Independence
Day:
changing paradigms in American puppetry
by
Andrew C. Periale
The fall of Communism
in Eastern Europe and the rise of the conservative
right in American politics, though radically different
processes, have a common thread. In both cases the
message to artists has been:" Look over there!
See that federal support for the arts? Wave 'bye-bye'!" In
this country, the process has caused a lot of suffering
and not just for artists. People on welfare, people
on farms, people on the streets... a lot of folks
will be waving a lot of money goodbye in the coming
years as the mood of the country shifts. In particular,
the gutting of the National Endowment of the Arts
is presenting both artists and cultural institutions
with new challenges. As pitifully as this situation
reflects on the state of American politics, meeting
the challenge will certainly make us stronger in the
long run.
The changing scene in federal arts support
may, in fact, be largely responsible for the new paradigm
in American puppetry: forge new partnerships, connect
with new audiences, build new bridges to the old ones.
This new attitude is completely in line with the national
movement back toward "community" represented
by the new popularity of, for example, co-housing and
communitarianism.
In addition to our recognition of the l00th anniversary
of the premiere of Alfred Jarry's Ubu Roi, this issue
is full of new paradigm puppetry- artists like Amy
Trompetter and Lee Breuer, who are endlessly building
new bridges in their work- between cultural traditions,
between artists, between artistic styles. Arts presenters,
too, are creating new partnerships- with new audiences,
new artists, new sources of funding. Though this may
not seem like a radical concept, Vince Anthony (director
of Atlanta's Center for Puppetry Arts) sees it as
a sea change." The
model in the '70s was people who'd been drawn to puppetry
earnestly working on the techniques by which to
express themselves in the medium. In the '80s a lot
of new artists were drawn to puppetry from other
disciplines and there was a lot of wild experimenting
going on- a lot of 'pushing the elastic boundaries'.
Now in the '90s artists are interpreting more- really
trying to communicate with their audiences."
Though
the NEA money which made it easier to develop risky
(at times even obscure) work is largely gone, it
has left a legacy of artists who are equipped to
continue without it. Whether or not they will is
still an open question.
When we look at how many
Russians now long for the good old days before perestroika,we
get a quick reminder of the difficulties of real
independence. Humans are an ingenious species. I remember
hearing Buckminster Fuller address this, pointing
to a man who, in need, turned a floating piano crate
into a life preserver. That doesn't imply that
a piano crate is necessarily the best design for
a life preserver. We tend, though, to cling to what
works, whether it is the best solution or not. The
NEA surely kept many artists afloat in its time.
Now the budget cutters, be they anti-art fascists
or merely sincere Conservatives, are prying our
fingers loose from our make-shift life rafts.
No
doubt some will drown, some will thrash about until
they happen on a new bit of floating debris, and
still others will put time and energy into designing
a more efficient life raft. But for those who've
used their time afloat in a process of growth and
development, it's Independence Day: the time has
come to jump in and swim straight for shore. |
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