Art As Transformative?

What do you think? Have you had a personal experience of transformation through art?

I wrote my Master’s thesis on social engineering in 90s, before I had any idea what social engineering was. I didn’t know at the time that’s what I was writing about. The thesis was about women writers of francophone West Africa using their novels as a means to catalyze social change. Liberation through literature, I called it, where practices like polygamy, female genital mutilation, and lack of educational opportunities were voiced in fictional form by the otherwise voiceless.

Certainly it is not at all uncommon for writers to use their works toward such ends. And yet, something about the timing of my thesis, or perhaps the content, resonated less with others than I expected.

I found that instead ‘Art for art’s sake’ had become the more popular mode of the times and works that were considered to be ‘too pedantic’ (which seemed to mean any fictional work with a purpose other than sheer entertainment) were heavily criticized.

I tried for years to pitch similar ideas for publishing to various entities and could find no interest and quite a lot of criticism. Folks wanted to be entertained, not taught. If they had to learn something, they wanted it tightly obscured in a bubble of excitement, like a Dan Brown novel.

But times seem to have changed again and authors and artists with a serious message, with deep societal concerns, seem to be able to find, or are perhaps themselves creating, a growing audience hungry for their transformational content.

It reminds me of some of the criticisms I heard in the 90s—art is not meant to transform or educate, but rather has the sole purpose to simply express the subjective worldview of the creator. Any feelings of universality in a work of art is essentially meaningless coincidence. Art should not be held in the clutches of meaning-making. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Art cannot be personally or socially transformative, except to the artist himself, that is an establishment myth of conformity.

I even had an artist friend, with an art degree, who assisted at a gallery, try to insist to me that the glass flask full of the artist’s excrement (I’m not joking) was to be considered art just as much as any old famous painting.

So I’m very pleased to see this more recent ‘re-formation’ to art with purpose. But, I wonder, can it actually be transformative? Or were all those critical voices in the 90s correct?

What do y’all think?

Here’s a couple of amazing pieces which might have such power. Do you know of others to share? If so, please do link below!

In Shadow: A Modern Odyssey

Kingdom

These works are both by: Lubomir Arsov and you can find an excellent interview with him here:

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Author: KenshoHomestead

Creatively working toward self-sufficiency on the land.

8 thoughts on “Art As Transformative?”

  1. Sure, art has transformed me. Mostly the art on US Dollars. My transformation is dependent on the portrait on that bill. Washington, not so much, Lincoln a little more, and good and Ben transforms me to a smiling consumer.

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        1. I think you do care about art more than you might realize. A novel, a film, a song? Have you not felt the emotion of a powerful scene in a favorite movie? This would be along the same lines. Not exactly ‘transformational’ but simply ‘moved’ by a work of art — moved to tears, or rage, or pity, or envy, or some other human emotion?

          I suppose you gave a bit of a crap about your wife’s novel, no?

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          1. There is a huge difference between enjoying something and letting it be transformative. And I cared about my wife’s effort to write the book and her perseverance to get it published, but it was not transformative. Visual art – or any kind of art- has zero lasting effect on me, and that includes movies. Want to now what was transformative? Watching your buddies get tore up by IED’s and sniper fire. Once you have experienced that, everything else carries less weight.

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            1. That experience transformed you. Now everything else carries less weight. So does that mean that transformation to you feels like an experience of weightlessness? The Unbearable Lightness Of Being, Milan Kundera, a great work of art, about his experience in Soviet- occupied Czechoslovakia. A wonderful gift when someone shares their transformative experiences in a way that helps others understand, or perhaps even feel something of a transformation themselves.

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            2. ‘Sure, art has transformed me. Mostly the art on US Dollars. My transformation is dependent on the portrait on that bill. Washington, not so much, Lincoln a little more, and good and Ben transforms me to a smiling consumer.’

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