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The Crowd, the Critic, and the Muse von…
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The Crowd, the Critic, and the Muse (2012. Auflage)

von Michael Gungor (Autor)

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452564,436 (4.29)1
"We are all creators. Whether or not we create is not up to us. We are human, and creating is what we do. Every interaction, movement, and decision is creativity at work. We are all artists. We all order creation around us into the world that we want to make."--Michael Gungor In The Crowd, the Critic, and the Muse, Michael Gungor takes an uncompromising--and humorous--look at our creative selves and the world that we have fashioned around us. Through story and reflection, Gungor shows how our deepest beliefs and assumptions about the universe affect how we order creation. Our art and our humanity are inextricably entwined. Surveying pop songs and church services, fine art and movies, Gungor shows what these works of creation reveal about us--for better and worse--and offers a powerful argument for why we can do better. Art is like fruit, and if we want to improve the quality of our creative output, we must tend not only to the fruit, but to the tree, its roots, and the soil that it is ...… (mehr)
Mitglied:crockdaddy
Titel:The Crowd, the Critic, and the Muse
Autoren:Michael Gungor (Autor)
Info:Woodsley Press (2012), 230 pages
Sammlungen:eBook, Deine Bibliothek
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The Crowd, the Critic, and the Muse von Michael Gungor

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Michael Gungor makes it a point that we are all creators in our own respect but I highly recommend this book for anyone who is involved in any kind of creative arts. Although this book is written from a Christian perspective Gungor is very honest and real about his views on society, Christianity, and himself. There is a lot of himself in this book which was interesting because I do admire him as a person as well as the words he has written. There is a bit of profanity in it so if you are opposed to that then... read another book, but if you can look past that (or even enjoy it) it is a fantastic read. ( )
  miguelvalentin7 | Feb 10, 2016 |
I was lucky enough to snag an early copy of the Crowd, the Critic, and the Muse for review. I’ve loved and deeply appreciated Gungor’s music for a long time, and have also been exploring Christian art, so I was very interested in what Michael Gungor would write about. The book releases today, so if it sounds like something that’s up your alley — you can get it on iTunes right now!

The number one word I’d use to describe this book is refreshing. My car’s audio jack is broken (wah wah), which means no iPod or Audible for me while I’m driving. Which means that I’ve turned over my ears to the radio. For the most part, I listen to NPR, but I also been tuning in to music stations to escape my local public radio station’s fundraising drive. (I donated, because it’s crucial to support the things you love, but the endless appeals are making me crazy.) It’s amazing how catchy pop music is. Without even realizing it, I already know the words to at least a dozen pop hits. I ponder existential questions like what exactly the (I’m assuming) crude metaphor “blow my whistle” might mean. But even as I’m listening, I realize I find most of it empty. It may have its place for some people, but honestly, there’s hardly anything edifying in there for me. It’s just something to pass time time while driving down the road.

Gungor writes, “When art becomes a mere distraction from our first-world boredom, it will devolve into something less human. It will become animalistic and trite. But it will certainly be entertaining.” Pop music, anyone?

He continues: “Part of the reason people aren’t building cathedrals anymore is that we are too lazy and spoiled for the pain and the work that they demand from us. This sort of laziness leads to an artistic narcissism that creates art as a mere emotional expression of the ego rather than an intentional and profound re-ordering or re-imagining of the world.”

I love this. I am just as guilty as anyone for trying to get away with making easy art, and I love his call to fight for good art. To figure out what motivates me toward good art. Gungor would argue faith, doubt, hope, and love are the primary motivators — and I would agree. It also made me re-think the things I’m putting into my brain and soul — and to get my audio jack fixed stat.

Gungor also writes about his fundamentalist childhood, and the journey he took to break free from the belief system he grew up with and into something true and healthy. He writes:

“Fundamentalism is rigid and certain—like a prison. It leaves no room for doubt, no room for exploring or creating outside of the acceptable boxes. It is the polar opposite of creativity, the enemy of art. Fundamentalism is not limited to traditional religions like Christianity or Islam—there are fundamentalists in every stream of thought. There are fundamentalist atheists whose worldview is rigid with certainty. Even the “nothing in particular” belief can become dogmatic and arrogant. The fundamentalist’s worldview is one that is not open to the unexpected or the new.”

As I watch the political season right now, I see this fundamentalism on both sides. This is not faith. This is fear. And we need to address it in our lives.

I could go on and on, but I don’t think Gungor would appreciate me divulging all of the content of his book here. So suffice it to say, if you’re an artist of any stripe, I highly recommend this. It’ll take you back to your roots and has the potential to ignite the passion in your art once more.

Read my full review here: http://letseatgrandpa.com/2012/10/09/book-review-___-the-crowd-the-critic-and-th... ( )
  letseatgrandpa | Oct 10, 2012 |
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"We are all creators. Whether or not we create is not up to us. We are human, and creating is what we do. Every interaction, movement, and decision is creativity at work. We are all artists. We all order creation around us into the world that we want to make."--Michael Gungor In The Crowd, the Critic, and the Muse, Michael Gungor takes an uncompromising--and humorous--look at our creative selves and the world that we have fashioned around us. Through story and reflection, Gungor shows how our deepest beliefs and assumptions about the universe affect how we order creation. Our art and our humanity are inextricably entwined. Surveying pop songs and church services, fine art and movies, Gungor shows what these works of creation reveal about us--for better and worse--and offers a powerful argument for why we can do better. Art is like fruit, and if we want to improve the quality of our creative output, we must tend not only to the fruit, but to the tree, its roots, and the soil that it is ...

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