| Why
I Refused the National Medal for the Arts
By ADRIENNE RICH (Los Angeles Times
Book Section - August 3, 1997)
Note: Adrienne
Rich's recent refusal of the National Medal for the Arts puzzled
many people. The debate over the proper relations between the
state and the artist, between the realms of the public and the
private, continues unabated. Book Review invited Rich to explain
why she refused the presidential honor.
The invitation from
the White House came by telephone on July 3, just before the
national holiday, a time of public contention about the relationship
of government to the arts. After several years' erosion of arts
funding and hostile propaganda from the religious right and
the Republican Congress, the House vote to end the National
Endowment for the Arts was looming. That vote would break as
news on July 10; my refusal of the National Medal for the Arts
would run as a sidebar story in the New York Times and the San
Francisco Chronicle.
In fact, I was unaware
of the timing. My "no" came directly out of my work
as a poet and essayist and citizen drawn to the interfold of
personal and public experience. I had recently been thinking
and writing about the growing fragmentation of the social compact,
of whatever it was this country had ever meant when it called
itself a democracy: the shredding of the vision of government
of the people, by the people, for the people. "We the people
still an excellent phrase," said the prize-winning
playwright Lorraine Hansberry in 1962, well aware who had been
excluded, yet believing the phrase might someday come to embrace
us all. And I had for years been feeling both personal and public
grief, fear, hunger and the need to render this, my time, in
the language of my art.
Whatever was "newsworthy"
about my refusal was not about a single individual not
myself, not President Clinton. Nor was it about a single political
party. Both major parties have displayed a crude affinity for
the interests of corporate power while deserting the majority
of the people, especially the most vulnerable. Like so many
others, I've watched the dismantling of our public education,
the steep rise in our incarceration rates, the demonization
of our young black men, the accusations against our teenage
mothers, the selling of health care public and private
to the highest bidders, the export of subsistence-level
jobs in the United States to even lower-wage countries, the
use of below-minimum-wage prison labor to break strikes and
raise profits, the scapegoating of immigrants, the denial of
dignity and minimal security to our working and poor people.
At the same time, we've witnessed the acquisition of publishing
houses, once risk-taking conduits of creativity, by conglomerates
driven single-mindedly to fast profits, the acquisition of major
communications and media by those same interests, the sacrifice
of the arts and public libraries in stripped-down school and
civic budgets and, most recently, the evisceration of the National
Endowment for the Arts. Piece by piece the democratic process
has been losing ground to the accumulation of private wealth.
There is no political
leadership in the White House or the Congress that has spoken
to and for the people who, in a very real sense, have felt abandoned
by their government.
Hansberry spoke
her words about government during the Cuban missile crisis,
at a public meeting in New York to abolish the House Un-American
Activities Committee. She also said in that speech, "My
government is wrong." She did not say, I abhor all government.
She claimed her government as a citizen, African American and
female, and she challenged it. (I listened to her words again,
on an old vinyl recording, this past Fourth of July.)
In a similar spirit,
many of us today might wish to hold government accountable,
challenge the agendas of private power and wealth that have
displaced historical tendencies toward genuinely representative
government in the United States. We might still wish to claim
our government, to say, This belongs to us--we, the people,
as we are now.
We would have to
start asking questions that have been defined as non-questions
or as naive, childish questions. In the recent official
White House focus on race, it goes consistently unsaid that
the all-embracing enterprise of our early history was the slave
trade, which left nothing, no single life, untouched and was,
along with the genocide of the native population and the seizure
of their lands, the foundation of our national prosperity and
power. Promote dialogues on race? Apologize for slavery? We
would need to perform an autopsy on capitalism itself.
Marxism has been
declared dead. Yet the questions Marx raised are still alive
and pulsing, however the language and the labels have been co-opted
and abused. What is social wealth? How do the conditions of
human labor infiltrate other social relationships? What would
it require for people to live and work together in conditions
of radical equality? How much inequality will we tolerate in
the world's richest and most powerful nation? Why and how have
these and similar questions become discredited in public discourse?
And what about art?
Mistrusted, adored, pietized, condemned, dismissed as entertainment,
auctioned at Sotheby's, purchased by investment-seeking celebrities,
it dies into the "art object" of a thousand museum
basements. It's also reborn hourly in prisons, women's shelters,
small-town garages, community college workshops, halfway houses--wherever
someone picks up a pencil, a wood-burning tool, a copy of "The
Tempest," a tag-sale camera, a whittling knife, a stick
of charcoal, a pawnshop horn, a video of "Citizen Kane,"
whatever lets you know again that this deeply instinctual yet
self-conscious expressive language, this regenerative process,
could help you save your life. "If there were no poetry
on any day in the world," the poet Muriel Rukeyser wrote,
"poetry would be invented that day. For there would be
an intolerable hunger." In an essay on the Caribbean poet
Aime Cesaire, Clayton Eshleman names this hunger as "the
desire, the need, for a more profound and ensouled world."
There is a continuing dynamic between art repressed and art
reborn, between the relentless marketing of the superficial
and the "spectral and vivid reality that employs all means"
(Rukeyser again) to reach through armoring, resistances, resignation,
to recall us to desire.
