Kara Lysandra Ross's speech at the 7th annual IGOR exhibition
Created: September 27, 2012 Last Updated: September 27, 2012
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First I would like to thank Don Clapper, Vala Ola, and the International Guild of Realism (IGOR) for inviting me to be a guest judge at this fantastic event, and also for giving me an excuse to come to beautiful Carmel, California. I had the privilege of visiting this gallery two years ago when a spectacular painting by IGOR charter member and also ARC Living Master, Duffy Sheridan, placed prominently in the window, pulled us in. Patricia Terwilliger and the Jones Terwilliger Galleries, in the time I have known them, have always been strong advocates for Contemporary Realism and sanity in the arts, and I am sure everyone here and all of IGOR?s members are grateful to them for hosting this exhibition.
As many of you may already know I am Kara Lysandra Ross, and I?m the Director of Operations for the Art Renewal Center, a non-profit educational foundation dedicated to the return of traditional training techniques to the visual arts and the promotion of art education through our scholarships and the support of approved atelier schools which have grown when ARC was founded from 14 schools and only 100 or so students to over 70 schools and over 2,000 students, our workshops. We also supply to the public articles, artist biographies, our ARC Living Master?s gallery, database of now over 80,000 images by artists throughout history and of course our Annual International ARC Salon. This year with the collaboration of groups like IGOR we expect the number of entries to be larger then ever. In addition we have secured extra publicity for our winners of the upcoming 2012/2013 salon with featured articles in The Epoch Times, Fine Art Connoisseur Magazine, and Plein Air Magazine. We are accepting entries now through December 31st and would love all of IGOR?s members to participate.
I want to talk a bit today about the importance of art in society, something that for the most part is underestimated. I was in Epcot Center in Disney World last year, and in the Innovations Center they had a computerized survey, which had already been taken by thousands of people. The survey was based on what broad issues or groups the participants thought were going to be the most important and influential in the next 20 years, and out of all the items people could choose from, art was near the bottom in terms of importance. Many people view art as a luxury, something to decorate a home with or simply something for people to view or create for fun or relaxation. In truth, art lies at the core of human existence, and with it has the power to not only influence an individual?s thoughts or beliefs, but can actually shape nations.
As some of you may know I write a monthly column in The Epoch Times, which is a large international newspaper that publishes in 35 countries and 19 languages. This newspaper was founded by Chinese ex-patriots who fled China due to religious persecution. The religion, Falun Gong, which is wide spread with about 100,000,000 practitioners, was developed based on pre-communist traditions in the post Mao era, similar to Buddhism in that it is non violent and is deeply founded in meditation. One of the founders of the newspaper, Dana Cheng, told me that in China they believe in two kinds of weapons. The first is arms, such as guns, bombs and tanks, and the other is Art and Culture. It is as possible to destroy a society by stripping away its art and culture as it is to do so with conventional weapons. This is why in the 1960s and during the rise of Chairman Mao in China, all books on traditional Chinese culture and art were burned, and the paintings and art objects themselves were destroyed. This period is known as the Cultural Revolution and over 10,000,000 people were killed, many trying to protect their heritage. Today the practice of Falun Gong is banned in China and those who practice are imprisoned, and in some cases tortured and killed. Paintings depicting religious Falun Gong images and those that show the wronging of Chinese citizens by the Chinese government are banned, as are paintings of the Red Guard. Some artists who do not wish to stay silent and paint images that are banned in defiance of the laws, know that if they are caught they will go to prison or worse. The winner of the most recent NTDTV art competition is one such example. The painting depicts a Falun Gong member being tortured, and the work already is showing signs of cracking from the conditions required to smuggle the painting out of China. Realist art and literature have the ability to communicate, shaping beliefs and therefore societies, which is why many governments view the arts as something that needs to be controlled. Nothing says more about a culture then the art it idolizes. It represents what it values, what it thinks about, and essentially what it deems worth remembering. Art is the representation of a people, encapsulating its essence on every level. By attacking the art of a culture you attack the culture itself.
China is not the only country that banned art for this purpose. It has been said that the English banned the Scottish bagpipes in the 1700s as a way of attacking their heritage. The Polish press was liquidated, the libraries and bookshops were burned, and their paintings and sculptures destroyed by the Nazi during WWII, and in addition we are told over and over again that many Arab countries view the spread of American art and culture, such as film, painting, and music, as both a threat and an attack of their beliefs and society. Art is indeed a power of its own otherwise it would not be viewed as such a threat.
