I hate your art
I have beautiful people in my life: Those I trust, love, and enjoy spending time with. Some of them have been bold enough to dedicate their lives to an artistic practice that requires an âall or nothingâ attitude. To sustain yourself with a creative pursuit is difficultâfoolish, reallyâso Iâm proud of all of them for finding ways to do it. But I canât say that I love all the fruits of their labor. Does that make me a bad person? This feeling is not uniqueâin fact I imagine most people who know more than one artist always have some kind of reservation about their output. Thereâs surely someone who comes to mind for you too. I spoke to a bunch of people who describe being caught up in this dilemmaâtheir names are changed below to protect their friendshipsâunsure about whether anything productive comes from being honest about it. When someone you like makes art you donât, how do you navigate that? Recently Jennifer realized that her friend is a âgod awfulâ poet. âSheâs really having a go at it,â she tells me. âShe does poetry readings and has self-published an anthology collection. By all standard markers, she is a poet.â But the work isnât hitting in a way she can fully stand behind. Jenniferâs been invited to many uncomfortable poetry nights.â It was all too fussy and read like AI. I canât think of any more excuses to miss her poetry nights and itâs getting awkward.â How long can you keep up the act before you crash out and tell them how you really feel? I find that lacklustre artists happen to be the loudest, letting you know everything theyâre up to, keen to show off their work. At art school, those friends are (for the duration of your course) inescapable. An art history student, Emma has been holed up with the worst of them for a while. She can sniff them a mile off and put a smile on for the sake of staying civil. They are perfectly nice people but, fuck me, she canât stand what they make. She tells me there are three dominant types: The so-parodied-itâs-serious white man doing Basquiat art âRipping off one of the most famous artists is going to get you nowhere, unless your plan is to get clicks from rage-baiting.â The nepo baby artist âYawn. Sometimes talented, generally not. Mommy and daddy just happen to do late-summer weekends away with an art director. The only reason youâre getting noticed.â The faux provocateur âThe growing-up-in-Surrey-to-thinking-youâre-Marina AbramoviÄ pipeline is by far my favorite.â She has been to parties, asked that harrowing question: What do you think? All along sheâs managed to keep it cool. The nice thing about art school is that thereâs an end in sight. Thatâs all good for Emma, but Jennifer is stuck in her bad poet situation. Has she managed to muster up the courage to lie? âI wonât betray my opinions and say âOh wow that was amazing!â,â she admits. âI will try to say, âOh wow, how exciting!â instead.â Iâve found myself doing versions of this out of politeness. If an actor friend is in a play or film I donât like, but I genuinely think theyâve saved it, Iâll skirt around the quality of the text and hone in on their performance. I have vivid memories of running into a filmmaker whose film I had just seen and hated, and responding with: âYou must be busy!â. Ben, a photographer, told me heâd recently been gifted a work by a friend of his that he hated. âI have to hang it up in my flat or theyâll notice!â he says. I donât think lying is good for anyone, even if itâs designed to protect the peace of a clearly passionate person. But âtelling our loved one that their art isnât to our taste would hurt and injure them,â says Harry Rawson, an Integrative Humanistic Counsellor I turned to to solve this problem. âThe conundrum here is that the lie injures the relationship also. You could even argue that the sustained lie does more damage to the relationship than confessing.â Rawson suggests that we could look at ourselves in this scenario. What does our hatred of our friendâs art, and our reticence to express it, say about us? Personally I think itâs a symptom of my unshakeable bitchiness that undergirds so much of what I do, but itâs probably a little bit of insecurity too. Rawson also cites Freud, specifically the quote: âUnexpressed emotions never die.â Rawson explains, âIt could be argued that the feelings we may have about our loved oneâs art, or our loved ones in general, have to come out.â He added, âif we shifted our lens slightly, we could learn to celebrate the art, not in and of itself, but something deeply personal and a reflection of our loved one? We might say, âThis painting isnât to my taste, but Iâm so proud of you for painting itâ or âI wouldnât personally listen to it, but Iâve seen how hard youâve worked on it and you should be really proud of yourself.ââ I started to think about it: What if I was that girl to some other person? The amateur DJ? The Bitcoin entrepreneur who developed a Diet Jackson Pollock artistic aesthetic? Would I want to know if those I loved were cringing a little at my new creative pursuit? Maybe they are! I never know whatâs happening in the group chatâsomeone screenshotting my sentences and posting them with eyeroll emojis attached. Then I started to think: Maybe itâs healthy to keep some things to yourself. Thereâs something really lovely in that ignorance of not knowing. Despite the annoyance it causes her, Jennifer is with me: She knows that her poet bestie wonât learn her opinion of her work. âAt the end of the day that is my pal,â she says. âItâs not worth the hurt feelings.â But thereâs a niggling feeling at the back of Jenniferâs mind that this secret beef might one day come in handy. âSome things are better left unsaid,â she says, âbut if we have some kind of evil falling outâthen I would reconsider.â Itâs quite nice when you see a show and you donât have to lie about the thing to the person involved afterwards. Such is the case with Calam Lynch, whoâs currently playing The Beatlesâ manager Brian Epstein in the cool and deeply homoerotic Please Please Me at Londonâs Kiln Theatre. I saw it and told him it, and he, were both greatâand that wasnât a lie! We last spoke to him for his performance in What It Feels Like for a Girl, which is nominated a bunch at the TV BAFTAs tomorrow. I asked him: What makes you think of 2007? He said: â2007 reminds me of Putney Leisure Centre. Sure, on the one hand, it was just a leisure centre⊠it had a pool (Olympic size I think?) and a shit gym. But in 2007, Putney Leisure Centre was where I had my first kiss, soundtracked by none other than Fall Out Boyâs âThnks Fr the Mmrsâ. Itâs therefore a site of some spiritual significance.â Someone asked me what I was listening to the other day and I said old showtunes and AdĂ©la. Which is to say, after our big Rachel Zegler digital cover story last year, her award-winning performance in Evita is coming to New York! One for people who like their plays like pop shows. The Cannes Film Festival kicks off next week. The next one of these will be dedicated to the good stuff Iâve seen. The muscle in the back of my armpit keeps twitching. I think itâs connected to me being on my phone too much.
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