| Thank
you for having me here today.
Before I start, I would like to make a confession. In preparation
for writing this speech, I took the opportunity to go back and read
some of my teachers’ comments from when I was a student at
Milton that my mother had kept for all these years. I came across
this rather sobering evaluation, which I would like to share with
you today:
Date: June 5, 1987
Subject: Public Speaking
Teacher: Deborah E. Simon
Grade: B-
“Sarah, at the beginning of this year I saw in you the potential
to be a very fine speaker. Before each speech I was hopeful that
this would be your most powerful effort. In all of your presentations
there were fine elements—voice, your opinion of a particular
source, your use of the outline. But unfortunately I never thought
you totally pulled it together in one, polished effort...I’m
not sure what got in the way of your presentations in this class—absences,
attitude, lack of preparation. But Sarah, you have the makings of
a very fine speaker. I wish I could have seen your strengths more
often.”
So I am back again for one last try.
Reading through these piles of detailed comments, I was reminded
of how, as a student, ones performance is being watched and evaluated
at all times. In light of this, I would like to start by giving
you something that Milton might not have given you while you were
here. I’d like to give you all the permission to fail.
It’s an ugly word that means different things to each of us.
But in certain crucial situations, the permission to fail means
the freedom to take meaningful risks. And in certain crucial choices,
such as choosing to do what you love, the practice of being too
cautious could be the greatest failure of all.
I am an artist. It is a career that, perhaps uniquely among professions,
is vigorously encouraged in children and then vigorously discouraged
in adults. After being vigorously supported and encouraged by a
remarkable art faculty here at Milton, I arrived at Yale in the
fall of 1987. I was studying art along with four other subjects.
A live model would come to my painting class every week, pose for
an hour, and we would paint a likeness on canvas—a method
of teaching painting that probably dates back to the very beginning
of painting itself. I had the ability to paint quickly and to capture
likeness, and this ability served me well. Studying art is a very
public, group endeavor, and at the end of each class, when the easels
were all turned and the canvases lined up, there was no doubt that
mine stood out. Studying art became like a competitive sport.
But when I look back at those paintings, what strikes me is only
their technical virtuosity. The skill was evident and self-assured.
But I was only fulfilling exercises, jumping through hoops.
And then, in a bizarre turn of events, my dorm room burned down.
A fire had caught in one of the old college chimneys and spread
through the floorboards. I climbed the stone stairs of my entryway
only to find the black, soaking shell of our common room. I scanned
the room with a dull sense of disbelief. But it was not until I
saw the remains of my painting—a painting that I had done
at Milton Academy and brought with me to college—that I was
surprised by a profound sense of loss. It was a painting of about
three by four feet, and on the wall where it had hung, oddly, there
still remained a skeleton of blackened stretcher bars, the canvas
of the painting perfectly singed off. I lost all my belongings in
that fire, but when I thought about what I might have saved from
that room, the only object I could think of was that painting.
The loss of the painting was a good thing, not only because it was
a dramatic indication of what I cared about, but also, because it
was one of many paintings that I had produced at the time that were
primarily paintings in which I was concerned with showing off my
skill as a painter. It was a skill for which I had always gotten
approval. The seduction of that approval would have to be destroyed
in order for me to move beyond making artwork as simply an academic
exercise.
The painter Philip Guston once said, “The basis for creativity
is one’s willingness to risk embarrassment.” By the
time I left college I was bored, and most lethally I was bored by
my own paintings. I had finally figured out what the artist Nam
Jun Paik meant when he said that he would “rather make a new
mistake than an old success.” It was time for me to make some
new mistakes.
It was just a few days into graduate school at the School of Visual
Arts in Manhattan. I went to class expecting the usual encouragement
and support. The teacher for critiques that morning was the artist
Jackie Winsor. “Who cares if you’re talented?”
she said. “You wouldn’t have gotten this far if you
weren’t, and nobody cares. The great majority of you will
give up making art within a year after graduating—if you even
make it through. The few who survive will be the ones who are able
to work through the bad work. The creative process is not a steady
climb upward. It’s ups and downs. Whether or not you’ll
be resilient, that will be the real test.”
