The Myth of Neutrality: Why Every Creative Act Is A Political One

This one’s for the artists navigating the messy middle.

There’s a phrase that sometimes floats around creative circles like a dusty relic: “Art should be neutral.”

I’ve heard it spoken in classrooms, whispered in galleries, and dropped in art critiques like a rhetorical mic drop—as if neutrality is the highest virtue of artistic integrity. In fact, I most definitely mentally wrestled with this concept a lot when I was a wee young lad. Caught between wanting to be liked and successful in whatever art fart cliques I was travailing in (read: wailing in), and feeling a deeper desire to make art that mattered.

As if that was any less obtuse and problematic of a place to find a voice. But I digress.

Personally, I believe these dichotomies exist because there’s something to be gleaned both from operating within the rules, then narrowing the focus and experimenting once you’re confident in how the proverbial game works. Still feels incomplete, doesn’t it?

Not to worry, I’ll break it down momentarily.

The more I explore art, culture, and politics through timotheories, the more I realize: neutrality in art is a myth. The great artists of our time and decades long forgotten pushed through and past whatever was popular, whatever seemed “right”, to make statements on the world around them.

It Belongs In A Museum!

That quote from Last Crusade isn’t just a punchline—it’s a metaphor.

Now, I love the first three Indiana Jones films, and tolerate the rest out of respect for the legacy they come from, and as I sat down to write this post, the quote “It belongs in a museum!” just kept coming back to me, over and over again.

But why? You ask?

Indiana Jones angrily confronts enemies in The Last Crusade, referencing the iconic line 'It belongs in a museum!' to highlight cultural ownership.

Museums have been around for thousands of years, though their form and function have changed with time. If we look back on the history of the museum — an ironic statement if I ever saw one — they’ve undergone a wee bit of work. They started as exclusive research centres like the Museum of Alexandria, the temples in Mesopotamia and even in Ancient Greece.

Which later gave way for private collections and “cabinets of curiosity” to emerge during the Renaissance. The next transition saw the formation of public museums throughout the 17th to 19th centuries, and finally many museums have nested into what we have today; sites of cultural dialogue, decolonization and identity politics.

Which is why art being neutral feels wrong to even put to the keyboard.

Honestly, it might be one of the most dangerous myths we let ourselves believe. Art is a language after all, and when we close it off from the world, it stops speaking; and that’s when problems begin.

Let’s take a step back for a moment, I think it’ll solidify my point.

I know I’ve said this a few times in previous posts, which is why the Indy quote sticks so well: when art is in process, it belongs to the artist, to grow and be nurtured, hopefully turning into something better than its parent. But as soon as art enters the cultural edifice, it belongs to the public. That’s why writing it off as decor, presenting it as a history lesson or pretending it says nothing isn’t neutrality – it’s silence masquerading as objectivity. And that’s a form of segregation.

Art Doesn’t Exist in a Vacuum

No matter the medium—film, painting, photography, literature, or TikTok shorts—art starts and ends as a reflection of its creator’s values, experiences, and worldview. Even when the author claims detachment, their choices speak volumes: what they include, what they omit, how they frame their subject, what they refuse to engage with.

The song remains the same. We can’t exist external to our environment.

Alex DeLarge undergoes aversion therapy in A Clockwork Orange, his eyes forcibly held open while he watches violent imagery—a metaphor for forced perspective and the illusion of objectivity in storytelling.

In my 2016 post A Priori and A Posteriori, I wrote about how the creation and consumption of art is never purely objective. We carry our biases, our memories, our politics into the act of creating. And the audience brings their own baggage too. Art is a conversation between two loaded perspectives.

In other words, the idea of a “neutral artwork” is like claiming a documentary has no point of view.

I want you to really think on your favourite documentary for a moment, and I can assure you, within the final 1/3 or in the closing statements the director will have presented a perspective on the topic; it runs like clockwork through all forms of art.

And to save you some time… Some great examples of this are presented in 13th (Ava Duvernay), An Inconvenient Truth (Davis Guggenheim/ Al Gore), Won’t You Be My Neighbor? (Morgan Neville), The Social Deilemma (Jeff Orlowski) and Stories We Tell (Sarah Polley).

