POINT
OF VIEW
Celebrity
Versus Culture...
Everything now is entertainment. And the purpose of this omnipresent
commercial entertainment is to sell us something. American culture
has mostly become one vast infomercial.
I have a reccurring nightmare. I am in Rome visiting the Sistine
Chapel. I look up at Michelangelo's incomparable fresco of the
"Creation of Man." I see God stretching out his arm
to touch the reclining Adam's finger. And then I notice in the
other hand Adam is holding a Diet Pepsi.
When was the last time you have seen a featured guest on David
Letterman or Jay Leno who isn't trying to sell you something?
A new movie, a new TV show, a new book, or a new vote?
Don't get me wrong. I love entertainment, and I love the free
market. I have a Stanford MBA and spent 15 years in the food industry.
I adore my big-screen TV. The productivity and efficiency of the
free market is beyond dispute. It has created a society of unprecedented
prosperity.
But we must remember that the marketplace does only one thing—it
puts a price on everything.
The role of culture, however, must go beyond economics. It is
not focused on the price of things, but on their value. And, above
all, culture should tell us what is beyond price, including what
does not belong in the marketplace. A culture should also provide
some cogent view of the good life beyond mass accumulation. In
this respect, our culture is failing us.
There is only one social force in America potentially large and
strong enough to counterbalance this profit-driven commercialization
of cultural values, our educational system, especially public
education. Traditionally, education has been one thing that our
nation has agreed cannot be left entirely to the marketplace—but
made mandatory and freely available to everyone.
At 56, I am just old enough to remember a time when every public
high school in this country had a music program with choir and
band, usually a jazz band, too, sometimes even orchestra. And
every high school offered a drama program, sometimes with dance
instruction. And there were writing opportunities in the school
paper and literary magazine, as well as studio art training.
I am sorry to say that these programs are no longer widely available
to the new generation of Americans. This once visionary and democratic
system has been almost entirely dismantled by well-meaning but
myopic school boards, county commissioners, and state officials,
with the federal government largely indifferent to the issue.
Art became an expendable luxury, and 50 million students have
paid the price. Today a child's access to arts education is largely
a function of his or her parents' income.
In a time of social progress and economic prosperity, why have
we experienced this colossal cultural and political decline? There
are several reasons, but I must risk offending many friends and
colleagues by saying that surely artists and intellectuals are
partly to blame. Most American artists, intellectuals, and academics
have lost their ability to converse with the rest of society.
We have become wonderfully expert in talking to one another, but
we have become almost invisible and inaudible in the general culture.
This mutual estrangement has had enormous cultural, social, and
political consequences. America needs its artists and intellectuals,
and they need to reestablish their rightful place in the general
culture. If we could reopen the conversation between our best
minds and the broader public, the results would not only transform
society but also artistic and intellectual life.
There is no better place to start this rapprochement than in arts
education. How do we explain to the larger society the benefits
of this civic investment when they have been convinced that the
purpose of arts education is mostly to produce more artists—hardly
a compelling argument to either the average taxpayer or financially
strapped school board?
We need to create a new national consensus. The purpose of arts
education is not to produce more artists, though that is a byproduct.
The real purpose of arts education is to create complete human
beings capable of leading successful and productive lives in a
free society.
This is not happening now in American schools. Even if you forget
the larger catastrophe that only 70 percent of American kids now
graduate from high school, what are we to make of a public education
system whose highest goal seems to be producing minimally competent
entry-level workers?
The situation is a cultural and educational disaster, but it also
has huge and alarming economic consequences. If the United States
is to compete effectively with the rest of the world in the new
global marketplace, it is not going to succeed through cheap labor
or cheap raw materials, nor even the free flow of capital or a
streamlined industrial base. To compete successfully, this country
needs continued creativity, ingenuity, and innovation.
It is hard to see those qualities thriving in a nation whose educational
system ranks at the bottom of the developed world and has mostly
eliminated the arts from the curriculum.
from the June 17. 2007
Commencement Speech
given at Stanford University,
Palo Alto, California
by National Endowment for the Arts Chairman, Dana Gioia
|