Wednesday, 8 January 2025

TheDisposableArtist

 

This is a rich and complex topic that weaves together art, philosophy, sociology, and technology.



The Disposable Artist: Art and Appreciation in a Narcissistic Age


I. Introduction: Art in an Age of Entitlement

Thesis: Modern and postmodern society, shaped by narcissism and entitlement, has shifted the appreciation of art from an act of connection and empathy to one of consumption and convenience.

The contradiction: Art as an object of appreciation vs. the artist as a disposable creator.

Key symbols: Duchamp’s readymades, AI-generated art, and the starving artist in their garret.


II. Art as Object vs. Art as Act of Appreciation

1. The Narcissistic Gaze:

In an entitlement-driven culture, art becomes a mirror reflecting the appreciator’s taste rather than a window into the creator’s soul.

The focus shifts from the creative process to the personal act of valuation.

2. Duchamp’s Readymades and the Separation of Art from the Artist:

Duchamp’s Fountain (1917): A urinal declared art, shifting the focus from skill and craftsmanship to conceptual thought.

How this movement paved the way for art to be about the viewer’s internal act of recognition rather than the creator’s intention.

3. AI-Generated Art as the Next Readymade:

Technology has removed the human creator entirely from some art forms.

A user pressing a button becomes both the artist and the audience—a seamless act of consumption and self-expression.

The erosion of traditional skills and craftsmanship parallels the devaluation of human effort.


III. The Starving Artist: A Symbol of Dehumanisation

1. Romanticising Trauma:

The starving artist trope reflects the cultural expectation that suffering is the price of authenticity.

In a narcissistic culture, this suffering becomes an aesthetic rather than a call for empathy.

Society consumes the artist’s output while discarding their humanity—“starving” both metaphorically and literally.

2. The Disposability of Creators:

Convenience culture (Uber, Amazon, AI) reinforces the disposability of labor and creators.

Artists are valued not for their humanity but for their productivity or the aesthetic appeal of their suffering.


IV. Empathy, Trauma, and the Value of Art

1. Convenience vs. Craftsmanship:

Trauma and hard work historically underpin human creativity and empathy.

Modern convenience erodes the appreciation for effort, making both art and the artist disposable.

2. Empathy through Struggle:

The absence of personal struggle in art appreciation limits the audience’s ability to value the artist as a person.

The rise of technology-driven art furthers this disconnect by presenting creation as effortless.


V. AI-Generated Art: The Entitlement Symbol

1. Art Without Graft:

AI art commodifies creativity, presenting it as instantaneous and universal.

The paradox: AI art is a product of entitlement and a driver of further entitlement.

2. Devaluation of Traditional Skills:

Just as Duchamp’s readymades questioned skill, AI erodes it further by removing the human entirely.

The symbolic shift: Art is no longer a dialogue between creator and audience but a monologue of the entitled user.


VI. Conclusion: Art, Empathy, and the Way Forward

To reclaim the value of art and artists, society must reintroduce the appreciation of effort, humanity, and empathy.

The role of education and cultural shifts in resisting entitlement-driven dehumanisation.

The need for a new ethos: valuing connection over consumption and creators over convenience.


This structure allows for a coherent argument that traces the historical and philosophical evolution of art appreciation in narcissistic and disposable cultures, connecting it to contemporary issues like AI-generated art.




This blog is part of a series entitled The Fragile Canvas.

No comments:

Post a Comment