If you’re a great artist who’s work does not exist in a commercial space (gallery or Facebook platform or website or whatever) and it gets thrown in a dump when you die, did it express anything at all?
Comment on Oracle made a $300 billion bet on OpenAI. It's paying the price.
KillerWhale@orcas.enjoying.yachts 1 day agoI am not sure what you are implying. There will always be art. Art does not need to be a commercial success to be expressive.
TronBronson@lemmy.world 1 day ago
vacuumflower@lemmy.sdf.org 1 day ago
Artists need to eat.
Art needs to be a commercial success to defend itself from commercial successes it hurts.
Computing industry notably positions itself as replacing art (I don’t mean digital art like tracker music or 3d modeling), in many things where, say, car industry doesn’t. But the suggested replacements are not that. Similarly to how journalism can only be adversarial and offensive to most points of view, otherwise it’s just public relations, because it doesn’t improve anything. Improvement is always adversarial.