Starving Art
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By
The Centaur
~ February 24, 2002
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It amuses me that the last article on
this site was on "Dedication"...
posted immediately prior to a two-month
hiatus in the production of
this site.
In that article I challenged David
Mamet's view that only the starving
can create art - that the comfortable have
crutches to lean on which prevent
them from taking the steps to excel.
No, I argued, the key to creating
art is dedication to the task
- achieving a level of focus that
enables one to put other tasks aside
and complete what really matters.
But it has become clear to me in the
intervening months the wisdom in Mamet's
words. I have seen all too many people
fail at things they cherished because
they were too comfortable. With a
nourishing job at hand, I have seen
myself and others drawn off by sparkling
distractions, curling up with our
comfortable movies and plays and dances
and parties while the things
that we can achieve - and tell each
other and ourselves that we want
to achieve we want to achieve -
fritter away further and further
into the distance.
It is as true for professionals as
it is for amateurs. Case in point:
the world of comics. Three of my
favorite comic books -
Albedo Anthropomorphics,
The Authority and
Planetary were canceled,
or hang on the edge of being
canceled, because their creators could
keep a schedule. Now, I know some of
the reasons behind the delays; and
sometimes they are good ones. But in
the end, delay after delay in any
enterprise leaves fans feeling lost,
participants feeling betrayed, and
ultimately all concerned must move on
to new devices when their interest
finally dies.
So perhaps it is true that it is
not necessary to be starving
to produce great art. But if the
author or artist is not so hungry
for their art that they are willing
to put it above all else, their art
will starve, and we are
all left poorer by it.
- The Centaur