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Daily Ginko Photo and Haiku: Revolution

Posted on March 21, 2022March 17, 2022
poisoned for money
the winter of elitism
new creatives spring

 
Caistor Parish Church March 15th @ 13:43:37

Be creative in your own way

Challenge and criticize the status quo.

What is known today as modern or postmodern art began with revolutionary trends in the arts, originally aimed at wresting art away from the grip of religious and political institutions and the elite few, and later at protesting the ravages of the Industrial Revolution.

Artists of the modern era rebelled to uphold art’s freedom of expression, be it founded in social commentary, aesthetics, or subject matter.

Historically, those in power always sought to appropriate art in order to glorify themselves or to legitimize their claim to power (be it based in scripture, celebrity, ideology, riches, or trendsetting) as well as to squelch artists’ ability to challenge and criticize the status quo.


For many centuries, the result of such constraints was benign art based primarily on aesthetics and devoid of any
narrative that did not comply with the interests of the elite.

As expected, the Iron Law prevails in our own time, too. In the absence of political and religious authoritarianism, other interests have moved to claim power over art. Among them are business interests seeking profit, academic institutions seeking legitimacy and funding, wealthy patrons seeking to treat art as investment or as status symbols, and various activists seeking to leverage the power of art in promoting their causes (and to squelch art that is detrimental to these causes).


The Iron Law explains why anyone associated with the contemporary art elite has an implicit vested interest in promoting art that either reinforces their legitimacy or maximizes financial profit for those in the business of art. Neither is necessarily bad, but a balance must be maintained in order to ensure that art remains what most of us intuitively consider it to be: a subjective, personal, expressive pursuit free from arbitrary constraints of dogma, politics, or profit.


What I found most disturbing about the response my friend received was not the rejection as such, but the profound lack of foresight expressed in suggesting that artists should strive to comply with the arbitrary sensibilities of “contemporary photography,” rather than their own sensibilities. My friend’s application was dismissed merely by virtue of his art fitting into the general category of “landscape photography” and considered inferior as such, without any regard to its innovative nature or to the artist’s motivations and skills.


I contend that today’s art elite has again come dangerously close to the dreaded outcome of the Iron Law, placing too much power in the hands of a few who control the proverbial purse strings, and I believe the time is nigh for another (peaceful, intellectual, and creative) revolution.

—Guy Tal








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