It is difficult
to get the news from poems
yet men die miserably every day
for lack
of what is found there.
—William
Carlos Williams, “Asphodel, That Greeny Flower”
I
suspended this blog six years ago to take what I thought was
temporary leave. The work I’d begun in 2008, through what was then called the Center for Documentary
Arts, had led me into deeper waters of art, ethics, and the
ineffable than I’d foreseen. To pursue questions and answers the Center had raised, in 2013 I left for Yale Divinity School to weave my scattered metaphysical inclinations together into a
single course of study. I imagined I would continue posting from New
Haven, but as Robert Frost observed, “way leads on to way,” and
my circumnavigations pulled me away from this space for much longer than I’d
expected.
Travel far
enough and you find yourself coming full circle, back to a home at
once familiar and new: the
end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know
the place for the first time. A few weeks ago, I was thrown back
to the origins of this project when I borrowed from the library a 2009
book called The Age of Empathy, by
biologist Frans de Waal. De Waal has devoted his career to studying
animal behavior, including acts of altruism, empathy, and emotion
that science used to think were outside the capacity of non-human
creatures. Just two paragraphs into his preface explaining the
meaning of the title, the author wrote that the United States was on
the threshold of a golden age of compassion.
“American
politics seems poised for a new epoch that stresses cooperation and
social responsibility,” de Waal declared. “The emphasis is on
what unites a society, what makes it worth living in, rather than
what material wealth we can extract from it. Empathy is the grand
theme of our time. . . .”
I
snapped the book shut, struck by a sudden pang of recognition and
mourning. It was too much to think of the nightmare we are trapped in
now and recall how, not so very long ago, such an optimistic statement was not at all unreasonable. De Waal's quotation goes back to a sliver of time that
corresponds with the first year of the Center for Documentary Art’s existence. The
Age of Empathy was published in
September, 2009, so de Waal would have been writing his preface (typically the last part of a book to be completed)
sometime after Barack Obama’s historic election and inauguration as
our 44th President. We had just survived an eight-year stretch of
terrorism, war, government-approved torture, venality, and self-congratulatory lunacy when Obama soared into office on the most inspirational message of
a generation. De Waal quotes Obama speaking to
university students during his campaign: “I think we should talk more about our empathy
deficit,” the president-to-be says. “It’s only when you hitch
your wagon to something 12ptr than yourself that you will realize
your true potential.” The speaker of such words made it easy to be hopeful that we were entering a new age of decency in civic life.
Obama’s confident rhetoric was all the more impressive coming as the country
was sinking into financial ruin. A decade of abuses by corporate
banking and unregulated finance has resulted in institutions and
businesses failing, people loosing their homes, mushrooming unemployment,
and a lot of citizens justifiably afraid that the meltdown would
create a crisis equal to that of the Great Depression. Throughout the 1930s,
the arts had played a vital role in binding the country together in
the midst of adversity. There was Steinbeck’s The Grapes
of Wrath and John Ford’s film
of the novel; Woody Guthrie's dust bowl ballads; the W.P.A. photographs
of Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, and others; the stage and radio
plays funded by the Federal Theatre Project; and the work of the
Federal Art Project, which commissioned some ten thousand painters,
sculptors, and others to produce a vast body of public artworks,
including the heroic murals that decorated post offices across the
U.S.
Though
largely populist, American art of that era was nothing like the
lock-step propaganda being created under totalitarian regimes
elsewhere in the world. In this country, no two artists could be said
to have quite the same ideology, yet for all the freedom of expression, much of the art exhibited a shared morality of equality,
dignity, and charity born of common need. The work shared other
traits as well. In general it was pictorial and naturalistic,
concerned as much with depiction as self-expression, produced to tell
a story and bring viewers closer to the lives of others. Some of it was
brilliant, some of it banal, but it all aimed to give people a
common language and a common hope at a time of inconceivable
hardship.
