continued from last post
4. They say I should not use the words sublime or everyday.
I shall sit on the fence about this and see how my work develops as it could go in many ways. For the time being instead of using the word sublime I shall use poetic, and instead of using the word everyday I shall use the word familiar. I am certainly drawn to the poetic, I collect quotes and poems (all relatively new to me as my schooling was very science based) alongside visual images and ideas. I look for poetry in the familiar.
LIGHTBULB MOMENT We have started reading groups at college now and recently I have read
Alan Badious 15 Thesis on Contemporary art. We discussed this text with Amanda Beech, I’m interested in his recommendations, that we should not make Formalist Romantic work, he explains that by this he means work exploring death, sex and the body (same old thing) shown just in another way. But that instead we suggest new truths and positive possibilities. I want to study this further to get a better understanding. But I’ve been very influenced by it and feel now that I need to make work that in someway presents change or the future in a positive light. So I have been thinking about utopia and the future. I think the formation idea will still stick within this new understanding of what I want my art to be about.
At another recent reading group with Isabel Bowditch around the text A Ricoeur (french philosopher 1913 – 2005) Reader: Reflection and Imagination we touched on issues around limitations and freedom. In the works of Sartre (french philosopher 1905 – 1980), facticity signifies all of the concrete details against the background of which human freedom exists and is limited. For example, these may include the time and place of birth, a language, an environment, an individual’s previous choices, as well as the inevitable prospect of their death. For example: currently, the situation of a person who is born without legs precludes their freedom to walk on the beach; if future medicine were to develop a method of growing new legs for that person, their facticity might no longer exclude this activity. Ricoeur says facticity is what makes us free and human, and we shouldn’t be defeated by it.
I have been looking for the argument that freedom has to be pitted against un-freedom, which I havn’t found, but I found this interestin blog from Anthony North on freedom and unfreedom.
The defining point of western society is the idea that the person is free. Each an individual, it is our own choices that decide who we are, assisted by a society that is democratic, with minimum interference in what we do.
This is more a delusion than a reality, because a society can only exist if it balances your duties to others and your rights towards yourself. Go too far one way, and we have totalitarianism. Go the other and we have chaos.
Libertarians would disagree with this argument.
Rather, it is the duty of the individual to be who he wants to be regardless of others. The outcome is not chaos, but fulfilled individuals. But the problem with this is that if everyone does exactly what they want, they impede so much on the wants of others that no one gets what they want at all.
Most people accept this and moderate their behaviour accordingly. Indeed, it seems to be that libertarianism is not about choice, but excess. It is simply about deluded people flying in the face of a norm.