakespeare wrote in ‘The Tempest’
‘We are such stuff As dreams are made on; and out little life Is rounded with a sleep.’
I examine the themes in Apostle Rising
 
and Mr. Glamour.
 


9 comments:

  1. At the feet of the master--Richard Godwin is that and more. From the route he's laid out for Art--from Nietzsche to Rimbaud to Morrison to the Stones to... the ultimate and only possible culimination, which is--Banksy.

    I'm printing this up and saving it. Thanks, B.R. Thanks, Richard.

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  2. It is a fascinating walk through one's imagination. Loved it.

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  3. It’s like tipping the monster out of the pot. Yes, yes, yes, a thousand times, yes. You have to be drunk on art so the world cannot touch you -- who said that? Bradbury? A proper derangement of the senses that only comes from a disciplined mind loosed for the revels. Mere drunkenness is insufficient, but all most people can manage. Indeed, indeed.

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  4. Brilliant. And I agree, as a writer myself, Godwin sets the bar pretty goddamn high.

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  5. Apostle Rising is an in depth study of the things mentioned here. It also is a whacking good thriller and procedural to boot. Richard is a former professor and teacher at university level, so it's not a wonder that his novels have a bit of education in them too. And that's more the better for us all. I hasten to add that his second novel Mr. Glamour is an equally edifying/terrifying/saterical examination of some more of the universal themes and social concerns prevellent today.

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  6. Bryant and everyone thank you so much.

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  7. More than happy to help, Richard. And pleased as punch to say that I know you as a long-distant friend.

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