{"id":11159,"date":"2022-01-01T08:40:57","date_gmt":"2022-01-01T08:40:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=11159"},"modified":"2022-01-10T12:42:10","modified_gmt":"2022-01-10T12:42:10","slug":"changing-the-world-through-art-do-you-have-what-it-takes-by-debra-hand","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=11159","title":{"rendered":"\u201cChanging The World Through Art: Do You Have What it Takes?\u201d by Debra Hand"},"content":{"rendered":"\r\n
by Debra Hand<\/pre>\r\nThe artworld talks a good game\u2014how noble artists are and how they enlighten us, how civilized we all are, standing around the artworld looking pensively at profound works that are deepening our consciousness.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n
But are artists really being allowed to maximize their power by the gatekeepers of the art world?<\/p>\r\n
I say \u201cwe\u201d because I also ask myself this question regularly, not just as an artist but as a member of the human species. Am I maximizing my power to affect change? I know it\u2019s not exclusively the job of the artists among us to save humanity. It\u2019s all of our jobs to do what we can. So I never quite buy into the notion that just by being an artist, you are somehow magically imbued with solutions that will help fix the rest of us.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n
People who do the work to understand life and people on a deeper level, and make a goal of participating in activities that have life-altering outcomes for others, are the people who make the real difference\u2014whether they are artists or not.<\/p>\r\n
But here\u2019s the thing about art: Art by itself has a power, even to the point of being able to zap a person into a whole new way of seeing. Who among us has never seen a movie that affected the way they saw a subject or relationship in their life? A movie can make you go home and hug your family with a deeper appreciation, or even alter the way you see the world.\u00a0 Again, art has power.\u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\r\n
You can look at a painting and not even know why the artist created it, and yet be moved by the painting on a deep and visceral level. No one can say with true authority what Rothko\u2019s paintings are meant to convey in words. That\u2019s because paint and words are two different mediums for communicating experiences to an audience. Paint generates light frequencies that don\u2019t have to be processed by the logical brain to have an effect on us viscerally. Words, however, must make sense to affect us, or at least convey a sense of something logical in order to move us. Even poetry that sounds like gibberish to some, others are able to construct for themselves a meaningful message from.<\/p>\r\n