The Artistic Life
by John M. DeMarco (Continued
from the main page)
The truth is when the soul of another touches our own. The truth
is when tears spring up in our eyes, when our hearts race, when
chills traverses along our spines. The truth invades us when we
create space for critical thinking, and no longer suppress for
the sake of blind duty the natural flow of emotions.
Few things communicate truth to us as powerfully and effectively
as forms of art. Without the regular nourishment of creative expressions,
we find ourselves starved into mediocrity. We descend into bitter
normalcy; we allow life to be reduced to a bite-sized journey
bordered by zero lot lines—a microcosm of the blandest suburbia,
a “walking shadow…a tale told by an idiot, signifying
nothing.”
When we give ourselves permission to catch but a glimpse of the
truth and be changed, we feel new vitality and energy bubbling
within. The artists of times past and present stand ready to speak
truth to us. We must accept their generous invitation. When we
creak open the shutters of drudgery, we blink our eyes and see
ourselves in the pale, horrified yearning of the androgen portrayed
by Edvard Munch in The Scream. The cry of this person’s
mouth seems much more than an expression of one individual’s
discontent and mourning…it seems to penetrate all of surrounding
nature, perhaps all of society. It is a silent scream for people
to recognize each other’s humanity, to embrace justice,
to choose love, to care for children, to refuse to miss life passing
by. It is the scream of all our hearts. It remains silent as long
as we are anesthetized by apathy, mediocrity and duty.
When we timidly grant ourselves permission to dream again, we
drink in the majesty that is Michelangelo’s magnum opus
sculpture David. Israel’s greatest king stands poised for
battle, geared for love, contemplative of his self-doubts and
mistakes. He stands before history as Every Person, embodying
the best and worst of the human heart. We stare at David and see
ourselves, teeming with unrealized and actualized potential, amazed
at how we can hold aspirations for heaven and hell in such dynamic
tension. We look into his calm and seek ourselves to envision
anew the drama that is all of life, to enter back into the story
we began writing as children and youth.
When we glance up from the want ads or Horoscopes long enough
to focus our eyes on Dylan Thomas’ immortal Fern Hill, we
travel back to the time when we too were green and unaware of
our gradual dying. We slowly recognize that within us we have
allowed to slouch toward an early demise—and also see what
still remains green, untapped, virgin, hopeful, exploding with
the ability to be recreated.
When we get past our tacit approval of the ignorance that reduces
life to a cacophony of role-playing, we embrace the skeptical
eyes of Holden Caulfield from Catcher in the Rye, and allow the
simple best of life to be our goal. We are less and less tolerant
of façade and pretense and sheer human greed. We desire
to prevent our children from careening off of the mountain of
hope into the cavern of cynicism.
When we allow it to be more than noise providing a temporary
panacea to loneliness, music connects one heart to another. “Evergreen”
and “The Rose” remind us of love’s pain and
deliverance, while “My Heart Will Go On” and “Georgia”
drive home its transcendence. The music of our upbringing still
delivers the lessons and emotions of its initial hearing when
we stumble across it decades later; it flavors the epochs of our
lives, causing us to yearn for “Seasons in the Sun.”
Even if the Italian language escapes us, an operatic solo touches
something beyond verbal and cultural barriers, as effectively
as a smile or a hug.
When we take the gamble to duck out of the office and into the
theater, we yearn with Jean Val Jean in Les Miserables for fate
to “Bring Him Home.” We share his love for his adopted
daughter Cosette and his desire to outrace his sins and truly
become a new person. When we watch The Graduate’s Benjamin
Braddock float meaninglessly in his family’s swimming
pool to the words of Simon and Garfunkel, we too are not satisfied
with anything less than a quest for the meaning of our existence
and a refusal to be painted into a corner or boarded up in a box.
We are not all artists in the same vein as those who give us
such lasting works via the toil of talents mixed with passion,
sweat, pain and contradictions. We can all, however, live an artistic
life—leaving just enough space for art to touch and transform
us. Perhaps it is not a question of “can” but “must,”
in order to remain fully alive before we have been buried. The
arts round us out as individuals. They engrave our distinctions.
They shout the truth to us when we have grown dull in hearing
it for ourselves. And in a world of descending grays and irrelevancy
for its own sake, we are desperately in need of hearing more truth.

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John M. De Marco is a Brevard County, Fla., businessman.
He also is a United Methodist pastor, having served in both West
Palm Beach and Fort Pierce, Fla., and has an extensive writing
and editing background as both a full-time journalist and a freelancer.
He runs John
M. DeMarco Communications, and seeks to affirm existing dreams,
help others clarify their focus and assist in constructing the
means to transition goals from potential to fruition.

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