I’m not going to give away the point of each, but I will say this – a personal favourite of mine own is Won’t You Be My Neighbor? which takes a profound look into the legacy of Mr. Rogers, an icon of children’s programming, and it turns out, a deeply political artist with a vision. If you have any connection to Mr. Rogers, want a good cry, and haven’t seen it yet, I’m warning you now!


Not to belabour the point (okay, maybe a little), but let’s pivot to a slightly less serious example.

Spaceballs—the crudest, cleverest reminder that even parody has a point. Mel Brooks isn’t just spoofing sci-fi tropes; he’s poking at the guts of storytelling itself: commercialization, gender roles, recycled formulas, and the illusion of creative neutrality. When Yogurt proclaims “Merchandising! That’s where the real money is made!” it’s not just a punchline—it’s another thesis. Even the most ridiculous art reflects the systems it’s reacting to, profiting from, or trying to critique.

I want you to consider the particularly absurd moment on the transforming spaceship occupied by Darth Helmet and the President, when Mega Maid shifts “from suck to blow.” Mel Brooks isn’t just making a crude joke.

Mega Maid in outer space transforming from vacuum to blower in Spaceballs, parodying the idea that narratives can reverse direction with a switch.

Okay, he is, but also, he’s spoofing how quickly narratives can shift from benign to destructive, from passive to invasive, and then back again. And perhaps, making commentary on the detachment that world leaders can have regarding the populaces they are meant to serve or the nations that they villainize.

Like that vacuum metamorphosis, art doesn’t operate in neutral—it always moves something, even if it’s just reversing the air flow.


Ok, and I have to do it. Chris will probably shake his head when he reads this, but yes a Star Wars reference is inbound.

Han Solo and Finn argue in The Force Awakens, with Han exclaiming 'That’s not how the Force works!'—a metaphor for creative misinterpretation.

Han Solo’s exasperated retort, “That’s not how the Force works,” in The Force Awakens humorously underscores a common misconception—not just about the Force, but about art itself. Just as the Force isn’t a tool to be wielded without understanding, art isn’t a neutral entity devoid of influence or impact.

So when someone claims their work is “just art,” not political, I think of that Spaceballs scene. It reminds me: detachment doesn’t mean inertia—it just means the force is going somewhere else. Usually, unnoticed.

Silence is Still a Statement

There’s a quote often mis-attributed to Elie Wiesel that goes something like: “Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim.” While that’s often used in human rights contexts, it applies to creative spaces, too.

When artists choose silence on urgent issues—injustice, climate change, inequality, war—they’re not avoiding politics. They’re participating in the dominant narrative that allows those systems to persist.

In my Eco-Friendly Arts (Earth Day) post, I argued that artists have a role in shaping culture and influencing awareness. Choosing to say nothing is a decision with impact. And often, it maintains the status quo.

One of my favorite songs by Canadian pop punk band Crowned King is Turn It Up We’re Going Down. The lyrics beautifully capture this tension between truth-telling and protection, visibility and harm:

Break the silence
Let’s not break the news
Cause breaking stories breaks the hearts of children
What’s there left to do

Art that chooses silence isn’t neutral—it’s just letting someone else decide the narrative. And sometimes, the refusal to “break the news” says more than headlines ever could.

Even “Personal Work” Is Political

Another cringeworthy phrase, “But I’m not political, I just make personal work.”

Let’s break THAT down.

If you’re making work about your identity, your mental health, your body, your family, your community—you are inherently engaging with systems. If you’re a woman, BIPOC, queer, disabled, or in any way marginalized, your “personal” story is already a form of resistance on the very important topic of inclusion. The act of visibility is political.

And for those with privilege, avoiding politics is a political act. It’s the luxury of opting out.

Here’s where things get interesting for me.

