• Home
  • maureenmullarkey.com

Studio Matters

Feed on
Posts
Comments
« Art Institutes, Debt & Education
The Artist as Self-Booster »

Post-Bollocks

Jun 23rd, 2011 by Studio Matters

Share

Randy Pausch gave good advice to his computer science students at Carnegie Mellon: When you know you are in pissing contest it, get out of it as fast as you can. So in the Pauschian spirit, I offer this delicious cartoon, sent by Mr. Eyeballs as both a free gift and a chastisement.

The previous post grew, in some curious way, out of Arty Bollocks, the earlier waltz over artistic pretension. Just how things sidled into corporate greed, is a bit murky. It is certainly not the ditch to die in. Greed is one of the seven deadly sins, to be sure. So is envy. And forgive me, please, if I tend to see much of artists’ moral indignation aimed at profit-making enterprises to be tetthered—by however gossamer the thread—to something very close to envy.

//

Francois Lemoyne, "Time Saving Truth from Falsehood and Envy (1737)

//

The reason I suspect so—doubtless someone will correct me if I am wrong—is that the greed and corruption of our political class does not draw equal ire. (Charlie Rangel, anyone? Nancy Pelosi, whose personal wealth increased 62% over the last two years while in public service? John Kerry, who keeps his yacht in a tax haven even though his wife’s net worth is larger than that of some island nations? The list is long.)

Believe me, I carry no brief for Goldman Sachs. Any who has browsed the selection of published essays on my website knows that. I simply pointed out that asset management is one of their functions. Every one of us who has a pension fund, an IRA (the container for stocks, treasury bills, bonds, mutual funds, etc.), or a 401(k) is a shareholder in corporate profits. You want to be solvent in your old age? Then you want the corporations in your retirement basket to make as much money as possible.

Artists often seem to want it both ways. They want to protect their retirement—a legitimate need—while they pull their skirts back from the taint of corporate profit. That, in a nut shell, is all I was groping to say in the previous post.

Judging from email, some of you got it. As reader Gail Reiser put it:

If a place like SCAD is not delivering on its promise to turn out employable graduates, it should return tuitions. If it is, then it serves a real purpose. So do the Art Institutes if their grads have a leg up in the job market. Whether of not their CEOs are overpaid is a different issue. But it is fun to feel righteous, isn’t it?

Grandstanding is an enduring temptation to artists. Why is that? Art itself is neither moral nor charitable and, as Jacques Barzun reminds us, has no superior warrant for denouncing the world.

//

© 2011 Maureen Mullarkey

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Tags: art and money, Artistic Pretension, Arty Bollocks, Goldman Sachs, SCAD

Posted in Art, Art & Money, Art and Politics, Artistic Pretension

Comments are closed.

  • Contact

  • Categories

    • Art
    • Art & Censorship
    • Art & Money
    • Art and Politics
    • Art Education
    • Art History
    • Art Writing
    • Artistic Identity
    • Artistic Pretension
    • Collage
    • Culture Cues
    • Drawing
    • Environmental Piety
    • Fashion Arts
    • Feminist art
    • Landscape
    • Museum Culture
    • Painting
    • Photography
    • Sacred Art
    • Sculpture
    • Things to Read
  • Archives

    • January 2013
    • February 2012
    • December 2011
    • November 2011
    • October 2011
    • September 2011
    • August 2011
    • July 2011
    • June 2011
    • May 2011
    • April 2011
    • March 2011
    • February 2011
    • January 2011
    • December 2010
    • November 2010
    • October 2010
    • September 2010
    • August 2010
    • July 2010
    • June 2010
    • May 2010
    • April 2010
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
  • Recent Posts

    • Moving Day
    • Ruskin and Ourselves
    • I Am What I Have
    • View Through the Fallopian Tubes
    • January 1, 2013
    • Until Later
    • For Unto Us A Child Is Born
    • Picturing Mary Magdalene
    • Things to Read with Caravaggio in Mind
    • Navigating the Cognitive Philosophy of Michael Fried

Studio Matters © 2013 All Rights Reserved.

Free WordPress Themes | Fresh WordPress Themes