On Being Kryptonite

Recently, El Cheeto Loco announced he would remove the Chair of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and replace that person with โ€ฆ himself!ย 

Since heโ€™s already made his horse a senator, I suppose he has no one more qualified on hand. In any event, he has declared himself Emperor of American Culture, promising to whip us all into he-manly shape with no more of that icky drag stuff that reminds him of, I suppose, that time he went on a date with Rudy Giuliani.

Unsurprisingly, the response from the arts world has been a resounding chorus of โ€œOh, fuck no!โ€ for about 10,000 serious reasons.

As Iโ€™m part of the arts world, Iโ€™m joining the chorus. I hope to talk you all down a bit about it but also pep you up a bit. 

Like everything that asshole does, this move starts out scary but comes apart under scrutiny and yields to a plan of action. Letโ€™s parse it out.

The Scary Part:

You are correct. This is a precursor to a program of censorship, perhaps a retread of Joe McCarthyโ€™s Red Scare campaign of terror in the 1950s, with the modern witch-huntersโ€™ obvious, but only first, targets being trans people and the wider LGBTQ+ community.ย 

Iโ€™d be willing to bet, in fact, that McCarthyism 2.0 is the literal plan because El Cheetoโ€™s first evil mentor was Roy Cohn. 

For those lucky enough not to remember, Roy Cohn was a lawyer notorious for, among other unpleasant things, assisting McCarthy as chief counsel in his crusade to accuse and destroy supposed communists in the media and government, until both men were taken down by their own over-reach plus exposรฉs by Edward R. Murrow.

Cohn then went into private practice in New York. There, he was so infamously crooked that he was eventually disbarred, but not before collecting a list of rich, famous clients, including one Donald J. Trump. 

Those two were a match made in hell, by many accounts, and cut quite the swath together through the Studio 54 party scene. It ended in 1986 when Cohn died, sick, alone, and despised. His best bud, Little Donnie Dipshit, refused to visit him and denied their relationship at the very end. (Sound familiar, Rudy?)

Nevertheless, El Cheeto has yearned for his old friend over the years, lamenting every time some attorney tells him something he wants to do is illegal, โ€œWhereโ€™s my Roy Cohn?โ€ 

(Heโ€™s dead, Donnie, and you wouldnโ€™t even go when he called for you on his deathbed, you backstabbing bastard.)

So with one of the architects of McCarthyism as a formative guru, we can be sure Trump is dreaming of a 21st century HUAC, endless show-trial hearings led by Gym Jordan and the Three Weird Sisters of the House Maga Caucus, Boebert, Greene, and Mace, ruinous SLAPP lawsuits, bans, cancelling, and gleeful mobs.

The goal will be to erase any art and literature that doesnโ€™t glorify the maga ideal. We can expect floods of AI-generated versions of โ€œBirth of a Nation,โ€ full of racial, ethnic, and gender stereotypes and heavy doses of christian-nationalist propaganda, in which the heroes are the kinds of bulked-up, gun-slinging dudes Trump enjoys looking at, in slo-mo.

Weโ€™ll also have the spectacle of media companies, music labels, publishing houses, and key celebrities, piddling themselves to be the new regimeโ€™s favorite Leni Riefenstals. 

Meanwhile, the rest of us will run like rats in fear of what the mobs will do to us if we take one wrong step.

Iโ€™m pretty sure thatโ€™s the plan.

Only it wonโ€™t work.


The Coming Apart Part:

This escalation of the culture war will fail for two reasons.

I. The first reason is thereโ€™s no there there.

The magaists are like most Americans in that they donโ€™t understand there is no arts system in the USA. We have no credentialing bodies, no established academies, closely linked to government or social elites, that dictate American Arts & Letters. We have people who claim to be that, but theyโ€™re bullshitters.

Many people believe the federal government does support the arts, because politicians talk about supporting the arts, but thatโ€™s bullshit, too. Our government support consists basically of the National Endowment for the Arts and a few sincere but fragmented programs with painfully tiny budgets that are constantly being cut. If people knew how meager federal arts funding is, even diehard art-haters would think, โ€œDamn, thatโ€™s cold.โ€

This lack of support has a few causes, but itโ€™s mostly due to the US having never given two shits about the arts. Sorry, but facts.

