when dana gioia was
nominated to the
top post at the National Endowment for the Arts
last fall, many predicted the Santa Rosa, Calif.,
poet would
be a shoo-in. They were right, but for the wrong
reasons: by the time the Senate unanimously confirmed
his appointment
on January 29, war was on everyone’s mind, not
art. Gioia, ’73, MBA ’77, has frequently
provoked controversy—he’s attacked academia
for making poetry the product of an inbred coterie,
called today’s poetry criticism “wimpy” and
accused literary San Francisco of “living off an
imagined sense of greatness and centrality.”
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BY THE BOOK: “You
won’t find me compromising free speech,” says
the new NEA head.
Barbara Ries
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Author
of three books of poetry and several volumes of
essays and translations, Gioia was born in the
rough neighborhoods outside L.A., the son of a
Sicilian cab
driver and a Mexican/Native American telephone
operator. He was vice president of marketing at
General Foods before
becoming a full-time man of letters in 1992. Undoubtedly
both sides of Gioia—businessman and artist, urbane
intellectual and working-class populist—interested
the NEA.
Since taking office, he has already launched
the largest-ever American theatrical tour of
Shakespeare, with professional companies playing in more
than
100
small and midsize cities in all 50 states. Cynthia
Haven interviewed him in May.
Your last few predecessors have been fairly low-key, Washington
types. You clearly are not. What issues would you
like to spotlight?
My central—and indeed unavoidable—mission
is to articulate a compelling case for public support
of the
arts and arts education. There is an urgent need
to create a positive and inclusive consensus on arts
funding, one
that refuses to be partisan or polarizing. The chairmanship
of the NEA is probably the only position from which
such a case can currently be made effectively, and
I plan to
do it.
Yet there’s an enduring belief among conservatives
that the private sector, not government, ought to
fund the arts.
I resist all monolithic programs for
culture. I agree that arts should be privately funded,
but why does
that belief require that they only be privately funded?
Objections
to state and federal funding rest mostly on the dangers
of government control. This is not an idle worry.
State control of the arts has occurred in many countries;
it
even exists today in nations like China. But there
is no danger of government control in the United
States, where
the Constitution guarantees freedom of speech, and—in
purely practical terms—federal support of the arts
represents only 1 percent of total arts funding.
I think we could double or triple the current budget
without much
worry on this issue.
The real issue is to demonstrate
the benefits of federal arts funding. That has not
been done in a
compelling and inclusive way. To claim that the arts
are entitled
to funding is not a cogent argument, especially in
a time of economic downturn and increased national
defense needs.
A serious, mainstream argument for the irreplaceable
civic and educational importance of the arts needs
to be fostered.
America, like Britain, has a National
Theater, yet we’ve never been willing to give it
the funding to make it a vital center. As a librettist,
you know that
American singers must go abroad to build up their
operatic resumes—to Germany, for example, where there
is heavy state arts funding. Would you like to see
this picture
change?
I admire the American system of philanthropy,
which combines private and public funding through
individuals, corporations and foundations, as well
as local, state
and federal governments. This system provides maximum
artistic freedom and local control, and it has produced
a
national
community of museums, theaters, opera houses, ballet
companies, symphony orchestras and other arts institutions
that are
now probably unmatched anywhere in the world except
perhaps Germany.
I don’t think America would be well
served to adopt a European model of state support
for the arts. In that
system, which was developed in aristocratic or imperial
political systems, the arts not only receive most
of their funding from the state, but they are also
seen as an extension
of the state. Many artists are even employed as civil
servants. It creates a system in which artists are
either insiders
or excluded. That system is now hardly working even
in Europe, where it faces economic and political
problems.
The most visible issue the NEA has had to face
in recent years has been so-called government-funded
obscenity. Given the stated importance of “family
values” to
the current administration, where do you stand on
this issue, and on potential charges of censorship?