While Spaceballs makes its point with parody and punchlines, Starship Troopers plays it straight—so straight, in fact, that many viewers missed the satire entirely. On paper, Paul Verhoeven’s film is a popcorn flick with great action sequences and steamy shower scenes. It looks like a celebration of patriotism and heroics, but it’s actually a scathing critique of fascism, propaganda, and blind nationalism

Neil Patrick Harris in Starship Troopers, wearing a militarized uniform—satirizing authoritarianism and blind nationalism through a straight-faced lens.

And that’s the point: even when art pretends to be apolitical—or especially when it does—it often reinforces the very systems it claims to ignore. Starship Troopers isn’t neutral. It’s deliberately baiting the viewer, asking: “Are you watching critically? Or are you just enjoying the explosions?”

Which is why that quote—“The only good bug is a dead bug”—hits differently when you realize it’s the voice of a regime, not a rebel. The film doesn’t shout its politics. It weaponizes genre expectations and makes you sit with the discomfort of complicity.

Take Enchanted, as another example.

On the surface, it’s just another fish-out-of-water rom-com, complete with spontaneous singing and animal sidekicks. But look closer, and it becomes clear: Enchanted is a sly satire of Disney’s own legacy.

It pokes fun at the the tropes of animated Disney princesses—the instant love, the gender roles, the happily-ever-afters—by dropping its archetypal princess into gritty, modern-day New York. And what happens? She changes. The film critiques the limitations of fantasy while still celebrating its emotional power. That “Happy Working Song” isn’t just cute—it’s a tongue-in-cheek commentary on labor, obedience, and the absurd cheerfulness expected of female characters.

Giselle in full princess gown stands in a cluttered modern apartment in Enchanted, highlighting the contrast between fantasy tropes and reality.

That’s what makes Enchanted so brilliant: it critiques the fantasy without abandoning it. It asks: What if the dream could evolve instead of just being escaped? And that’s just as political as anything in a war movie.

Cultural Touchstones

And now it’s time to drive the point home. Some further homework for you creative cuties. Take a look at these artists who are working TODAY; for inspiration, and take up a brush, or whatever you chosen tool is and join the fight.

  • Kent Monkman critiques the historical treatment of Indigenous peoples through a deeply political lens, even using visual language rooted in Western painting traditions.
  • Rebecca Belmore uses performance, installation, and sculpture to address issues like colonialism, displacement, and Indigenous identity. Her work is often physically demanding and emotionally evocative—unmistakably political in both form and content.
  • Wanda Nanibush, as both a curator and artist, challenges institutional structures through her advocacy and exhibitions centering Indigenous and feminist perspectives.
  • Sandra Brewster’s textured photo-based works explore Black identity and diaspora, bringing visibility to histories often erased from the Canadian narrative.
  • Films like Incendies, Antigone, and The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open show how national identity, migration, and survival are laced through every frame of story.

After all, my own Watch List has grown to include films that explore themes of quiet rebellion, fractured identity and culture shifts. And that reminds me, I’m probably due for an update elsewhere…

timotheories and Dont Bartlett sit at a table with Songs in the Key of Life by Stevie Wonder prominently displayed, teasing an upcoming YouTube video on the essential album.

This post talked a lot about movies and visual art—but music? That’s another conversation entirely. I teased a bit with the Crowned King reference, but long-time readers might remember Sound Culture, where I explored music worth listening to with intention.

I’ve been sitting on a list of albums that shaped how I listen, and I think it’s time to unpack said list in a future post. Stay tuned for that!

theories Summarized

So what should artists do?

I’m not saying every piece of art must scream protest. But I AM saying we can no longer pretend art exists outside the world we live in. The past few years have seen a change in how we connect with the world around us – I think in many ways, creatives have insulated with the global pandemic and slowly return to the public spaces, but that shouldn’t have stifled our speech.

Use your voice. Make work that reflects your truth. And recognize that art doesn’t need to be loud to be powerful—just honest.

Because neutrality isn’t real. But authenticity? That changes everything.


What do you think? Have you ever tried to stay “neutral” in your work? Do you believe it’s possible? Let’s talk about it in the comments or shoot me a message—this is the kind of conversation that fuels creativity.