Except for that brief fling with the WPA, the creative sector has never been important enough to warrant a bureaucracy of our own. We have no departments or agencies. Hell, we couldnโ€™t even get into education despite the traditional pairing of the arts and sciences – and STEAM being an objectively better acronym than STEM.

Which means that there is nothing for Mango Mussolini to weaponize.

He can cut institutional funding, and that will hurt PBS, museums, and state programs, but theyโ€™ve been surviving political sabotage for decades. And 99+% of individual creatives never see a dime of that money anyway.

He can threaten and bribe media to act as censors for him, but theyโ€™re already at war with artists, replacing us with AI and churning out slop-buckets of conformist garbage.

At the federal level, thereโ€™s no infrastructure, no organization, not even any money – no way for him to blanket-crush us the way he blanket-cut-off everyone elseโ€™s funding and blanket-pardoned his pet insurrectionists.

This was true in McCarthyโ€™s day, too, but back then limited technology allowed media companies to own the means of cultural production. You had to go through Big Media to make movies and television, publish books, record and distribute music, etc. McCarthy could attack speech indirectly, evading the First Amendment, by attacking the companies the arts depended on with bogus national security claims. And they were only too happy to serve up sacrificial victims, such as the Hollywood Ten.

Even so, censorship mainly hit corporate media, while in the greater art world, that period saw a flood of innovative, avant-garde, politically charged, and socially challenging creativity. How? Iโ€™ll get back to that.

And letโ€™s remember, the 2020s are not the 1950s. Thanks to modern technology, artists today are more independent than weโ€™ve been in centuries. And as the USโ€™s red-headed stepchildren, we are used to self-funding our projects with no corporate middlemen (because weโ€™re not that profitable). If you want to know what real-life โ€œbootstrappingโ€ looks like, consult an indie creative. Itโ€™s not as glamorous as the oligarchs make out.

When Trump comes for the arts, lacking any kind of structure or leverage, heโ€™ll find itโ€™s like emptying the ocean with his hands. Heโ€™ll have to terrorize each one of us individually, and nobody even knows how many of us, professional and amateur, there are. I donโ€™t see him doing that for very long, do you?

II. Especially since the second reason his culture war will fail is that thereโ€™s no there there on his side, either.

The culture war has always been fake – mere inflammatory slogans, and the more ephemeral and illusory the scapegoats, the better they serve to enrage and divide people.

When you turn the concept into a thing, however, then you have problems.

So Clementine Caligula takes over the Kennedy Center. Whatever. Itโ€™s just a theater. Itโ€™s not attached to anything. No dominoes will fall, nor ripples spread because of it. This hostile takeover will thud into nothing, just like the thousands more hostile takeovers heโ€™ll have to do if he wants to make a moral crusade of it.

And none of it will actually impact the arts.

The Kennedy Center is just a theater like any other. It is legendary only because of the audience that goes there. Its association with the Presidency makes it a favorite venue for wealthy art patrons – the glitterati whom Trump envies and hates to his rotten core.

By an amusing coincidence, many of them are also among the countryโ€™s biggest political donors. Oops.

But that glamorous world he resents is completely separate from the sweaty, ink- and paint-stained, 80+ hours/week world where art is actually made. Artists and Kennedy Center patrons exist in different realities, only crossing paths briefly at a few events per year.

Magaists donโ€™t realize this because they never see either artists or art. All they see are the glitterati, and their own culture war slogans, through the filter of their angry fantasies.

By grabbing the Kennedy Center, Trump made the fantasy real and revealed its emptiness. Like he always does.

Meanwhile, we artists keep on working. Like we always do.


The Plan of Action Part:

But the McCarthyist threat has been made, and the malicious, destructive intent behind it is more real than Trump himself. It must be understood to be counteracted.

The Red Scare, the blacklist, todayโ€™s culture war, even the First Amendment fights over Black history, womenโ€™s history, and trans representation – none of that is really about the arts. The books, artworks, shows and films being defunded and banned donโ€™t actually matter to fascists. We are not the fascistsโ€™ true targets. We are just a means to an end.

They really mean it when they go after the news media, because journalists confront them head-on, exposing their secrets. They understand that kind of threat to their power. Thatโ€™s a hard danger to them.