I
believe in the First Amendment. The Endowment makes
its decisions on artistic excellence, not on a work’s
point of view. This criterion was upheld by the Supreme
Court. You won ’t find me compromising free speech.
I
must introduce some caution, however, in the use
of the word “censorship.” Is not getting a
government grant “censorship” per se? If that
is the case, then we censor thousands of organizations
and individuals every year, since we receive far
more applications than we can afford to fund. Under
such a definition, the
New Yorker would be America ’s leading literary censor.
When
poets said they intended to use the White House’s “Poetry
and the American Voice” event as an antiwar forum,
it was canceled. Do you agree with U.S. poet laureate
Billy Collins that the politicization of that event
might signal
the end of literary events at the White House?
Of
course not. Literary events will continue at the
White House. Laura Bush is a serious and passionate
reader and educator. Problems with a single event
will not change
her commitment to celebrating literature. Many poets
see themselves as political creatures and act accordingly.
That is their inalienable right, just as it was Laura
Bush’s
right to cancel a disruptive event in her own home.
How
do you see art and the NEA fitting into the nation’s
awareness and priorities, given the focus on terrorism,
war and homeland security? What about the popular
notion that important art often emerges from troubled
times?
The importance of art is never more evident than
in times of war or terror. People instinctively turn
to modes of expression strong enough to bear the
weight of
their grief, fear or anxiety. Mere entertainment
is inadequate to the occasion. One saw this phenomenon
so clearly after
the events of September 11. Suddenly W.H. Auden’s
neglected poem, “September 1, 1939,” acquired
what one journalist called an “almost scriptural
status.” People who hadn’t looked at a poem
since high school were reading and reciting it.
How
war and terror affect art is a complicated subject.
There is no simple reaction to such profound events;
the responses depend upon the individual writer and
his or
her circumstances. But I suspect that great personal
and public suffering generally tends to elicit responses
of
commensurate magnitude in the best artists.
As our
country grows more diverse, can art help interpret
what is “American”?
The arts are not programmatic
or analytical like science or philosophy; they are
experiential and
holistic. They can help us understand the complex
notion of what
it means to be American, but mostly in indirect ways.
The arts don’t give us answers or definitions. Instead
they alert us to areas of experience we might otherwise
overlook or dismiss. They expand and develop our
humanity—sometimes
even the national qualities of our humanity.
Attendance
at museums has exploded in recent years. Is this
the result of more interest in art, or merely
another entertainment option? Does it matter? If
more people support
arts institutions, is there a trickle-down effect
that bolsters all artists?
The growing attendance
at art museums over the past few decades has led
to an enormous expansion in both
new and established institutions. Artists, dealers,
curators and scholars have all directly benefited.
Many midsize
American cities now have public museums as well as
commercial
galleries. It is astonishing to go to a city like
Asheville, N.C., or Santa Barbara, Calif., and see
the vitality and
diversity of the local arts scene. I suspect that
today Santa Fe, N.M., has as many commercial art
galleries as
Paris did 100 years ago. It’s not a trickle-down
effect in many cases. It is a steady, widening stream.
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‘A
healthy culture demonstrates diversity and
incorporates disagreements. Perhaps a culture
is best known less by what it agrees upon than
what it considers worth arguing about.’
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There
has been a lot of discussion about who “owns” culture—the
so-called elite or the “masses.” How do we
make art appreciation a standard feature of American
life rather than a wedge between classes and ideologies?
No
single group owns culture, and there is no single
enterprise that constitutes culture. American arts
culture is made up of thousands of institutions
and millions of
individual artists and patrons. A healthy culture
demonstrates diversity and incorporates disagreements.
Perhaps a culture
is best known less by what it agrees upon than
what it considers worth arguing about.
As chairman,
I must remember that my agency does not serve the
arts establishment. It serves the
American people. The arts establishment provides
our partnership
in this endeavor, but they are not an end in
themselves. We must work together to bring the best
works of
art to the broadest audiences. I refuse to believe
that artistic
excellence and democracy are incompatible. 
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