Posts tagged paul hunter
In Memory of William H. Matchett, March 5, 1923-June 21, 2021

In Memory of William H. Matchett (3-5-1923--6-21-2021): William Matchett taught English at the University of Washington from 1954 until he retired in 1982, but he continued teaching and writing since leaving the university. His latest book, Airplants: Selected Poems, was published in 2013 and joins his two previous books of poetry, The Water Ouzel and Fireweed . He is also the author of Shakespeare and Forgiveness and co-authored, with his colleague Jerome Beaty, Poetry: from Statement to Meaning. He also has written stories, articles and other criticism, and his work has appeared in dozens of magazines, including The New Yorker, Saturday Review of Literature, Harper’s and The New Republic.

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Patrons, Revolutions, Romantics, and Boarding House Reach:

During the last four thousand years, where art existed at all, for most artists making a living meant begging from those in power. Historians call it patronage, though most of it went without saying, part of the facts of life absorbed by osmosis. Some rich person, king or noble, bishop or abbot, cardinal or pope would be approached by an artist, a painter or sculptor or poet, and if the rich person liked what he saw, the two might arrive at an understanding whereby the artist would be clothed and fed, perhaps given supplies and a stipend along with a series of commissions which were really command performances. He might also sometimes be given a tedious, responsible job as personal secretary or teacher of the rich man’s kids, in return for his work being sponsored, tacitly approved, owned and enjoyed by the wealthy man and his family. If the artist remained properly subservient, the arrangement might be lifelong. To some extent patronage still goes on today, politely veiled through a couple of mechanisms I will come to in a minute.

Today perhaps an endpoint is approaching for the written arts, where nearly everyone is an artist, a poet, though maybe not even a writer, and there is no professional publication only self-publication, no need of it really, no shame in its absence or limitation, perhaps because with everyone an author, and each reading only himself, the real need is to connect with others for the endless jockeying that constitutes a career, that seems a lot like waiting in line for your turn at that proverbial fifteen minutes of fame. And for that all you need is a smartphone, tablet or laptop and a Wi-Fi hookup. As for friends—well, there’s that old saying, misery loves company.

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