They donโ€™t see artists that way. To them, weโ€™re just a bunch of farty flibberty-gibbits who canโ€™t take a punch. But lots of people like us, so they go after us to get to those other people – the public, We the People. 

They destroy the arts because art is personal and emotional, and they want to hurt and scare the people and tell them they canโ€™t have anything private, anything just their own. The fascists have to be the center of their attention.

Itโ€™s like the abuser who punishes a child by putting down their pet.

They see artists as weak, disposable, something someone else loves, and no more threat to them than so many puppies.

They think that way because they are stupid. They can only understand the hard danger of direct confrontation. They donโ€™t understand the soft danger of the arts. 

Journalism is about information. The arts are about hearts and minds. Journalism tells you what happened. The arts tell you how to feel about it. Journalism speaks in plain words and clear images. The arts speak a subtle, even subliminal, language of symbolism and emotion. Art can deliver its messages without anyone being aware what itโ€™s doing, let alone able to pinpoint its methods.

This brings us back to the outpouring of challenging art in the 1950s despite McCarthyโ€™s pogroms.

I guarantee that any maga-fascist who happens to read this essay will laugh at me right about now. This is such self-soothing copium bullshit, right? Art is crap.

Thatโ€™s what the McCarthyists thought. We are nothing to them. They canโ€™t detect our signals or break our codes. They donโ€™t get our banter. They donโ€™t see anything in us that is target-worthy in our own right. Unless they want to drown a puppy to make children cry, they pay us no attention.

And thatโ€™s how the 1950s was full of American art, literature, drama, and music that protested injustice, called out corruption, challenged social and moral norms, critiqued the church, the government, the draft, specific news events, etc., and included the voices of people of color, immigrants, women, LGBTQ+ people, and more.

Artists even went after McCarthyism itself. Arthur Millerโ€™s play, The Crucible, came out in 1953, the height of the Scare just before its collapse.

So what does this mean? What should we do right now?

Make Art.

Thatโ€™s what we should do. 

I realize it sounds glib to play up all this drama and end with telling people to carry on as theyโ€™ve been doing, but hear me out. 

I believe the most direct, foundational form of protest is to keep doing the things the oppressors donโ€™t want us to do. This is related to Timothy Snyderโ€™s advice, โ€œdo not obey in advance,โ€ i.e. donโ€™t cede our agency, our liberty, our principles to appease the autocrat.

I amend that advice to simply this: Donโ€™t Obey. Full stop. Forget โ€œin advance.โ€ Donโ€™t obey ever.

Fascists want artists to shut up because, if we shut up, others will, too. They think that, if they silence artists, they will have taken something personal, something intimate and meaningful to the people – our cultural identity – and the people will become demoralized and will submit.

But they canโ€™t silence us by force. Instead, they try to scare or depress us into silencing ourselves to appease them, and then theyโ€™ll take the credit for having done it to us, and everyone will fear them, and theyโ€™ll win. Thatโ€™s what the blacklists, book bans, censorship, and mobs are for – to get us to stop making art.

So how should we respond to that?

By making art, thatโ€™s how.

But Jen, I sense you shouting, how???? I want to fight fascism, but Iโ€™m tired and confused and stressed and poor. How am I supposed to do this?

I hear you. Your concerns are legitimate, but this is doable. Plenty of experts on this stuff (and how fucked up is it that there are experts on this stuff?) offer tips on sustainable resistance. Here are a few that are working for me, so far. Your mileage may vary, but give them a try:

1. Breathe.

Deep, cleansing breaths, calm and grounded. Attacks on the arts are psychological warfare, intended to scare and upset people, but it only works if we let it into our heads. When you feel the tension rising inside, take a break. Get off the internet. Go outdoors. Go to your work or practice space, and do your creative exercises. Natural light and art are literally, neurologically, the best tonic for calming the nerves and mind. Apply liberally as needed. 

2. Protect yourself.

Beef up your cyber security. Get your own website, backed up offline, so your work is not dependent on any corporate platform. If youโ€™re a creative employee, start an independent side hustle, and have a lawyer look over your employment/contract terms re ownership and exclusivity. Save your money. Choose whom you allow into your personal circle, even as you reach out to the world. No more universal love and light, kumbaya, all are welcome bullshit. Take anyoneโ€™s money, but vet your friends.