Art is both tough
and fragile. It speaks of what we long to hear and what we dread
to find. Its source and native impulse, the imagination, may
be shackled in early life, yet may find release in conditions
offering little else to the spirit. For a recent document on
this, look at Phyllis Kornfeld's "Cellblock Visions: Prison
Art in America," notable for the variety and emotional
depth of the artworks reproduced, the words of the inmate artists
and for Kornfeld's unsentimental and lucid text. Having taught
art to inmates for 14 years in 18 institutions (including maximum
security units), she sees recent incarceration policy overall
as rapidly devolving from rehabilitation to dehumanization,
including the dismantling of prison arts programs.
Art can never be
totally legislated by any system, even those that reward obedience
and send dissident artists to hard labor and death; nor can
it, in our specifically compromised system, be really free.
It may push up through cracked macadam, by the merest means,
but it needs breathing space, cultivation, protection to fulfill
itself. Just as people do. New artists, young or old, need education
in their art, the tools of their craft, chances to study examples
from the past and meet practitioners in the present, get the
criticism and encouragement of mentors, learn that they are
not alone. As the socialcompact withers, fewer and fewer people
will be told, yes, you can do this, this also belongs to you.
Like government, art needs the participation of the many in
order not to become the property of a powerful and narrowly
self-interested minority.
Art is our human
birthright, our most powerful means of access to our own and
another's experience and imaginative life. In continually rediscovering
and recovering the humanity of human beings, art is crucial
to the democratic vision. A government tending further and further
away from the search for democracy will see less and less "use"
in encouraging artists, will see art as obscenity or hoax.
In 1987, the late
Justice William Brennan spoke of "formal reason severed
from the insights of passion" as a major threat to due-process
principles. "Due process asks whether government has treated
someone fairly, whether individual dignity has been honored,
whether the worth of an individual has been acknowledged. Officials
cannot always silence these questions by pointing to rational
action taken according to standard rules. They must plumb their
conduct more deeply, seeking answers in the more complex equations
of human nature and experience."
It is precisely
where fear and hatred of art join the pull toward quantification
and abstraction, where the human face is mechanically deleted,
that human dignity disappears from the social equation. Because
it is to those "complex equations of human nature and experience"
that art addresses itself.
In a society tyrannized
by the accumulation of wealth as Eastern Europe was tyrannized
by its own false gods of concentrated power, recognized artists
have, perhaps, a new opportunity to work out our connectedness,
as artists, with other people who are beleaguered, suffering,
disenfranchised precariously employed workers, trashed
elders, throwaway youth, the "unsuccessful" and the
art they too are nonetheless making and seeking.
I wish I didn't
feel the necessity to say here that none of this is about imposing
ideology or style or content on artists; it is about the inseparability
of art from acute social crisis in this century and the one
now coming up.
We have a short-lived
model in our history for the place of art in relation to government.
During the Depression of the 1930s, under New Deal legislation,
thousands of creative and performing artists were paid modest
stipends to work in the Federal Writers Project, the Federal
Theatre Project, the Federal Art Project. Their creativity,
in the form of novels, murals, plays, performances, public monuments,
the providing of music and theater to new audiences, seeded
the art and the consciousness of succeeding decades. By 1939,
this funding was discontinued.
Federal funding
for the arts, like the philanthropy of private arts patrons,
can be given and taken away. In the long run, art needs to grow
organically out of a social compost nourishing to everyone,
a literate citizenry, a free, universal, public education complex
with art as an integral element, a society without throwaway
people, honoring both human individuality and the search for
a decent, sustainable common life. In such conditions, art would
still be a voice of hunger, desire, discontent, passion, reminding
us that the democratic project is never-ending.
For that to happen,
what else would have to change? I hope the discussion will continue.
***
July
3, 1997
Jane Alexander
The National Endowment for the Arts,
1100 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington 20506
Dear
Jane Alexander,
I just spoke with
a young man from your office, who informed me that I had been
chosen to be one of twelve recipients of the National Medal
for the Arts at a ceremony at the White House in the fall. I
told him at once that I could not accept such an award from
President Clinton or this White House because the very meaning
of art, as I understand it, is incompatible with the cynical
politics of this administration. I want to clarify to you what
I meant by my refusal.
Anyone familiar
with my work from the early Sixties on knows that I believe
in art's social presence as breaker of official silences,
as voice for those whose voices are disregarded, and as a human
birthright. In my lifetime I have seen the space for the arts
opened by movements for social justice, the power of art to
break despair. Over the past two decades I have witnessed the
increasingly brutal impact of racial and economic injustice
in our country.
There is no simple
formula for the relationship of art to justice. But I do know
that art--in my own case the art of poetry means nothing
if it simply decorates the dinner table of power which holds
it hostage. The radical disparities of wealth and power in America
are widening at a devastating rate. A President cannot meaningfully
honor certain token artists while the people at large are so
dishonored. I know you have been engaged in a serious and disheartening
struggle to save government funding for the arts, against those
whose fear and suspicion of art is nakedly repressive. In the
end, I don't think we can separate art from overall human dignity
and hope. My concern for my country is inextricable from my
concerns as an artist. I could not participate in a ritual which
would feel so hypocritical to me.
Sincerely,
Adrienne Rich
cc:
President Clinton Return
to Adrienne Rich's bio page
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