Paul Prudence
@paul-prudence
Art should *not* be made accessible to the mainstream. Art is the antidote to the mainstream. Unless you are confusing art with marketing.
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tim/vortac
@vortac
Normally I'm on par with everything you say and do, Paul. But I'd question that statement. Dealing with art is an important form of cultural and educational mediation, it promotes (critical) engagement with topics that transcend the banalities of everyday life. I would even say that it can help people learn to reflect on personal, societal and political changes and developments and at the same time promote emotionality and creativity. Art in general should not be something exclusive, reserved for and cultivated within a certain group. This may not be true for certain movements within the overall art spectrum, as they are often an identifier, outlet and catalyst for social exclusion and a means of expressing the struggle for recognition. So certain art forms and movements are definitely antidotes and their assimilation into mainstream culture is often purely superficial and meaningless, but "art" in general is not.
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Ryan
@ryanthompson
Good catch Tim, I didn't read it that way and it's a good reminder to ponder different perspectives. Funny how the interpretation of one word changes everything. In my mind saying 'accessible' was more about the process of producing the art to appease mainstream appetites not the access to the work.
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Paul Prudence
@paul-prudence
I realise now that my hastily written sentence, could have been better phrased and nuanced with more specific details. What I mean is specifically the drive by nft platforms to further commodify art into the realm of the mainstream as a profit enhancing strategy at the *expense of everything you say above*, which i 100% agree with, Tim. My bad with the initial lambast.
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