3. Connect.

It will fall to all of us to look out for each other and to support and protect the vulnerable. Collaborate with your fellow artists. Network within your communities. Pour energy into local arts cooperatives and mutual aid groups (after vetting them, of course). Network across interest groups, too, for practical support with living costs, political action, legal services, schooling, even sharing healthy food and consumer goods.

Footnote: Avoid excessive ideological purity. When vetting the people you bring in and the groups you collaborate with, keep your ethical standards high, but judge people more on their values and actions than their labels. We will need carefully chosen friends in police departments, for example.

4. Keep it sustainable.

This is an โ€œin it for the durationโ€ situation, so donโ€™t try to do it all on your own, and donโ€™t put unreasonable pressure on yourself. Assess your skills, interests, passions, resources, obligations, personality. Ask yourself realistically what kinds of actions, artistic, economic, political, etc., fit with what you can do going forward. Make a manageable list, and do those things, knowing there are millions of other people making similar assessments and lists. Carry your weight, and trust others to carry theirs.

And if some donโ€™t, kick โ€˜em and carry on with those who do. Part of sustainability has to be not wasting energy on the uncooperative.

5. Be Kryptonite.

Existence is Resistance. Being an artist is resistance. Choosing who you will or wonโ€™t work for is resistance. Choosing where you will or wonโ€™t spend your money is resistance. Growing a garden, sewing your clothes, sharing with neighbors, teaching children, cleaning rivers – all that stuff is the resistance, because it undoes or undermines what the fascists are trying to impose on us. So live your life on your own terms, not just in reaction against what they do. Donโ€™t force yourself into fighting fascism as a separate, additional thing you must do. Being a free human being is the fight against fascism. So when youโ€™re figuring out how to be in the fight, consider all the things you do every day and try to do them in a way, with an energy, that makes them toxic to fascism. Thus, just by your existence, you are poisoning the well of that evil ideology. Then everything else you add to your to-do list is gravy. Liberty gravy.


No sugarcoating. The world is in trouble. There is a disease in our body politic, and it will take more than just ousting the current crop of villains to cure it.

We in the arts, being the cultural influencers, have a vital role to play. We may be disorganized and freaked-out, but this is our moment to do what we do. Win hearts and minds. Soothe shattered nerves. Awaken atrophied senses. Guide the narratives, and shine light in the darkness.

So breathe, hydrate, touch grass. And keep making art.

-Jen

Illustrated with details from my collage. XIX. The Sun, symbolically relevant on many levels.

Another Day One: an artist meets 2025

Monday was a bad day.

I started writing this at 10 to midnight on January 20, 2025. By the time I finish and certainly by the time you read this, we will be well into a new day.

But as of starting, Monday was bad.

As my subscribers know too well, I do not hesitate to express my political opinions in this art and writing blog. Marketing people always say you shouldnโ€™t do that. You want your audience to get to know you, but only the sellable you, the SEO-friendly you, the positive, unchallenging, amusing version of you that wonโ€™t turn away potential sales. Not the you that might not be universally palatable to all demographics at all times. Nobody wants to see that crap.

But you know what – fuck that noise. 

Thatโ€™s job advice – the cubicle-jockey concept of professionalism. Trust me, I have jockeyed enough cubicles in my life to know that the conventional wisdom against being abrasive or opinionated, against publicly taking a stand on issues, against bringing your personal views into the work space, is all about maintaining the work flow of your bossโ€™s business. 

And itโ€™s good advice as far as it goes. Itโ€™s the right way to behave when youโ€™re working for someone else. Itโ€™s especially good advice for anyone who is getting paid to represent someone elseโ€™s image or brand.

But it doesnโ€™t apply here because Iโ€™m not an employee. I donโ€™t have a boss to answer to. I am the boss in this space.

Jen Fries Arts is the portal into my studio. When you come here, youโ€™re an honored and welcome guest in my house, but I donโ€™t work for you, so I donโ€™t have to separate myself from my work. 

