When I was younger, it was all about making a statement.  Telling off the world and basically challenging the status quo.  I was all about making an impact.  I did this with the way I dressed, my hair, who I hung out with, the music I listened to, my journaling.  I secretly wanted to move to San Fran and then NYC to experience what it was like to stand up for something I thought was right.
When I was 14 I was the editor of Tomahawk News, Edgewood Jr High's newspaper.  I wrote an article on teen sex and abortion rates.  I was also a member of the local 5000 member baptist church down the road.  I felt it was a problem.  I felt like the Sex Education in my school was non-existant, because it was.  And I felt like my church was manipulating women into believing things that were wrong.  Needless to say I was sent to the Dean and then the Principal.  And while they agreed with me, they didn't believe that those types of articles belonged in an educational institution.  So I gave them an ultimatum; take the article out and I quit.
I quit.  I was astonished and I felt let down by the very institution that was supposed to be giving me the tools so that I could make decisions in my life that were healthy.  I decided to stage a protest.  I made a sign that said, Freedom of Speech only exists outside these walls.  I was too chicken to actually protest.  I was chicken because we were poor and I didn't need my single mother to worry about anything else that I had done.  I became solemn the last year of my life there and then moved to a completely different school where I knew 10 people.
Then there was highschool.  My junior year, I joined the key-club.  And to this day I still don't know what we did.  But Thanksgiving that year, I worked at a grocery store and asked my manager if he would donate some food to a project that we were working on.  He donated almost $5000 in food.  We delivered the baskets during school to families in need within my neighborhood (I still live in that neighborhood).  And I got in trouble.  Almost expelled.  Almost suspended because I shot my mouth of to a dean.  I accused her of being racist.  She was a black woman.  I accused her of favoritism.  I accused her of many things which she did not like at all.  But I won.  I never got suspended or expelled.  I held my ground and did not give up.  I still don't know why I got in trouble, but I will tell you that I never felt so good about it in my entire life.
I secretly wish I could still do that.  I wish I could look someone in the face and tell them exactly what I think of them.  But things get complicated when you get older.  The first thing that comes to mind is the outcome and the consequences of our actions.  If I tell someone off at work, it will come back to my manager and then ultimately make me look bad.  If I tell off a parent who is profusely beating their child in public, I'm told to mind my own business and not tell them how to discipline thier child.  If I see a 12 year old look like she's ready to be pimped out, I'm told off by her mother.  If I make negative comments toward my state and national representatives, I am afraid they will revoke my husbands greencard and send him back to the UK.
Man, that is one fuct up life.
I have started to fall in love with protest art again.  While I think that scrapbooking and jewelry making and ATC swapping are great and I enjoy each aspect of them, I have to ask myself - is it art or is it a consumable.  What is art?  A former friend once told me Art is anything the invokes an emotion.  But I have to disagree now.  I think art is something that makes a statement, whether it is about the artist or about current events or about pop culture etc, it is something that says something.  Hence the saying, a painting is worth a thousand words.
I'm not ready to go renegade.  But I'm ready to start making noise again.
There she goes, there she goes again...
Edited 06/07/07 8:57pm
Just because I questioned if certain projects were art or consumables, doesn't mean I still don't like to do them.  PS  What if they are creatives, oooh that's another way to look at it still!
-J.
June 7, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 

 

1 comments:
Good for you - heck yea - make some noise!
Post a Comment