{"id":6268,"date":"2019-12-26T13:22:46","date_gmt":"2019-12-26T13:22:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=6268"},"modified":"2019-12-26T13:34:59","modified_gmt":"2019-12-26T13:34:59","slug":"do-artists-have-a-critical-role-in-the-world-by-debra-hand","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=6268","title":{"rendered":"\u201cDo Artists Have a Critical Role in the World?\u201d by Debra Hand"},"content":{"rendered":"
\u201cDo Artists Have a Critical Role in the World?\u201d by Debra Hand<\/b><\/p>\n
So Anyway\u2026<\/span><\/p>\n A banana that was duct-taped to a white wall just sold for $120,000 and shocked the globe; well, every part except the art world.\u00a0 In that world the sale of taped-up bananas is not nearly as outrageous as past stunts. Incidentally, Andy Warhol also had a banana in his portfolio, a design he created for an album cover.\u00a0 Of course for Warhol, his grocery store inspirations went far beyond the produce section. After stuffing his shopping cart with boxes of Brillo he wheeled around to the canned food aisle and slurped up millions by actually replicating Campbell soup-can designs.\u00a0 So, it\u2019s all been done before. My <\/span>biggest<\/span> fear is that some museum looking to increase membership will exhibit the taped-up banana\u00a0 or (once mushy) its banana replacement stand-in. I can already imagine the lines wrapped around the block\u2026people queued up for miles to get a photo with this joke-of-art\u2026just to prove they saw it in person.\u00a0 I can already see the viral photos on social media. That\u2019s when the real fame will start, just as with the Mona Lisa when President Kennedy and his wife, Jacqueline, hosted the painting in America. They treated the painting like a superstar diva.\u00a0 It arrived in America to the fanfare of press conferences, VIP receptions, and exhibits — all of this after having the painting escorted to America in a first class cabin on a luxury liner. People lined up to be part of the fervor and the Mona Lisa\u2019s fame skyrocketed.\u00a0 Although, already famous abroad for having been stolen, recovered, attacked, etc., the painting arrived in America to the equivalent spectacle of a ticker-tape parade. I\u2019m not saying the Mona Lisa wasn\u2019t a phenomenal painting showing tremendous technical skill by Leonardo da Vinci, but what I am saying is that attention creates attention and this simple phenomenon allows mediocrity to morph into all kinds of forms of fame and myth.\u00a0 I mean, clearly, the Mona Lisa was not the most beautiful woman in the world as many experts claimed; nor does she have the most mysterious smile known to mankind. In fact, if the painting had arrived in America today with the current social media atmosphere, the Mona Lisa would have been dragged for her lack luster hair and makeup. She would have become viral for other reasons. Nevertheless, viral attention equals quick fame, and $120,000 bananas create curiosity seekers.\u00a0 So, this kind of gimmickry is simply what some sectors of the art world have been reduced to.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n But art has a much more critical role in society and I\u2019d rather remain focused on how collectors and artists might maximize its real potential to change the world.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n