Comments by Arturo Sandoval to Leadership Albuquerque January 22, 2008
Our need for arts stems from our basic human need to feed the
spirit. It is no accident that as soon as our ancestors climbed
down from the trees, tamed fire and started sitting around campfires
in caves, art began to blossom on the walls around them.
Language also started our deep need to tell
the stories of the day. After our ancestors had successfully
killed a deer or a woolly mammoth, it was not enough just to
eat the spoils. We wanted to hear how the deer were stalked,
how brave our hunters were, where they found the deer. All of
the world’s literature, religion
and art sprang from the stories told around the campfires of our
ancestors.
After a short period, art became as important
as actual deeds. Telling and re-telling our stories became a
way to develop community, to bind clans together, and to pass
our collective memory—its
lessons and its beauty-- down to our children and grandchildren.
Over time, the work—the joy really—of telling our
daily stories and re-acting and re-creating our lives became a
specialized task. And as we became even more “civilized” art
often became an elitist exercise, something only the wealthy and
the privileged could enjoy.
Fortunately for us, one of the great benefits of living in the
US in the 21st Century is that we have come full circle. Like our
cave-dwelling ancestors, we now can sit around the campfires of
arts and culture and hear and see our stories told and retold to
us by those touched by the gods of artistic talent. It is not only
a privilege; it is a basic human need.
I’ve personally witnessed the transformative
nature of arts.
I recall a number of years ago that José Rodríguez,
the founder and director of La Compañía de Teatro
de Nuevo Mexico, wrote a modern retelling of Christ’s life,
only in his retelling, Christ was a Mexican activist fleeing authorities
who wanted him killed for trying to help landless peasants in northern
Mexico. It was a powerful re-telling of the Christian mythos, with
great acting and wonderful music.
I served on the board of the teatro and attended many of the shows.
One night in particular, I sat behind a working class Mexicano,
who was there with his family and who had come directly from work,
still dressed in his work boots and hard hat.
I saw the entire show through his reactions. He was
enthralled, captivated, and alive. I could almost see the glow
of his humanity emerge as he connected with what was happening
on stage.
As leaders in our community, we need to learn that the arts are
as critical to the long-term health of our community and its peoples
as are jobs and education and infrastructure. We have to believe
and put into practice a community ethic that values an artist as
much as a realtor; that honors a musician as much as a banker.
We are beings who exist in both a physical and spiritual plane.
Both our bodies and our spirits need constant nurturing if we are
to remain healthy and productive persons. Here at 516 Arts, we
are engaged in feeding the spirit, of empowering people to build
better lives. And we do it by taking art well beyond the walls
of the gallery.
As you serve in positions of influence, and as
you make decisions that will impact our community, never forget those
ancestors we all have in common. Sitting around the early campfires,
they taught us how critical it is to our collective survival to feed
both the body and the spirit.