In art and publishing: Sometimes you win, most of the time you fail
Posted by: admin in Friends of Failure, Ah Minneapolis..., Death of arts publishing, The Utne Reader, Minnesotan Art Failure Tales (MAFT), Decline of reading, Commerce and the failure of art, Decline of human culture, The death of a literate society, Artistic failure in AmericaFirst, some rare good news: The Chronicle of Artistic Failure in America has learned that one of its blog postings, the first of a two-parter about the Colorado artist Dean Fleming, was picked up this week by the website of the Minneapolis-based magazine, The Utne Reader. Thanks to the Reader for their interest in this unusual artist, and in the Chronicle of Artistic Failure in America.
To read more about Fleming, you can also go to this post. To read more in general about struggling, aging artists go here.
Meanwhile, the bigger news this past week in Minnesota was the demise of the monthly feature magazine The Rake. Now, some would say–in a market where the local papers have downsized significantly over the past few years (cutting numerous arts and cultural writing position), where the local newsweekly has fired and replaced its entire writing/editorial staff over the past year, and where the local media market is constantly in flux–the loss of The Rake was just another blip on the path to local media/cultural/practical illiteracy.
It’s not putting too fine a point on things to say that all local publishers (and media professionals) are running scared. “Things have changed radically in the last six years, and I think it’s going to get worse long before it gets better,” Rake Publisher Tom Bartel said. “It’s too expensive to produce journalism and then have Google come along and take all your advertising.” “At best, these are challenging times, maybe even recessionary times,” said John Rash, a senior vice president at advertising agency Campbell Mithun who follows the media market and writes a monthly column for the Star Tribune. “While there is some tremendous journalism on websites and in smaller publications, it is more difficult to monetize it, both locally and nationally. Newspapers themselves have struggled.” “We think the next 18 months are going to be tough for advertising in general,” said Deborah Hopp, publisher of Mpls.St.Paul magazine, based in Minneapolis. “Our expectation is that, around here, weaker players will fall by the wayside.”
For purposes of our interest in artistic failure, however, the loss of The Rake hits home because this publication was particularly invested in and involved with the arts locally—initiating a quarterly arts insert (and a celebratory event) called 10,000 Arts, hiring a former arts writer as their editor-in-chief (which meant lots of interest in arts writing), and partnering with and supporting a number of local arts organizations on a range of projects.
The Rake will be missed…
By the way, as a separate, but related note: I wasn’t even aware that the Utne Reader still existed, were you?…
Entries (RSS)
March 4th, 2008 at 1:12 pm
Utne continues to be a wonderful clearing house for the off-mainstream culture. I found your web log via their small article citing Dean Flemming. In the late ’60s, I’d travel from D.C. to hang out with artists in what is now SoHo, crashing on mattresses in lofts over a weekend. I was about 17-18 and the artists, actors and writers I met were as awe inspiring as gods. I haven’t remembered those times in years. So thanks to you and Utne. I’ll read you posts often.
March 15th, 2008 at 11:56 am
I love the Rake and I will miss it.
March 15th, 2008 at 3:11 pm
Loved the Rake. Past tense, alas.