As a business-owner, which is what an independent creative is, my professionalism is about delivering goods on time and within agreed terms and dealing in good faith. Itโ€™s not about sucking up. Itโ€™s not about putting on a mask and lying to you about who you are following on this site.ย 

Thatโ€™s why, when bad things happen in the USA, where I live, I post statements about them. Long-time readers will be aware that I am firmly anti-fascist, anti-capitalist, anti-racist, -sexist, -transphobe, etc., firmly pro-democracy and civil rights, an ally to marginalized people, and, especially, pro-Earth.

I make statements because Iโ€™m a future-oriented Aquarius sun INTJ with a fiery Sagittarius moon and pragmatic Virgo ascendant, so when shit happens, I must confront it and declare my path over, under, around, or through it.

Well, on January 20th, shit happened. It was probably the worst non-personal day of my life so far. Iโ€™m sure Iโ€™m not alone in that.

To be blunt, as of 1/20/2025, a new Confederacy is in charge of the USA, and this country is at war with itself.

I know a lot of experts will balk and start parsing legal definitions and splitting historical hairs – and I certainly canโ€™t argue with them – but personally, Iโ€™m ready to call it. Civil conflict.

Itโ€™s been brewing as a cold war in politics and the media for many years, but it turned hot on Jan 6th, 2021, when Donald Trump instigated a violent mob to attack the US Capitol with the aim of overturning the 2020 election. I donโ€™t care what the magaists say, we all saw it.

We beat back that attempt on that day, but, stupidly, we did not press our advantage. We did not root out the corruption in our institutions. We did not defend our Constitution. We failed in our civic duty.

And sure enough, our enemies came back for another round. This time, emboldened by lack of consequences, thereโ€™s no pretense, no mask, no cubicle-politeness. They are out to destroy people they hate. Simple as. You can find the details all over the news media. I wonโ€™t go into it here, but the rightwingโ€™s extremism is cartoonish in its malice and cavalier abandonment of law.ย 

He said heโ€™d be a dictator on Day One, and here we are.
Now the question is, what will he be on Day Two?

Or rather, will there be a Day Two at all? Or will January 21, 2025, be another Day One –
the first day of a new American independence movement?

Iโ€™m no billionaire oligarch, media mogul, or A-list celebrity who goes to bend the knee and kiss the ass for favors and privilege. 

Iโ€™m just a working stiff like millions of others, barely scraping by. I donโ€™t have to beg Mango Mussolini not to push me off some high perch. I may speak as I please and create as I speak. So here goes.

When I talk about civil conflict, Iโ€™m not talking about armies seizing cities and carving out territories. Thatโ€™s not going to happen.

However, Iโ€™m also not talking about a bloodless coup or some kind of paper secession program worked out in courtrooms. People have died by political violence in the US in recent years, both before and since 1/6. I do believe there will be more of that. 

We are entering a dark time, and we will all be caught up in it, one way or another. It will not be possible to pretend itโ€™s not happening, as we have for so many generations till now. Everyone is going to have to choose how to relate to these times and its belligerent factions.

But what could I possibly do, broke-ass, minor creative and isolated individual that I am, with neither money nor connections? What can any of us do, realistically?

Well, realistically, we can think about this very question. We can think seriously about how we define ourselves as human beings. That itself is an action, a response, to our present moment.

We will all be defined by world events, whether we participate or not. Everything we do from now on will come with moral assumptions and judgments attached. No, itโ€™s not fair, and it shouldโ€™t be this way, but it is because thatโ€™s how deep the civil conflict has saturated the fabric of society. Literally everything we do tells the world who we are.

And thatโ€™s where I come in – I and all creatives, big and small, maybe especially small.

Because we artists, storytellers, poets and singers, designers and artisans, actors, dancers, etc., are the real influencers.

Sorry to all the modern influencers on the internet, for whom that cynical title was invented. Iโ€™m glad they earn decent money, but artists have been the cultural influencers for thousands of years, and weโ€™re still here.

Weโ€™re here, and we are not going to be replaced by AI or rendered irrelevant by artificially shortened attention spans because what we do is core human stuff. We adjust with the times, but fundamentally, there is little difference between what artists do today and what the cave painters were doing 40,000 years ago. When a thingโ€™s got legs like that, itโ€™s not a fad. Art is fundamental.

