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The Demon and the Angel by Edward Hirsch

ISBN:9780156027441
About the book:

A work of art, whether a painting, a dance, a poem, or a jazz composition, can
be admired in its own right. But how does the artist actually create his or her
work? What is the source of an artists inspiration? What is the force that
impels the artist to set down a vision that becomes art?
In this groundbreaking book, Edward Hirsch explores the concept of duende,
that mysterious, highly potent power of creativity that results in a work of art.
With examples ranging from Federico Garca Lorcas wrestling with darkness as
he discovered the fountain of words within himself to Martha Grahams
creation of her most emotional dances, from the canvases of Robert
Motherwell to William Blakes celestial visions, Hirsch taps into the artistic
imagination and explains, in terms illuminating and emotional, how different
artists respond to the power and demonic energy of creative impulse.
About the author:
Edward Hirsch is the author of many books, including five books of poetry. He also writes a weekly
poetry column for the Washington Post Book World. He has received a Guggenheim Fellowship, the
National Book Critics Circle award, the Prix de Rome, and a MacArthur Fellowship. He is president of the
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and lives in New York City.
Discussion Questions:
In this book, celebrated poet and critic Edward Hirsch explores the idea of duende, that mysterious,
highly potent, and universal-yet-personal aspect of creativity that results in a work of art. Hirsch taps
into the artistic imagination and explains, in terms illuminating and emotional, how a broad range of
artists have responded to the demonic energy and angelic power that together define the creative
impulse. The Demon and the Angel is an informed yet informal meditation on artistic creations both
ancient and modern, both sacred and profane. Indeed, Hirsch offers us a fresh, far-reaching
understanding of creativity in itself, one which illuminates, especially in the books concluding chapters,
the unique mood and mindset of American art. As Hirsch confesses in his Preface, his book is a tribute
with wings.
Q. What is an ars poetica? How might The Demon and the Angel as a whole be deemed an ars poetica?
And how did this book enrich, challenge, or alter your previously held notions of modernism,
primitivism, individuality, and spirituality in art? Also, what did the book teach you about the bonds
existing between creativity and nighttime?
Q. Art is by definition an incarnate form of experience, Hirsch maintains at the end of the chapter
entitled A Spectacular Meteor. What exactly does he mean by this-both in general and in terms of this
book particularly?
Q. Consider these three lines from the poem Sunday Morning by Wallace Stevens: Death is the
mother of Beauty; hence from her, / Alone, shall come fulfillment to our dreams / And our desires.
How do these lines reflect, refract, echo, or expand on the ideas of mortality presented and parsed
throughout this book?
Q. What, in Hirschs well-considered view, did the duende mean to Lorca? What did the daimon mean to
Yeats? And what did angels mean to Rilke? And to Klee? Comparatively or associatively discuss the two
primary metaphors (demons and angels) of The Demon and the Angel.
Q. Hirsch begins one chapter (A Person Must Control His Thoughts in a Dream) by claiming: It is too
reductive to think of artistic creation as merely putting oneself in a trance state. We need a fresh
vocabulary, a fuller and more enhanced notion of the artistic trance state in which one also actively
thinks. Does this book, in your view, provide such a fresh vocabulary?
Q. In the chapters entitled Paint It Black and Motherwells Black Hirsch investigates the use of the
color black by certain (primarily American) painters. Who were these artists, and to what aesthetic and
thematic ends did they employ black paint? Should we see their black-based concepts and creations
sacred? Profane? Angelic? Demonic? Otherwise? While considering your views in this regard, revisit the
chapter on Goyas inspirations and intentions (The Black Paintings) from much earlier in the text.
Q. Identify and discuss the connections Hirsch makes between flamenco music and the blues, between
duende and black soul, in the Ancient Music and Fresh Forms chapter, as well as those he makes
between Spanish cante jondo and American jazz in the subsequent chapter. What other musical forms
(or representative musicians) would you contribute to this pivotal discussion as supplementary or
additional evidence, and why?
Q. What representative and distinctly American traits does Hirsch recognize in the demon and the angel
as artistic/mythic/symbolic/cosmic constructs? Consider in particular the chapter entitled The Sublime
Is Now.
Q. Look again at the books final four paragraphs. What, ultimately, do the demon and angel have in
common? And in what key ways are they different? How does Hirsch suggest that we might identify
these similar yet dissimilar muses?
Q. Many books on the nature of creativity-or on the who, what, when, where, why, and how of the
creative endeavor-have been published. Conclude your exploration of this book by comparing and
contrasting it with other works you have read on the craft, history, impulse, and/or mystery of artistic
inspiration.

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