What Art Does for Us

This $100 Moroccan Trellis Rug is The New Amazon Coat
January 13, 2021
Faith is Hard to Define. Can Spiritual Directors Help?
January 13, 2021
Show all

What Art Does for Us

This post was originally published on this site

Want create site? Find Free WordPress Themes and plugins.

At Home Newsletter

What Art Does for Us

And why we should support it.

Credit…Invisible Creature

  • Jan. 13, 2021, 4:00 p.m. ET

Welcome. When I was 22, I was a factotum at a nonprofit theater in New York City. I made fundraising calls and addressed envelopes. The job was pretty humdrum, but it had one massive perk: I’d frequently get free tickets to shows I’d never be able to afford otherwise: Cherry Jones in “Pride’s Crossing”; “Art,” with Alan Alda, Victor Garber and Alfred Molina; musicals like “Ragtime” and “The Lion King.”

I thought about that era of constant theatergoing — of sitting in the dark of the audience, overwhelmed by the grandness of the spectacle onstage and my luck at getting to experience it — while reading the critic Jason Farago’s suggestions for what the Biden administration can do to provide relief for the arts. He argues that the country is in urgent need of Aristotelian catharsis — of art, music, drama and the emotions they summon:

You go to the theater, you listen to a symphony, you look at a painting, you watch a ballet. You laugh, you cry. You feel pity, fear. You see in others’ lives a reflection of your own. And the catharsis comes: a cleansing, a clarity, a feeling of relief and understanding that you carry with you out of the theater or the concert hall. Art, music, drama — here is a point worth recalling in a pandemic — are instruments of psychic and social health.

Farago advises Biden to create a new Works Progress Administration-style program treating artists as essential workers, and to make it easier for artists to receive unemployment benefits, among other recommendations.

We’re all waiting for things to open up so we can resume what we think of as normal life. Considering what that will take is daunting, but it makes the promise of going to a play, hearing live music or standing awed before a painting that much more exciting to anticipate.

In the shorter term, I’m anticipating “A Swim in a Pond in the Rain,” George Saunders’s close reading of Chekhov. Parul Sehgal wrote, in her review of it, that Saunders “offers one of the most accurate and beautiful depictions of what it is like to be inside the mind of the writer that I’ve ever read.” Who could resist?

There’s also a new Sally Rooney novel coming in September. (Rooney’s last novel, “Normal People,” which was adapted into a popular Hulu series last year, gets more attention, but I’m partial to her first book, “Conversations with Friends.”)

And if it’s sunny where you are, or even if it’s not, you might find it thrilling, as I did, to take a stroll and listen to this episode of the podcast “Grounded with Louis Theroux,” in which Theroux interviews his friend and rival, the writer and filmmaker Jon Ronson.

Tell us.

When was the last time you had a strong emotional response to a play or film? The last time a book or painting freed you from “the feeling that there’s only one way to live, or only one way to go about your day,” as the writer Ben Lerner put it? Write to us: athome@nytimes.com. We’re At Home. We’ll read every letter sent. More ideas for leading a full and cultured life at home appear below.

Like what you see?

Were you forwarded this newsletter? Sign up to receive it yourself! You can always find much more to read, watch and do every day on At Home. And let us know what you think!

Did you find apk for android? You can find new Free Android Games and apps.

Comments are closed.