Selling Your Heart Out (Dave Von Bieker, preview interview pt 2)

Do we all get to be who we decide to portray ourselves as on screen or in the media? I’d like to believe that it’s possible. But more importantly, I wonder if we can ever live up to the moral ideals we establish about our creative touch.

Making art is extremely difficult to sustain and it takes a lot of personal sacrifice if you really do hope to make it for a life time. Whether your medium is music, painting, design, fashion, photography, video, dance or any other combination of forms, it’s challenging road, filled with dues paid and money earned.

And a more common theme on everyone’s lips is the notion of burning out or fading away with time. The age old struggle of the creative professional – to be completely bohemian or a corporate sell-out. These polarizing terms exist for reason though, and I happen to believe that both are valid ways of looking at this as a career. This is where the theory comes in; if you want to truly be happy, you need to embrace both in some regard. That’s why it’s important to wrestle with the dichotomy of self versus the selfless.

Yes, you shouldn’t compare yourself to others, but relating to what those who have come before and have found success is an invaluable exercise. You might learn something by breaking apart a Kanye West song, recreating a Rembrant, or spending some time with 1927 movie classic Metropolis.

It’s a continual sacrifice. I give a lot for my art and to make it, so it seems crazy to me that I wouldn’t it to be heard by as many people as possible

Dave Von Bieker

I had so much fun talking with local music genius Von Bieker, that I decided to give another preview interview. I know, I know, I promised a full length interview, but this way you get even more content, and I can further craft his story in a meaningful way for you. Time for some more bow-tie rock to haunt your heart.

Enjoy creative cuties!

theories Summarized

Everything I do artistically is an expression of my ideals. Is this a true statement?

It’s an excellent question to ask yourself dear readers, and if you did, please like and share the video, leave me some comments and I’ll share them on social media. Maybe some new theories will unfold in the process.

Coming up next, a review on the new Young Fathers record, so please check back in tomorrow evening for more theories! You won’t be disappointed.

Tim!

All Of The Flaws With The Last Jedi (Cross Talk EP 33)

It turns out that I love the new Star Wars movie.

I realize that this is not a popular opinion, and yeah I review movies regularly, and yeah that puts me into the camp of critic rather then enthusiast, but I really want you to hear me out on this one dear readers. Yes, the movie has been critically acclaimed for honouring the tradition of Star Wars films, but consider this point – as Chris says in this weeks episode of Cross Talk, “it’s a movie that is greater then the sum of it’s parts.”

By ripping apart the seams of the legacy we have, Rian Johnson has forced us to re-evaluate our love affair with nostalgia and the future-past aesthetic of a galaxy, far, far away. It looks like Star Wars, it sounds like Star Wars, but the humour is contemporary, and the story challenges the audience with new ideas about the Jedi, the Force, Luke Skywalker, and all of things that made this fiction so entertaining in the first place.

But I love this movie not because the movie was a good movie. To be perfectly honest, as a movie, it fails in so many different ways. Yes, it was entertaining at times, and it had some really interesting inclusions in it, but I also agree with Mike that it’s horribly flawed in it’s presentation, there are too many loose threads, and the upending of everything from Episode VII towards the end of Episode VIII will leave general audiences frustrated.

When I think about it, I’m not entirely sure how this trilogy is going to right all of the wrongs of the prequels.

And yet, I do love it. Despite all of it’s flaws, The Last Jedi is challenging all of the dogmatic ideas about The Force, and it presented a completely different version of Luke Skywalker then we were expecting. Plus, I think it redeems Episode I, II, and III. Not because they are better by comparison, but because Disney is doing a really interesting thing with it’s culling of the Star Wars canon (I’ll save that for another day).

In brief, this movie is very interesting. And if you don’t believe me, it’s time to look at all of the flaws with The Last Jedi. And this is episode thirty three of Cross Talk.

theories Summarized

You can’t expect a movie franchise universe to be perfect, because the challenge of a film director is to live somewhere between honouring what came before, and adding something new. Where art fails (movies, music, fashion , etc.) is when authors erase everything you know and love. That is when I can completely understand why fans would be disappointed, and with a movie like Star Wars, the fan base is so large that there will be strong opinions.

