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Kevin LaTorre's avatar

"Borderstalker" is certainly the most stylish term I've heard to describe the liminal ambassador-types who navigate several spheres. “Artists are instinctively uncomfortable in homogenous groups" feels correct to me, though I wonder if the following "means to help people from all our many and divided cultural tribes" reverie is better-suited to critics than artists?

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G. M. (Mark) Baker's avatar

If art is weapon, beauty is its cutting edge. I live more in the world of literature, but it is the same there. If literature is a weapon, story is its cutting edge. Beauty in art, story in literature, are what get them through the door, on the wall, on the nightstand.

We seem to have seen an abnegation of this among fine artists in both fields. Unpopularity, the rejection of beauty and of story, become a calling card to a deep pocketed elite -- even more so it seems for art than for literature.

But if art is upstream from politics, it is the art that gets hung on the wall, the books that get piled on the nightstand, the shows that are watched from Netflix, that occupy that upstream position. Whatever beneficial effects the arts may have for heart, mind, and soul (and I believe they are many) can only occur if the art is consumed. If the artist has any kind of obligation at all, that obligation can only be met if they take seriously the obligation that the art should be received.

I complain that we have created a culture with a hole in the middle. Nihilistic elitism on one side, hedonistic populism on the other. The division is clear in literature, but I suspect it is no different in the art. This is why I look for the return of what I call the serious popular novel. I would not presume to name the equivalent prescription for art.

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