ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

IDEAS

Getting Real With Art (What Matters)

The Real that art helps us come into contact with is something far more slippery, and far closer to what Walter Benjamin called the “true surrealist face of existence.” - Harper's

Before And After AI (Beyond Mythologies)

Should we trust the most optimistic voices coming from Silicon Valley, AI could be the vehicle we use to create boundless wealth, cure all ills, heal the planet, and move toward immortality, while the pessimists warn that it may be our downfall. Has our time come to join the gods eternal? - Harper's

What The Voices Of AI Tell Us

Artificial intelligence stands accused of devastating the creative industries, guzzling energy and even threatening human life. Understandably, OpenAI wants a voice that makes people feel at ease using its products. What does artificial intelligence sound like? It sounds like crisis management. - The New York Times

We Sell Art As Fame, Fame As Art. It’s Really About Market Share

Of course, Gen Xers always knew this would happen: the gradual folding of everything that could possibly be called “culture” into one image-spectacle-and-sensorium corporate machine that thrives on endless niche differentiation as a way of metastasizing its market share. - LitHub

Why Some People Bloom Later In Life

Why do some people hit their peak later than others? In his book Late Bloomers, the journalist Rich Karlgaard points out that this is really two questions: First, why didn’t these people bloom earlier? Second, what traits or skills did they possess that enabled them to bloom late? - The Atlantic (MSN)

Brooks: Creativity Might Be A Solution For Depression

Research in neuroscience and psychology reveals that active engagement in creative pursuits is an effective way to see the world in a more positive way. This might be the simplest, easiest, and most natural way for anyone to improve their life. - The Atlantic

The Decline Of Criticism Is Not The Fault Of Critics

Reflecting on our work—the theories, the methods, the artworks—has devolved into a strained bleating about our “relevance” and “value.” Criticism has become, in a word, metacritical: making a case for itself, proph­esying its own demise, nostalgically musing on its halcyon days, decrying yet another crisis in the conditions of its production. - Yale Review

Confusing Artists With “Creatives”

he first entry of “creativity” in a dictionary dates to 1966. This current trend of using “creativity” as corporate-speak is not a distortion of its original intention, that is what the word has meant since its entrance into the mainstream. The word barely existed until the 1950s. - The Culture We Deserve

Does Your Reputation Depend On The Archive Of Your Work?

What is an archive? In particular, what is an archive when it is of a writer, philosopher or other thinker? Certainly, it would be expected to contain their published works – these are, after all, for public consumption, they are written with the idea of an audience in mind. But what of the rest? - Aeon

Why Google’s AI Can’t Be Sued For Libel

Even as tech companies speak of AI products as though they are actually intelligent, even humanlike or creative, they are fundamentally statistics machines connected to the internet—and flawed ones at that. - The Atlantic

The French Horn Teacher Who Works In Music To Support His Hobby

Andrew Westberg says his wife is "happy it's not tractors. … Pencils are so much easier to store.” - MPR

Just Who, In An Artistic Relationship, Is Whose Muse?

"The truest artist-muse relationship may be that in which the former works with the latter because no other individual talent will bring the art to the exalted level that lives in the artist’s imagination." - Washington Post

Gaming For Culture

For instance, the lead character encounters a blueberry pie on a picnic table. The game reads, “This is the longest word in Anashinaabemowin: Miini-baalashkiminasljigani-blitoosigani-badakiingwesijigani-blitooyiingwesijigani-bakwezhigan: Blueberry pie." - CBC

Octavia Butler’s Birthday Is A Reminder That We Need Black Women’s Visions For The Future

“Octavia E. Butler envisioned with eerie precision: a world of increasing drug addiction and illiteracy, global shifts towards authoritarian populism, vast gaps between the rich and everyone else, and destruction brought on by global warming. Her prophecies, however, ... provided a blueprint for how to fight back.” - Fast Company

The Growing Importance Of Being Idle

Exhortations toward work as the path to truth, meaning, virtue, and salvation suggest the contemporary valuation of work is—although not universal—more than the legacy of a single cultural tradition. - The Walrus

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