Art Bored

ALT

Everything fresh and new will grow stale over time. The larger the quantity of a thing that’s consumed, the duller the taste of it becomes. It’s important to recognize such changes as movement towards advancement and, with hope and hard work, evolution.

Early last year I began a focused consumption of specific visual artefacts. Ruined buildings, concrete structures, transhuman forms and their associated accoutrement. I collected and collated my findings in endlessly scrollable folders and gorged myself on a previously undiscovered universe of architecture and artwork.

It took months to start recognizing patterns and artists, but with the intensity of my focus it wasn’t long before I started to pick up on things. I mean, the brain’s always doing that as it is. But here with the specific task of overwhelming consumption and analysis, it first had to compensate for the input. But compensate it did. I began to recognize a photographer’s eye from the way their cameras had been placed, or how much light they’d let through their lenses. I could tell a painter’s hand by the brushes they’d used, and the palettes they’d dipped from. The recognition wasn’t perfect, of course, but this started to reveal other trends that I’d previously been ignorant to, such as how many pretenders and imitators there were out there. Many of them aren’t even doing it intentionally, they were simply using the work of those who’d come before as templates, and in doing so infected their own work with the ghosts of the past. I suppose you could argue that’s inevitable in any evolved artform—that everything is a combination or iteration of what’s come before—but I was finding plenty of things that seemed new and unique, at least at first blush.

This became even more apparent as time went on. There was a clear separation between who was doing “new” work and who was tracing and regurgitating. A gap formed between artists who were unafraid to reinvent themselves, take chances, and really push their boundaries, and those who’d reached a level of comfort with their tools that satisfied their creative needs. And then those observations revealed the range of hunger present in each artist, or how exhausted a certain way to portray a given subject was. The world of art blossomed before my searching eye.

And then the boredom started to set in; a unique form of tiredness that came from the mass-consumption of what in ages past would have been rare and restricted. We never had the ability to consume data in the past the way we do today. Now there’s an infinity of content available to anyone who can get online and search. Mastery of the search tools gives a dedicated explorer the keys to the world, or at least the portions of the world that have access to and the willingness to post their work to the ‘net. But the boredom was real, and it was different from the boredom I’d felt in the past. I hadn’t been specifically bored for years, not since discovering art for myself, and while I hadn’t yet found boredom in production, here was this creeping disinterest starting to crawl out from my habit of consumption.

It’s not that the work I was looking at was bad. Good and bad are always going to be subjective, and the fact that someone’s taken the time to create something “new” using the tools at their disposal makes most anything “good”, but there is undoubtedly a scale of quality, a gradient where on one end lies the amateur’s fumblings and on the other the master’s touches. And in an oversaturation of masterworks (what a condition to have!) there was an inevitable weariness. “Oh wonderful, another figure that’s as perfectly executed as the last dozen.”

How to describe this with any kind of accuracy to someone who’s not into it, or hasn’t experienced it? It’s like being tired of watching your favorite television program because they’ve run out of ideas. It’s like recognizing the formula behind a thing that’s been engineered to grab your attention. Seeing that wiring under the board. In the refinement of taste comes the realization that so much of what’s presented is subpar, based on how high your own bar’s been raised.

The point here is that the boredom that comes from concerted effort is a symptom of real evolution, and it’s what comes after that makes all that effort worthwhile. The new ability to see the true excellence in things. And then to take those new eyes, that new vision, and apply it to your own work. Without that step it’s all in vain, because you only need to look ten comments deep in any critique thread to realize that there’s a dearth of qualified criticism out there, and that people are starving for new things to knock their socks off.

This is the blessing and the curse of the current age, and it’s not going to get any easier any time soon. Consider this an important part of the new artist’s training, where overconsumption of a target aesthetic is key to becoming better.

First draft: 141018
Published: 230609


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