Much of modern art such as Abstract Expressionism and Dadaism was intended as an attack on society because at its essence it says that the human form, our hopes, dreams, and fears, were not important, that they are not worth painting or sculpting. In an article titled To Create = to Destroy? put out by UCLA, they state that, ?The idea of destruction was built into the ideology of modernism: old culture and its arts have to be destroyed to make room for the new: modernism wants to begin from ?tabula rasa,? or ?point zero.?? The idea of destructing the old was already present in Cubism (Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque): their paintings and collages destroyed the Renaissance tradition? and the modern movement of Futurism was ?a passionate attack on bourgeois society and its values.? Modernism has claimed that their intent was to attack the wealthy, but in actuality they attacked humanity as a whole. You need a lot of education to understand and appreciate an abstract expressionist work, but anyone can recognize and sympathize with an image of a grieving mother or a painting of a beautiful garden. Those things are universal to the human condition. Splotches of paint are just splotches of paint and are nothing but a cynical statement of mankind and its accomplishments which as far as the modernists are concerned amount to nothing more then Duchamp?s fountain, aka a toilet. Modernist leader F. T. Marinetti, who in 1909 wrote the 1st Futurist Manifesto stated, ?We will destroy all museums and libraries, and academies of all sorts; we will battle against moralism, feminism, and all vile opportunism and utilitarianism.? Although the modernists never burned the museums, they did remove most of the fine art from their walls, hiding many of the best works in the basement and in their stead hung canvases painted with solid color, or in some cases nothing at all. Today most modernist works take a fraction of the time that a realist one does and therefore the galleries have a larger inventory to work from. In addition, modernist works bring much higher prices at auction then those by the artists they claimed at the time to be opportunistic.
In an article recently published in the New English Review, titled The Tyranny of Artistic Modernism, Mark Anthony Signorelli writes,?Nothing is so important to the spiritual and mental flourishing of a people as its art. The stories they tell, the buildings they inhabit, the public spaces in which they gather, the songs they sing, the fashioned images they gaze upon, these things shape their souls more permanently and effectively than anything else. We live in a time when the art all around us accustoms men to, and insinuates into their souls, the most erroneous and degrading ideas imaginable about themselves and their world. A humane society can hardly be expected to grow out of such an adverse cultural environment.?
On a more uplifting note, there are also many examples of how the creation of art has impacted societies. Jacques-Luis David, The Death of Marat in 1793, became the symbol of the French Revolution and rallied men to battle against the Reign of Terror. Rembrandt is considered to have changed the way the world viewed depictions of Jesus Christ when in the mid 1600s he painted eight heads of Christ with a non western European look that sent the religious world spinning. Upton Sinclair?s The Jungle played a role in improving working conditions in factories, Elizabeth Thompson?s battle paintings spurred military reform, Uncle Tom?s Cabin helped bring about an end to slavery, and the writings of Dickens and his painter and sculptor counterparts such as Auguste Mulready,J.G. Brown, and William Bouguereau helped bring about awareness of the need to help the poor, to name a few.
I apologize if this has seemed a depressing speech. In reality it is meant to be uplifting in that it hopefully has demonstrated to you the importance of the work you are all doing. So remember, artists play one of the most important roles in our society. And for those who do believe in a higher power, is not the earth or the universe God?s artistic creation? I hope you walk away from this with an extra level of appreciation for the work you do, inspired not to be discouraged when you encounter difficulties. You are shaping our nation and the world into a better place, where once again freedom of thought and real communication can be disseminated though a canvas. With your diligence and effort, a picture is once again worth a thousand words versus needing a thousand words to understand it. So on behalf of the Art Renewal Center, and of my father and ARC Chairman Fred Ross, and as an art lover and historian myself, I thank you for pushing against the current and rescuing our heritage from those who have wished to destroy it.
Kara Lysandra Ross, the director of operations for the Art Renewal Center, is an expert in 19th century European painting.
The Epoch Times publishes in 35 countries and in 19 languages. Subscribe to our e-newsletter.
Source: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/arts-entertainment/why-realist-art-matters-297372.html
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