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July
@july
An idea I think about sometimes: The artist and the art are not the same and should be judged as such Too often people conflate the two
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tldr (tim reilly) pfp
tldr (tim reilly)
@tldr
Another interesting pt is that banning an artist bc they are immoral implies that we are looking to artists for moral guidance. But it’s not clear that that there should be any kind of relationship bt aesthetic genius and moral insight. When it does happily happen (eg Shakespeare) — we should thank the gods.
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Sahil 🥝
@sahilk
It seems we enforce moral standards on artists not because they are artists, but because they are celebrities. It’s implied these artists are famous, bc we wouldn’t even know their moral ineptitudes if they weren’t. And that looks like a function of the influence they hold.
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tldr (tim reilly)
@tldr
Great pt. When the artist becomes famous, their responsibility not as an artist but *as a human* increases. The question, I guess, is whether the artist should prioritize the act of a good artist (art) or the act of a good human (morality). This sometimes gets explored in art itself (eg, recently, in the film Tár)
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