Petrarch's Love--Usually when an era is in one of those less productive times--at the base of the "wave"--it tends to be either an innovative break with the past or an attempt to reconnect with the past in new ways that stimulates renewed creativity. If we are indeed in one of these less peak times, then one possibly invigorating approach could be to take a closer look back at some of the past traditions that may have been abandoned in the fervor of innovative rebellion and to incorporate a little of those past approaches to poetry into the contemporary mode. This is, of course, something that many poets do, and I do not mean to suggest that contemporary poets all fall neatly into the block of "innovative rebels," since clearly things are much more complicated than that. I'm also not stating absolutely that we even are in a particularly low ebb state poetically, though it is my sense that history won't be looking back at this time as one of the great heights. It is, however, very difficult to be completely accurate in one's assessment of the current day, and hindsight is always 20/20.
I largely agree. I do think that over the course of history we can discern certain peaks and certain lower points in the production of art. This does not mean that the best artists of such a "low point" cannot be brilliant... even as great as some of the greatest giants of those most peak periods. Speaking of my own field of the visual arts one can recognize certain eras: The Renaissance, the Baroque era, Romanticism, Modernism... as peak eras. In each instance they are followed by "lesser" periods: Mannerism, Rococo, Realism/Symbolism/Academicism, Late-Modernism/Post-Modernism. I might almost suggest that these eras which follow in the wake of periods of great innovation are almost a necessary lull during which the innovations of the era preceding are dissected and digested. A good deal of the art of these periods becomes "mannered"... self conscious... academic and as a result it usually takes a reexamination of older traditions or an influx of new or unexpected sources to reinvigorate the art form as a whole.
For example... following the Renaissance painting slips into nearly 100 years of a period termed as Mannerism. Mannerism was indeed an overtly "mannered"... abstracted... stylized dissection of the rules and common elements of Renaissance art. In comparison to the art of the Renaissance it often seems cold... lifeless... overly contrived. It will take the innovations of the painter Caravaggio to bust the strangle-hold and give birth to the Baroque. Caravaggio's "innovation" is merely to paint what he sees from observation. In one sense he merely returns to the Renaissance focus upon naturalism and personal observation... but he takes them to an entirely new level. He stages his models in dramatic orchestrated groupings spotlit with raking light and insists on painting them just as he sees them... no Mannerist abstractions and stylizations... but no Renaissance idealism either.
Of course this is a gross simplification... and the biggest problem with this simplification is that speaking of "peaks" and "low points" ignores the fact that there are artists of real merit in the worst of times... and the great majority of artists during the peak periods are as mediocre as during any other era. Mannerism produced Bronzino, Parmagianino, Rosso Fiorentino, Cennini, Veronese, Tintoretto, and El Greco... all artists of true merit... even genius. The period following the peak of Romanticism gave us Ingres, Courbet, Millet, John Singer Sargent, Whistler, Gustav Klimt, Aubrey Beardsley, etc... in the visual arts... and Browning, Tennyson, Oscar Wilde, Walter Pater, Baudelaire, Nerval, Rimbaud, etc... in literature.
Certainly, it is far easier to recognize... and be certain of the peaks and valleys of artistic eras as a greater deal of time has passed. I greatly suspect that we are not living in anything approaching a peak era in the arts. On the other hand... there are a great many of artists, writers, poets, composers who I find of real merit. It may be that future generations will imagine that we were living in one of the absolute pinnacles to be envied... with the only problem being that the greatest artists were not those who were recognized as such by the institutions. This, in itself, would not be new. How recognized were Mozart, Schubert, Bach, Bruckner, Van Gogh, Vermeer, William Blake, Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Mallarme... even the unpublished bard himself during their own lifetimes?
Jozie is right in that if we are moving on to what the current state of poetry... or the novel... or painting... or music... needs, I think that one is something of a stumper... Or rather, it is the million-dollar question. We can easily point out what we believe to be weaknesses or flaws. The solution for reinvigorating the art form in question would seemingly not take the form of some essay (except in the case of Emerson) but rather would involve the creation of that ground-shaking work of art itself.


) but rather would involve the creation of that ground-shaking work of art itself.

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One cannot help but experience these works from one's own Western cultural perception... but it must be admitted that such a view is skewed at best.