I
was thinking a lot about Depression-era art when I launched
the Center for Documentary Arts in partnership with the Sage
Colleges. The project was an experiment and an invitation. I wanted
to see if, amidst the anxiety and misfortune at
the end of 2008, the arts could carry the new empathy de
Waal wrote about. I had been an art critic for more than twenty years, and was struck by how little contemporary art seemed to notice the lives of others. Most of the art I saw, read about, and
reviewed was immensely intelligent but emotionally cold, with little
or no sensitivity toward human pain, privation, aspiration, or
triumph. Visual artists seemed to think fellow-feeling was outside their job description. Even when
addressing injustice, the work was more ideological than emotional,
more analytic than intimate.
From
abstract expressionism, free jazz, and experimental cinema to
postmodern architecture, gaming, and social media, for sixty years
creative freedom had been defined in terms of individuality,
rebellion, subversion, satire, and escape. I had grown up in this
stream, knew my way around it, but at some point had come to admit that
it wasn’t feeding me as it claimed to. I had an idea I was not
alone in my hunger, and through the Center for
Documentary Arts, sought out work by artists comfortable and conversant with compassion, suffering, and sacredness. A quick look
through the archives of this blog will reveal who and what I found, a
rich trove of art resulting in exhibitions, films, and
readings of uncommon depth and humanity. In serving this agenda, the
Center attracted a loyal following of people who responded with
interest, affection, and enthusiasm.
The
source of nourishment we found together can be summed up in a single
word, heart. The term covers a lot of territory. It describes
a mode of being—and art-making— motivated by caritas, the selfless love of others.
“Heart” describes the centeredness of someone secure in his or
her own convictions, and captures the vulnerability we must acknowledge in ourself before we can respond to it in another. For all
its intrinsic tenderness, though, the word “heart” also signifies a firm and fortified courage—the strength to stand resolute in the face of doubt, grief,
injustice, evil. A heart-centered art is at once independent and interdependent, equally informed by what philosopher Jacques Maritain
called the “liberty of art” and the “demands of moral life.”
We are
still waiting for an Age of Empathy, and by the looks of things will be for some time. Ten years on from the book, we live in a wilderness of violence,
faithlessness, and flagrant upheaval. In lieu of de Waal there is David Brooks, whose book The Second Mountain is
a cri de coeur for a
better world. Brooks laments our culture’s “catastrophe” of
“radical individualism,” a condition of corrosive self-interest
the author says can only be cured by committing to things bigger our
ourselves. The book, with its subtitle The Quest for
a Moral Life, replaces empathy, which de Waal regards as an instinct hard-wired within each of us, with a system of ethics ordered by a code of right and wrong.
Liberals,
progressives, artists, seekers, poets, hipsters, intellectuals,
humanists, and aging hippies—i.e., most of the people who make up
my Facebook feed—bristle at the concept of “morality,” which
smacks of a top-down system of rules and control. Just as the term
“religion” sets their teeth on edge but “spirituality” is
okay, most of my crowd will not speak of “moral standards” but are
comfortable discussing “ethics.” The term does seem to allow for
more personal agency, but in truth, both ethics and morals define the
same thing, the individual’s duty to the greater good, governed by
a protocol of principles and conduct. To speak of moral or ethical
duty is not to impinge on our free will, but to give it meaning. The compassion and courage essential for an ethical life imbue freedom with a texture and satisfaction it cannot otherwise achieve.
Art
that ignites moral imagination and reconnects us to our collective
conscience is a source and expression of such freedom. We are living now through a great depression of decency, virtue, and social justice, and need as
much as ever what I called the “documentary arts.” These are, broadly
defined, narrative and lyric forms of photography, film, oral
history, visual art, textile art, poetry, etc. that bear witness to the human condition, address social themes, and add to the world's
supply of beauty and mercy. Reborn now as the Center for Ethics and Culture, the intention remains unchanged: to promote a more just and ethical world; to present art that penetrates the heart, awakens compassion, and inspires action; and to support artists who embody these principles. As I return to this project begun a decade ago, I feel
an even greater commitment and urgency to continue its work of
education and advocacy, renewal and healing. I invite you to come along.
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