And as a true fan of these movies, I admit I treat them like a child, I love them no matter what they do, which is why I can still love it. Even when it does things I don’t agree with.

One final theory – you should totally like the video if you enjoyed it, leave a comment if you have some thoughts, and subscribe if you want to see more from us! Your support lets us know what we are doing right.

And come back tomorrow if you want to read my thoughts on the new 54.40 album.I.

Tim!

Well, That Was Easy (A Return To timotheories Form)

If you can believe it, I have been quite busy these past few months, dear readers.

I’m sure you’ve noticed this fact, given that timotheories effectively shut down in the month of August and didn’t return back to form until December, a solid four months later. This is largely due to two key reasons –

  1. I bought a house in September
  2. and then I got engaged in November

On top of that, I spent the better part of August searching for the house I have now bought, and once more in October shopping for a ring and planning how to propose to Mysticque on the eve of our anniversary. And spoiler-alert, she said yes to me. Which was both exciting and terrifying for me.

You see friends, I’ve never done either of those two major life things before, but it was finally time for me to take the plunge and make a financial decision that would further my ambitions AND more importantly secure a future for my fiancee and I. But it feels terrifying because I’m making decisions that don’t just impact me anymore. They impact the woman I love, and her son, who will also become my child too. Also, I’m hardwired (just like you) to resist change because it could hurt me.

This is why I consciously decided to carve out those months to complete those major goals and then get back into the rhythm in time for Christmas.

Fear of failure is where the terror comes in. Obviously I don’t want to let them down, nor do I want to put them into a bad situation. But to do nothing is worse because I know what I am capable of, and failure is simply an opportunity to learn.

When we are children, we are given many chances to learn, and as we learn we improve. Riding a bicycle, using a lawnmower, and wiping with toilet bowl cleaner all come with some risk. But if someone who is trained to use those items instructs us properly on how to use those items ourselves, then we can better prepare ourselves to complete those tasks too.

I guess my point, creative cuties, is this – Life will continue to be as it always is, difficult and beautiful. Which shouldn’t stop anyone from pursuing their dreams. Dreams are what make life so interesting after all, they motivate our waking life, it’s that easy. And that’s my major theory for the week.

Tim!

 

The Fast and the Furious (Watch Culture EP. 1)

So, you’re sitting at home on a Friday night and you want to watch something cool, but you just realized you don’t even know what’s cool anymore. Ya feel me?

Well, this is it, the latest and greatest venture on timotheories.

Ever so timely, and thanks one more time to Andre Lindo for inspiring me to come up with a new series of shows talking about Culture, from my perspective.

We’re doing something to challenge those top 10 lists and review videos that are ever so popular, creative cuties. These are going to be shorter videos with a more intimate feel and will feature myself at the helm (most of the time), guests, and and lots of unbridled passion about the topics at hand.

These ain’t your momma’s review shows, because we’re not going to focus only on the new and novel – Nope, we are going to inject into your consciousness the culture you need to navigate this crazy world of ours.

But enough of that, I think this show should be able to speak for itself, Watch Culture episode one is going to dive right into the thick of it, and it features my all-time favourite movie to watch when I’m sick, when I’m excited, when I’m ringing in the new year, and sometimes just to have on in the background when I’m painting or drawing. That’s right, we’re opening this can of worms with an episode on The Fast and the Furious,

Hit the jump to watch this video or stick around to stay on the site. Either way, This is going to be a fast paced 6 and half minutes of passion, fun, and entertainment on an amazing film that spawned an even better franchise.

theories Summarized

Look how happy I am just to talk about this movie, dear readers! And we haven’t even dug in just yet. I have so many more things to say about this movie, other movies and tv shows, and heck, who knows, I may dip my toes into some other creative channels. But you’re just gonna have to stick around to see what shows up next on timeotheories. Campfire theories continue to unfold and I’m stoked for it.

But you know what’s even more important here? Your feedback. Tell us what you think in the comment section, subscribe to the reading list for more great content, and please share this with your fellow lovers of creativity. We do this for you! Yet another theory to unravel folks.

Tim!