Vol. XXI No. 2
October 2005

The following is an excerpt from Eric Booth's book, The Everyday Work of Art: Awakening the Extraordinary in Your Daily Life (Sourcebooks, 1997)

Art, like sex, is too important to leave to the professionals—too important because of the delight and satisfaction it provides, and too important because of its role in creating each person's future. This book is dedicated to restoring our artistic birthright: an endless intercourse with attractive things.

Contrary to conventional wisdom, art has not always been a noun, a valuable object relegated to a museum or a ticketed event in a performance hall. All the way back at the birth of the word "art," it was a verb that meant "to put things together." It was not a product, but a process. If we can reclaim that view of art—as a way of looking at and doing things, a series of experiences and experiments—we gain a fresh grasp on the proven, practical ways to construct the quality of our lives.

Yes, the verb "art" often produces nouns; when artists apply themselves to certain media, they create those magnificent things we hang on well-lit walls, or pay 60 bucks to hear at Carnegie Hall. But the prevailing view of art is built upon a simplistic equation: art equals those "things." While not overtly "wrong," this formula for art is stingy; it sadly overlooks: the down-to-earth actions that result in art objects; the perceiving that brings such objects to life in us; and the impact of artworks on the way we think, understand, learn and make changes in our lives. We get caught up in the games of that materialistic view, with buying, selling, judging, and discussing art (if we bother with it at all); we leave art to a few supposed "experts," abandoning our own innate capacities, our own curiosities and artistic potential.

This book seeks to redress this imbalance by putting the verbs of art back in your hands for intentional, effective use in the rich media of your everyday life. In the following pages, we will focus not on "works of art," but rather on "the
work of art." The phrase may sound awkward at first, perhaps too taxing with its emphasis on labor. But in practice, you will see that it is neither heavy nor laborious: the work of art you will find in these pages is familiar, engaging, and fun. In other words, the work of art is serious play.

Art is not apart. It is a continuum within which all participate; we all function in art, use the skills of art, engage in the action of artists, every day. Underneath the surface distinctions that make individual lives seem very different, art is a common ground we share; the
work of art is a way we all do things when we are working well. Our unheralded everyday actions of art comprise one end of the human spectrum of artistry; the other end is the creation of masterpieces in the arts that we readily label as art: newlyweds setting the table for their first Thanksgiving dinner on one extreme, and da Vinci painting The Last Supper on the other; a businesswoman shifting the sequence of the slides in her presentation on one extreme, Sam Shepard transposing the order of the scenes during rehearsals of True West on the other. The differences are obvious, easy to identify and laugh about; the similarities (which are the focus of this book) may be less evident, but they construct the way we experience being alive. If we can acknowledge and honor the art that we perform, if we can stay aware of and develop the skills of art we use daily, if we can borrow appropriate and useful trade secrets from artists, who are the experts and exemplars of this field, we can dramatically enrich the quality of daily life.

Return to Eric Booth's article on training the 21st century artist.

The main artistic media (music, theater, dance, visual and literary arts) have survived because we thrill to witness what humans can accomplish, what the body can express, what the human voice can do at its best, what subtle truths people can communicate. Masterworks in art invite and reward our best attention; they also enable us to extend the range of our own overlooked artistic competences. Apprehending the magnificence of the soprano's aria increases our proficiency to hear the wide range of organized sound we encounter throughout our lives. Perceiving Cézanne's accomplishments in a painting of an ordinary house among trees can radically alter what you see on your daily drive to work. Responding to Shakespeare's King Henry the Fifth as he wanders all night, reflecting before the big battle, develops a wiser you to confront your next crisis.

But those occasional celebrated masterpieces are merely the tip of the artistic iceberg to which all of us (including many fine-but-not-famous artists) contribute less visibly and far more frequently. When we assume that the work of art exists only in these isolated peaks, we shrug off our birthright. Human bodies do wonderful things all the time, not just when Pilobolus performs, not just for a few days every four years at an Olympics. We all have human voices, and even thought they are less developed than the diva's, they are rich in sonic subtlety that we ply in many ways. We live in an abundant playhouse of sound that rewards the best hearing we can apply. We need to attend to the artistic experiences throughout our lives, not just at tickets-only events. In doing so, we reclaim many dwindling passions; we awake dormant skills with which to construct good answers to life's hardest questions.



©The Juilliard School. All Rights Reserved.
No material on this site may be reproduced in part or in whole, including electronically, without the written permission of
The Juilliard School Publications Office.