IndigoDownSuperEgoUp
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2025
I think most of the opinions here are coming from a modern western perspective, which muddies up what art really is.
The western scene developed the mythological character of the ‘tortured insane artist’ and found it so compelling that you had entire generations where more than half of the new artists were trying to imitate this mythological hero in the west.
The eastern scene didn’t mythologize, sacralize, or decorate this myth, and instead developed an idea of a stoic scholar-artist that adheres like glue to convention and tradition, and never really saw these new-age schizos in bulk until they encountered the west.
I’d recommend people ITT read this book by the name of Obtaining Images by Timon Screech, because it demonstrates that the creation of art doesn’t mandate becoming some insane barbarian sex pervert, and that creativity isn’t necessarily obliterated by not being a jartycacafloopa that goons to centenarians getting decapitated by BBCs.
More importantly, I think that this book is also evidence that art is not fundamentally connected to insanity, because grorious nippon had a thriving art industry even back then that didn’t need insanity to work properly and produce a lot of interesting things.
The western scene developed the mythological character of the ‘tortured insane artist’ and found it so compelling that you had entire generations where more than half of the new artists were trying to imitate this mythological hero in the west.
The eastern scene didn’t mythologize, sacralize, or decorate this myth, and instead developed an idea of a stoic scholar-artist that adheres like glue to convention and tradition, and never really saw these new-age schizos in bulk until they encountered the west.
I’d recommend people ITT read this book by the name of Obtaining Images by Timon Screech, because it demonstrates that the creation of art doesn’t mandate becoming some insane barbarian sex pervert, and that creativity isn’t necessarily obliterated by not being a jartycacafloopa that goons to centenarians getting decapitated by BBCs.
More importantly, I think that this book is also evidence that art is not fundamentally connected to insanity, because grorious nippon had a thriving art industry even back then that didn’t need insanity to work properly and produce a lot of interesting things.