Art and Propaganda
Article by
Milton GlaserFebruary 26, 2008.
On February 15, Milton Glaser gave the keynote address at
“Where
the Truth Lies: A Symposium on Propaganda Today,” sponsored by
the School of Visual Arts. The following is his
transcript.
Some years ago I was in Fez, Morocco, with my wife, Shirley. We
had hired a guide and were being escorted through the Medina, the
ancient part of the city that had 160,000 inhabitants and no
telephones—although our guide assured us that he could reach anyone
in the old city within two hours by word of mouth. We stopped
momentarily to look into a courtyard through an open door where
about 50 boys between the ages of 4 and 5 were seated on the
ground, reading out loud.
“How long will these boys be at school?” I asked our guide.
“Generally, two years. After that, almost all of them will go to
work.”
“What do they study?” I asked.
“The Koran.”
“Nothing else?”
“No.”
The memory of that scene and conversation has haunted me for
over 25 years. These poor boys would never be able to question
their own beliefs and could never understand how those beliefs had
been systematically pounded into their brains. Every culture has
its own way of indoctrinating its citizenry. In our culture, this
indoctrination occurs through the use of advertising, television,
schooling and the way news is reported. Because this indoctrination
is so difficult to identify, it becomes essential to question all
the beliefs we cherish most.

Buttons by Glaser for The Nation.
We live in an ocean of persuasion, most of it unrelenting and
invisible. I once described making a low-calorie Greek salad for my
wife and myself on a warm spring day in the country. After I
chopped the tomatoes, onions, peppers and cucumber, I found a
package of French feta cheese in the refrigerator, which I crumbled
into the bowl. I glanced at the back of the package. It read: 70
calories per serving. Below that, in smaller type, it read: number
of servings per package–7. I had just added 500 calories to our
modest lunch.
How does a tablespoon of feta become a serving? Everyone here
today knows exactly how this happens. It's so trivial, so banal it
hardly seems worth mentioning. Of course, I should have paid
attention and read the label before I dumped the feta into the
salad. Multiply this trivial event a million times and you begin to
understand today's constant and relentless subversion of what is
real.
As someone involved in the communication business, I often find
myself confused by whether I am an agent of propaganda. The most
obvious examples of my own interest in persuasion are a series of
buttons I've created for The Nation—the magazine, not the country.
A while ago, I was looking for a definition of art's purpose. I
came across one that I liked; in fact, I liked it so much that I
used it for the title of a film that was made about my work. It's
from Horace, the Roman philosopher and critic, who wrote, “The
purpose of art is to inform and delight.” I've been thinking about
the purpose of art all my life, and Horace helped me to arrive at
an understanding. Art is a survival mechanism for the human
species. Otherwise, it never would have lasted so long.
But how does it work? How does it affect us? Primarily, it makes
us attentive to the reality of our own life. The first cave
paintings made its viewers attentive to the spirit and character of
the animals their lives depended on. Sixteen thousand years later,
Guernica
made us conscious of how cruel the death of the innocent could be.
Picasso and Cezanne help us understand that things can be looked at
from several points of view at the same time. When we pass a
landscape and think of how much it resembles a Cezanne painting, we
become aware that Cezanne has made us attentive to how we see a
landscape. Picasso and Seurat anticipated and illuminated the
science of the 19th century, demonstrating that a landscape is an
accumulation of color fragments and spaces. Art may be the only
truth we can ever know.

Glaser's Purple Coalition 9-button set for The
Nation.
The experience of art can be considered a form of meditation. By
suppressing the debris of everyday life and the illusion that
desire creates, meditation enables us to observe without judging.
In this way, what is real to us becomes visible.
Recollecting Horace's description of art's purpose, he said “to
inform and delight,” not “to persuade and delight.” Informing us
makes us stronger. Persuading us robs us of our ability to observe
things for ourselves. Propaganda cannot be described without its
link to persuasion.
Propaganda is not necessarily a lie, but it affects our
neurological system and brain in the same way. It undermines our
ability to understand our own reality. It makes us more infantile
and dependent. It substitutes an alien authority for our own
perception.
Not all belief is culturally manufactured. A large part of what
we believe seems to come from a universal moral code that is
genetically programmed in every human being. They are:
- Doing no harm to others
- Fairness
- Loyalty and shared solidarity with your group
- Respect for authority
- Fear of contamination or the celebration of purity
Every society and political system emphasizes the parts of this
moral construct to serve its own needs. My moral indignation and
anti-adminstration activity may, in fact, derive more from fear of
authority than any other motivation. Those on the right don't have
trouble with authority but are driven up the wall by such issues as
same-sex marriage, which is a contamination issue. On the other
hand, my parents, who were anything but right-wingers, were
horrified when I told them I had eaten a clam.

Glaser's Blue/Red buttons for The Nation.
Propaganda not only inhibits our sense of reality, it frequently
causes us to act against our own interests. It does this by
affecting the primitive parts of the brain that are unaffected by
logic or consciousness but respond to images and symbols.
The short recent history of the Bush administration has
demonstrated this principle. By using fear and endless repetition,
the government has subverted our mythology and character and it has
processed the American people into accepting a dramatic erosion of
our civil rights and, perhaps most appallingly, to approve of
torture. Sadly, the phenomenon is scarcely unique. In fact, it may
be the inevitable narrative of human civilization. The intersection
of fear and persuasion has created the world as we know it.
The mind's ability to alter itself is the source of human
freedom. Information expands the capacity of the mind to change.
Persuasion limits that capacity. Beliefs must be held lightly,
because certainty is frequently the enemy of truth. Or, put another
way, to free ourselves from the insidious grip of propaganda, we
can follow the example of the scientist and psychologist William
James, who was said to have loved questions more than answers.