That didn’t sound like Anne Neely. I knew my paintings on
the wall were not going to cut it. I packed away the tentative paintings
I had eked out and decided to clear the room until it was reduced
to a white, bare box. I tried to forget what a piece of art should
look like. I went out to the corner store and bought a selection
of materials—materials that I could experiment with, that
were not precious and laden with history of painting; I bought materials
that were cheap, dispensable and everyday, but that were somehow
staples: rice, spaghetti, toilet paper, cheese, erasers.
When I arrived back at the studio building, the elevator was broken.
My studio was on the ninth floor. Climbing the stairs with the plastic
grocery bags cutting into the creases of my fingers—primarily
from the weight of the four bags of rice—I imagined putting
a grain of rice on each stair and watching the piles accumulate
as I ascended. I couldn’t get this vivid image out of my mind,
and after the second floor, against my better judgment, I decided
to try it. I returned to the ground floor and started at the first
step, placing one grain on the first stair, then two on the second,
three on the third, until I had reached the 288th stair with a pile
of 288 grains that marked the ninth floor on which my studio was
located.
Looking down the vertical drop of the stairwell, the descending,
shrinking piles in the distance had a life of their own. They were
provocative and would be discovered unexpectedly by the viewer.
They surprised me. The work sat in between painting and architecture,
decidedly outside the traditional form of sculpture.
In the history of art, sculpture is typically an object. Its value
is traditionally signaled by the worth of its constituent materials—gold,
bronze, ivory, ebony, marble, in the most traditional forms. But
what if value lies in an event, or in an intention, even if it is
a failed intention? What if it lies in something that can be destroyed
and easily can be remade—in fragility, in evanescence? The
rice piles were like the leftovers of an event. The act was barely
there—so slight that it was nearly invisible—but the
process absurdly rigorous.
In the years that followed, I made sculptures out of everyday materials,
trying to imbue value into ordinary objects: ladders, plants, lights,
Q-tips, paper, cloth and flowers. I made them in non-traditional
locations—outside the white boxes set up in galleries and
museums, in places they would be discovered unexpectedly by the
viewer, not presented to them. I buried pieces underground and hoisted
others into trees. Some pieces, such as the one made in the studio
of Hitler’s architect, Albert Speer, are on the verge of destroying
themselves. Others, such as the one in the atrium above the student
center at Milton, is intended to climb and descend simultaneously,
with two blue ladders spinning off in its wake.
I try to make all these sculptures to appear to still be in development,
structurally fragile, so that it’s unclear whether they will
grow or fall. I try to make sculptures that are somehow risking
failure in their very existence.
Twenty years ago, almost to this very day, I sat where you are now
sitting. At the time it did not cross my mind that I would be asked
back in this capacity. I ask you to take a moment now, all of you,
to imagine yourself invited back to speak. Apparently Milton has
adopted a policy to invite back former graduates, so your chances
are already not bad. And on top of that, you have just heard that
it’s possible to become a graduation speaker by putting piles
of rice on stairs. So imagine yourself standing up here in the year
2027, and I’d like to ask you to consider three questions:
What would you save if your room burned down?
What if the thing you had saved needed then to somehow be destroyed
in order to be reinvented again?
And perhaps most importantly, with the first two questions in
mind, what would you like to be honored for in twenty years time?
I’d like to end by leaving you with these questions and
with thoughts expressed in a letter by the dancer and choreographer
Martha Graham in a letter to Agnes De Mille. Graham wrote: “You
have to keep open and aware directly to the urges that motivate
you. It is not your business to determine how good your work is
or how it compares with other expressions. It is your business to
keep it yours, clearly and directly, to keep the channel open. There
is in you a vitality, a life force, a quickening that is translated
through you into action, and because there is only one of you in
all time, this expression is unique. If you block it, it will never
exist through any other medium and be lost. The world will not have
it.”
Congratulations to you all, and thank you very much.
[Back to Graduation 2007]
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