January 19, 2008

Arts Motivation

Arts Leadership readers might start to see evidence of a slightly obsessive professional crush on Albert Einstein. He says, "One of the strongest motives that lead men to art and science is escape from everyday life, with its painful crudity and hopeless dreariness, and from the fetters of one's own ever-shifting desires."

In both teaching and performing improvisation, I agree. 

However, this DOES NOT mean to say that when we become involved in an Artistic or Scientific Enterprise as a Leader we should ignore the realistic needs of everyday life and the ever-shifting demands of the public that would support our Enterprise. 

If Leaders ignore the needs of everyday life, we will no longer have the privilege of running sustainable Arts organizations. If Leaders ignore the ever-shifting demands and desires of the public, our work will cease to be relevant to the audience. And then, as an Arts Leader, we will have FAILED at providing that escape for the audience.

1 comment:

Alyssa said...

I agree. It seems like there are two parts to art. The creation and the honing of the art is one part, the other is the distribution and admin stuff.
The escape from reality exists only in the first. The second is more than an escape from reality: it's more the immersion in reality. Trying to find that audience and get them to see this art.