Writers who write about writing are stuck in a dead end. Why not get out and see the world?
Mark Ravenhill writing in The Guardian,
Monday September 29 2008
Mark Ravenhill writing in The Guardian,
Monday September 29 2008
A friend recently pointed out to me that artists of all kinds often make their discoveries early in their working lives. Writers, painters and musicians, he suggested, frequently know what they want to say and how they want to say it by the time they are 30. The rest of their careers are then spent refining these initial discoveries.
It's an idea that has a great deal of truth. Look at the retrospective of Francis Bacon that has just opened at Tate Modern, and you see an artist who discovered as a relatively young man a small but resonant set of images that spoke to him. He then refined this personal iconography over decades. Major events in his life may have rearranged the furniture a little, but the twisted bodies in the little rooms remain essentially the same.

Read the full story at the Guardian online.
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