musing on
the muse

[number four. 3. 31. 08]

 

This is the fourth  issue of musing on the muse, my no-longer-new, monthly newsletter about creativity. If you don't want to receive more musings, click this  unsubscribe link. On the other hand, you can forward this to anyone you think might be interested.
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As you may already know, I'm doing another three hour workshop
on April 13
at 2 in berkeley.

The last one on March 4 was great and serious fun.

for more info, click here

 

 

What you see above is a sea fan. It looks like a plant but is actually a colony of living corals, which are animals, of the same phylum as some jellyfish and anemones (cnidaria). By joining together and creating a wood-like substance,  the individuals  form these beautiful structures which they "know" how to place across the current to better trap their food. What is visible to us is the skeleton of the colony but if you were to look very closely as the sun went down, you could see tiny tentacles reaching out of tiny cup-like bodies within the elegant structure that is their collective work. visit my website for more marine life.


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Originality is overrated. We don’t exist in a vacuum. Even the most isolated artist has her influences. For some this is a source of anxiety, as the critic Harold Bloom has made much of, taking a hyper-Freudian stance that creators fear the power of their artistic “fathers” which manifests as “influence.” Bloom put an Oedipal spin on it with “son” killing father by breaking free of  his influence.

I take another view, perhaps influenced by sitting on the Jungian side of the aisle.  I celebrate those whose influence – consciously or not -- has shaped my work. I see myself as part of a continuum, a community that stretches beyond the usual boundaries of time, space and culture.

The examples of creative “geniuses” who borrowed, stole, reworked, transformed, appropriated others’ work are endless. Shakespeare drew from a common stock pot of plot and character. The Greek playwrights did not try to be “original” when they animated myths and mythologized history.

Of course, I’m not talking about literal plagiarism, stealing something word for word, note for note, without attribution, permission or acknowledgement. 

I tend to celebrate my “influences.”  I’ve just finished recording a new hybrid spoken-word/song/rap/blues piece that is an unapologetic homage to Bob Dylan, who, along with Leonard Cohen, Whitman, Grace Paley, Phillip Roth, Joni Mitchell, Shakespeare, Peter Brook, Bill Wilson, Joe Chaikin and hundreds of others whose works have altered the way I produce mine. Some I was lucky enough to meet in the flesh, others through the works they gave us.  I claim them as ancestors, models, teachers and sources of inspiration.  [For more extended thought on this subject, please visit my blog.]

try this:

Sit down some place comfortable. Take your shoes off.  Close your eyes and take a few deep breaths.  Without making any effort, allow an image to bubble up into your awareness of some “artist” – singer, composer, writer, painter, dancer, actor or a teacher in any creative area.  It might be a “great” artist or an “unknown,“ someone from the past or present, living or dead.  If a number of figures arise, just pick one, it doesn’t matter which.

When you're ready, open your eyes and write, non-stop for 10 minutes, a letter to the person who came to mind while you had your eyes closed.  Tell them what their work or their life has done for/to you, how it affected you, your work, your beliefs, your goals and/or anything thing else you want them to know.

If writing the letter energizes you, try writing, in the voice of this person, a response to the first letter.

At different times in my life, I’ve carried on dialogues in the form of correspondence with historical or imaginary figures over a period of months. It's a process I first learned from writer and teacher Deena Metzger (see right sidebar)

For less abridged reflections,  please visit my blog

yes we can department:

I don't want to end this musing without mentioning one more thing. I'm currently reading a book that is surprising me almost every time I turn a page.  The book is  Dreams from my Father. I imagine you all have heard of its author by now.  I've been supporting since I first heard him speak and then I heard the speech -- the one in which he broke the code of silence, among candidates, about racism. What his memoir makes clear is that he has made his journey through the dark night and is willing to tell the story. And he has the skill to do it in a moving and direct  way.  I can't think of any president since Lincoln who so keenly feels both the tragic and the transcendent dimensions of human life. Most importantly, he has, through his struggles to understand his own identity, acquired real empathy for all who struggle (which is every human, I believe) and has learned in his heart that we are all connected.

 

 

 

For my latest  work-in-progress recording, Bobby Z.,  click here

 

It was in one of  Deena Metzger's workshops sometime in the seventies that I first started writing with any understanding of why and what I was doing. She's a visionary and someone we are lucky to have on the planet right now. Her book on writing (above) is one of her many genre-busting works that I recommend to anyone interested in creativity in all its permutations.

 click on the book to purchase or on Deena's photo to go to her site.

 


 

 

 

 

Here's a response to the exercise-offering from the last issue by Betty Plevney, a gifted writer who took part in several workshops of mine.


Once I was stubborn, riding with my fear
Now I am in overdrive looking for the right exit

Once I was an innocent believing in happy ever after
Now I find happiness under rocks, beside dying friends, in the sudden smile hidden in the eyes of my wife

Once I was afraid of older men
Now I stare, mesmerized by the choice they make to pull pants over a burgeoning belly or hang below with cuffs dragging on the ground like their teenage daughter

Once I was a golden leaf
Now I am a footprint
 

 

 

 

photos: left and center column are  corey's (except for the dylan photo of unknown origin): on right, photo of corey by craig damon; of deena by ayelet berman cohen