Monday, January 15, 2007

Rilke, art, etc.

this is from Robert Genn's Twice-weekly Newsletter:

In 1903, the poet Rainer Maria Rilke responded by letter to a
young man seeking his advice. Rilke eventually wrote ten
letters now collectively known and much published as "Letters
to a Young Poet." They are heartfelt advice from a successful
(but still struggling) artist to another who was deeply mired
in self-doubt.

Here, partly in direct quotation and partly in condensed summation, are some of
Rilke's ideas:

Your work needs to be independent of others' work.
You must not compare yourself to others.
No one can help you. You have to help yourself.
Criticism leads to misunderstandings and defeatism.
Work from necessity and your compulsion to do it.
Work on what you know and what you are sure you love.
Don't observe yourself too closely, just let it happen.
Don't let yourself be controlled by too much irony.
Live in and love the activity of your work.
Be free of thoughts of sin, guilt and misgiving.
Be touched by the beautiful anxiety of life.
Be patient with the unresolved in your heart.
Try to be in love with the questions themselves.
Love your solitude and try to sing with its pain.
Be gentle to all of those who stay behind.
Your inner self is worth your entire concentration.
Allow your art to make extraordinary demands on you.
Bear your sadness with greater trust than your joy.
Do not persecute yourself with how things are going.
It's good to be solitary, because solitude is difficult.
It's good to love, because love is difficult.
You are not a prisoner of anything or anyone.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Significant words indeed.

cara said...

I have mixed feelings about his words, but they resonate, they do.

RODRIGO PRADEL said...

i like this. sometimes, you need to have someone else clarify all the noise.

Ted said...

lovely.

ARTIST'S UNITE!

Anonymous said...

I have seen lots of different graffiti in this city, anything ranging from individual tags, pen15, inspirational poetry to gang tags. So I'm going down the back lane on Spence just north of Broadway and on a garage in clear letters is "GENTRIFICATION".
I saw this and thought "Hey, there must be Starbucks or Banana Republic just down the street." No, there was only a Pawn shop and boarded up brothel.
I know the joke is kind of old now, but when I saw this last night it made me laugh.

-Denise M.

Anonymous said...

I think "GENTRIFICATION" was written in regards to the repair of homes in this area that will indeed raise rent/cost of buying and indeed again, force people who can't afford the increased prices out of this neighborhood.

You don't need a starbucks just down the block to be pushed out of your home

jr