Creatives channel the vibes of society. We interpret world conditions. We explain, contextualize, and set the narratives. We comfort, reassure, encourage, excite, and sometimes scold, challenge, and hold to account. We create the culture references everyone turns into memes. We bring people together in mutual recognition.

We are the bards who raise kings with praises and tear them down again with satires. We open minds, get people curious, thinking, and talking. We are dangerous to power, and thatโ€™s why the powerful censor us, slander and denigrate us, cut us out of school curricula, ban our books.

Granted, too many of us have slacked off. Weโ€™ve let ourselves fall into self-indulgence and the complacency of thinking weโ€™ll never amount to anything if we donโ€™t reach some unnecessary level of wealth in some impossible time frame so why even bother. Weโ€™ve allowed ourselves and our profession to be made ridiculous playing out banana and duct tape kayfabes with the ultra-rich.

Thatโ€™s got to stop, right now. 

This is the Information Age. Control of thought is the key to power, and very bad people have seized that deep power via disinformation, distraction, propaganda, and censorship.ย They have woven webs of confusion and fear around every mind they can reach. The damage is profound.

And there is no one – no tech developer, political leader, college professor, or tragically today, journalist – better equipped to break through those webs than artists. I truly believe this.

Because what they do is fake. What we do is real. They tell lies. We cast magic. They spin webs. We build worlds. When the artists wake up, we will wake up the world.

So wake the hell up, artists. Itโ€™s work time.

You may be thinking, โ€œWhat the frik are you talking about, Jen? You just make collages and nature pictures and sometimes weird shit with bones and junk, and nobody knows who you are. How can you wake up the world?โ€

Recall, I said this may come down to small artists like me.ย 

Why? Because we are your friendly neighborhood artists. The regular, working people whose art is hanging in regular, working peopleโ€™s houses all over the country. Weโ€™re the bands playing in local bars, the writers giving talks to community book clubs. We teach classes down at the Y and paint kidsโ€™ faces at municipal fairs. We set the style and look of a community with park sculptures and downtown murals.

People know us, and we know them. We have the ability to get inside their heads, to bypass the programming of social media, 24/7 news, and ideological podcasts, and stir up memories, emotions, connections.

We can plant the seeds of better possibilities and better choices. We can set ripples in motion that have the potential to grow into tsunamis.

Iโ€™m talking about the work of artists supporting a grassroots awakening against the malefactors of the new fascism. Iโ€™m talking about a counter-culture that can help dissolve the webs we are trapped in.

How we do it will vary artist to artist. Weโ€™re all different. Some of us offer healing and therapy. Some, reassurance or respite. Others are rabble-rousers, whistleblowers. 

Myself, Iโ€™m into raising consciousness. I seek to awaken awareness of a larger world and deeper experiences. Youโ€™d be surprised – itโ€™s pretty effective. Anyway, thatโ€™s the kind of artist I am.

And this long-winded essay aims to raise the consciousness of my fellow artists.ย 

It is time now for all of us to think about what kind of artists we are.ย 

I would like all of my colleagues, all creatives, pro and amateur, in every medium and genre, to take some time and think about what we are putting out into the world, what we want to be putting out there, what we should be putting out there.

How can we, with our small, human abilities, contribute to building a better world?

Many of us will start dissembling. โ€œI just play piano.โ€ โ€œI just do pet portraits.โ€ โ€œI just make drawings.โ€ 

Stop that! There is no โ€œjustโ€ in art. All art is more that it appears, because thereโ€™s a human behind it. 

Quit belittling yourself. Own your work, your thoughts, your dreams. Create, share, teach. Speak freely, and let the only words you never say again be those self-poisoning apologies for your existence.

The world needs us because tyrants fear us.ย They fear our doodles, ditties, and dog drawings, because they canโ€™t control how our work lands with the people. Neither can we, but we donโ€™t want to. Art liberates.

So thatโ€™s my assignment to myself, and my call to all of you: Create. Express. Do the things, no matter how nuts. Communicate. Cooperate.

And above all, speak truth to the people around us, because truth is the first victim of autocracy.

Itโ€™s now January 22. Writing this took me all of Day One of the New Movement. Thus it begins.

Illustrated with details from various of my works over various of my years.