this post was submitted on 17 Jan 2024
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Popular shit has always popular and shit. Avant-garde art has always been avant-garde. This is a lot of words to say nothing new at all.
I might even go so far as to say you've fallen victim to what you're talking about: drab gray product designed to appeal to as many people as possible.
You're not wrong but that's not at all what the essay is about. I actually anticipated this how-shall-we-say reddity response in the post itself:
How do you define "bleeding into the mainstream" such that doing is less often doesn't imply "smaller market share"?
I mean, I explain it in the essay. But picture a Venn Diagram with a big "mainstream" circle, and smaller "artsy fartsy" circle. Now picture them slightly further apart so the overlapping area is smaller, but the circles remain the same size.
Don't get me wrong, if you told me weird and challenging art indeed does have a smaller percentage of the market share than it used to, I would believe you, that's just not what the essay is about, and I also don't have that data to back it up anyway.