art

1 result for (book:tps4 AND heading:"delet session april 5 1978" AND stemmed:art)

TPS4 Deleted Session April 5, 1978 3/38 (8%) public fears art threat livelihood
– The Personal Sessions: Book 4 of The Deleted Seth Material
– © 2016 Laurel Davies-Butts
– Deleted Session April 5, 1978 9:37 PM Wedesday

[... 10 paragraphs ...]

Give us a moment.... Art always serves as some self-disclosure, in which the art stands for the person, and the art is sent abroad, for example. The art stands for more than the person. In a way it reaches higher than the person, in that it expresses dimensions of imagination or inspiration that are heroic, and often by nature it speaks of capacities that cannot be fully expressed except through art.

The person, therefore, often “cannot live up to his art.” Ruburt wants to embody his art. He expects himself to possess all of the qualities that his art tries to entice from human nature. If man can be a natural healer, and he says so, then he personally should heal others and himself. That is his reasoning. If he is gifted with words in writing, and gifted in speech, then he feels that he should go out bravely into the public arena, and speak out his message to the world.

[... 3 paragraphs ...]

You felt that commercial art would work financially, because it belonged to the times, yet even then the comic book market, you felt, was falling beneath you as the public’s ideas changed, and (Mickey) Spillane’s comic strip fell beneath censure. You simply would not, later, curry the world’s favor with your paintings—even if, through hard work, financial success might follow. You did not trust people to know good work when you produced it.

[... 21 paragraphs ...]

Similar sessions

TPS6 Deleted Session February 11, 1981 public arena spontaneous withdrawing white
TPS6 Deleted Session February 18, 1981 art public celebration subverts responsibility
TPS6 Deleted Session January 26, 1981 hostages impulses public private national
TPS6 Deleted Session February 4, 1981 public exposure latest disclaimer books