Art doesn’t seek common denominator
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JOSEPH N. BELL
The uneasy relationship between government and the arts has been on
display both in Washington, D.C., and Costa Mesa recently, and the
issues -- one national, the other local -- have much in common.
In Washington, the Bush administration is trying to diminish the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting by cutting its funding while
turning it into a public relations arm of the White House. And at
home, our mayor in Costa Mesa is -- in his own words in the Pilot --
arguing vehemently against the “use of taxpayer dollars to fund art.”
In both instances, there is clearly considerable discomfort with
public support of the free expression of art and its salutary
importance in the well-being of our society.
Both parties have also paid lip-service to their positions by
pledging their affection for the arts. Mayor Allan Mansoor said: “As
much as I like art, I will not use public funds to pay for it.” And
the chairman of the Congressional sub-committee that cut funding for
the CPB in half told a Los Angeles Times reporter: “I am a fan of
public broadcasting and public radio... but keep in mind that we have
limited amounts of money.”
So apparently what we have here is tough love. Those who oppose
public funding will tolerate the arts -- up to a point -- but will
always look at them with dark suspicion for subversive messages. And
keep in mind that we’re talking small change here. The funding for
public radio and television, for example, even with a portion of the
congressional cuts restored, is probably comparable to what taxpayers
spent supporting those 19 CIA kidnappers in 5-star hotels and
restaurants in Milan, Italy. Or Congressman Tom DeLay’s expense
account. Pleading poverty as a reason for withholding a pittance of
support for the arts is a high order of dissembling. At least Mansoor
isn’t guilty of that. He’s out front with his opposition. Way out
front.
A while back, for example, he opposed the reading at a City
Council meeting of a pro forma proclamation celebrating National Arts
and Humanities Month. Instead, he substituted a statement of his own
objecting to public support for the National Endowment for the Arts
that was mentioned favorably in the proclamation. His reason: the NEA
uses taxpayer dollars to fund artists who create works that some
consider anti-religious or pornographic.
Contrast this with the views of Mark Robbins, dean of Syracuse
University’s School of Architecture, who wrote in a recent op-ed
essay in the Times: “It is of more than symbolic importance that the
country support its creative voices. Government funding for the arts
is not a luxury. As a nation, we must help the difficult to get made
and get heard. Privatizing it risks pushing the arts ever closer to
the embrace of the market and away from its real purposes.”
Underneath all of the surface reasons given for opposing public
support of the arts is fear of uncomfortable ideas that might
challenge convictions rigidly held or possessions -- including power
-- carefully guarded. The thought of taxpayer dollars being used to
encourage the expression of such dangerous ideas through the arts is
anathema to those who would prefer to avoid uncomfortable new
challenges we might never explore otherwise.
Some of these dangerous ideas are reflected in what Mansoor
defines as anti-religious or pornographic. These are his perceptions;
nothing more. He’s welcome to them, but not when they prevent support
for art that a lot of us would see as provocative or fresh or even
funny. I certainly don’t want Mansoor deciding what is suitable for
me -- or my grandchildren -- to see or hear or read.
Art, in whatever form, doesn’t seek a common denominator. Mark
Robbins said it eloquently: “If stories, music, buildings and
pictures merely replay our own notions and cultural mythologies, then
they reduce us to the simplest of equations, mirroring too closely
... the seductions of the market.”
*
A caller to the Pilot properly took me to task for referring to
boxer Max Baer in a recent column as an “evil German.” Actually, he
was neither. I blew this one.
Max Baer was born in Omaha, Neb., and grew up in Livermore, Calif.
He won the heavyweight title from Primo Carnera in 1934 and lost it a
year later to Jim Braddock, as dramatized in “Cinderella Man.” But
Baer deserves some footnotes that weren’t covered in the movie.
He did, indeed, have a history with Germany. In 1933, he knocked out a real German named Max Schmeling, who was a favorite of Hitler.
Later that year, Baer starred in a movie called “The Prizefighter and
the Lady” that Hitler banned in Germany, partly in revenge for Baer
beating up Schmeling and partly because Baer was Jewish.
Baer won 53 of his 84 fights by knockouts, had his own vaudeville
act and appeared in 20 movies -- which I should have remembered since
I was around then and probably saw most of them. He’s also a member
of the Boxing Hall of Fame, has a park named after him in Livermore,
and died of a heart attack when he was 50 years old.
All of which is probably more than you want to know about Max Baer
but helps to assuage my guilt for treating him cavalierly in my
column.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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