635 lines
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Plaintext
635 lines
37 KiB
Plaintext
The Magazine’s Culture Issue
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• Jesmyn Ward’s Literary South
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• The Heart of Swiftiedom
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• Culture at a Standstill
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• Can Usher Save R&B?
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• Sparring With Errol Morris
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• U.S.
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• World
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• Business
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• Arts
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• Lifestyle
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• Opinion
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• Audio
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• Games
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• Cooking
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• Wirecutter
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• The Athletic
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[13]
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The Magazine’s Culture Issue
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• [14]Jesmyn Ward’s Literary South
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• [15]The Heart of Swiftiedom
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• [16]Culture at a Standstill
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• [17]Can Usher Save R&B?
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• [18]Sparring With Errol Morris
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An illustration of various people all bunched together.
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Credit...Illustration by Tim Enthoven
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[19]Skip to content[20]Skip to site index
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[21]
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Why Culture Has Come to a Standstill
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A Times critic argues that ours is the least innovative century for the arts in
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500 years. That doesn’t have to be a bad thing.
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Credit...Illustration by Tim Enthoven
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Supported by
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[22]SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
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• Share full article
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•
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•
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• [26]1240
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[27]Jason Farago
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By [28]Jason Farago
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• Oct. 10, 2023
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At the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in its fall blockbuster show, [29]“Manet/
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Degas,” is a painting from 1866 of a woman in the latest fashion. Victorine
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Meurent, Manet’s favorite model, stands in an empty room, accompanied only by a
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parrot on a bird stand. Her trademark red hair is tied back with a blue ribbon.
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Her head is slightly bowed as she smells a nosegay in her right hand: probably
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a gift from an absent admirer, just like the gentleman’s monocle in her left.
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She’s wearing a silk peignoir, which Manet has rendered in buttery strokes of
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pink and white. This is a full-length image, more than six feet tall, but
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Victorine hasn’t even put on her best clothes. She’s in a dressing gown, and
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the gown is amorphous. The gown is only paint.
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Listen to This Article
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[30]
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Open this article in the New York Times Audio app on iOS.
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Manet called this painting “Young Lady in 1866,” and the title is the briefest
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manifesto I know. After ages in which artists aimed for timelessness, Manet
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pictured a woman living in 1866, in the Paris of 1866, wearing clothes from
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1866. The painting was a radical eruption of temporal specificity. An art for
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this year, in this place, in a form possible only now.
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Image“Young Lady in 1866”
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“Young Lady in 1866,” by Edouard Manet.Credit...Metropolitan Museum of Art
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Most artists and audiences at the time did not think this was such a virtue.
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“Young Lady in 1866” got bad press at the Salon, the annual exhibition of
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France’s official art academy, where artists aspired to eternal beauty and
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eternal values, expressed through classicized motifs and highly finished
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surfaces. Thomas Couture, Manet’s own teacher, specialized in bloated but very
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technically proficient tableaux of nymphs and heroes. Only a few Parisians
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could see, in the thick pallor of Victorine’s face and the impetuous brushiness
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of her peignoir, the mark of a new cultural dispensation. Baudelaire, Manet’s
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great friend, articulated it in “The Flowers of Evil”:
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O Death, old captain, it’s time! Lift anchor!
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We’re sick of this country, Death! Let us sail ...
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To the depths of the Unknown to find something new!
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To find something new! That was the imperative of modernism, not only in
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painting but also in poetry, in theater, in music, in architecture and
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eventually in the cinema. Your job as an artist was no longer to glorify the
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king or the church, nor to imitate as faithfully as possible the appearance of
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the outside world. It was to solder the next link in a cultural chain —
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fashioning a novel utterance that took novel shape even as it manifested its
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place in a larger history. “You have to be absolutely modern,” Rimbaud
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declared; “Make it new,” Ezra Pound instructed. To speak to your time, we once
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believed, required much more than new “content.” It required a commitment to
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new modes of narration, new styles of expression, that could bear witness to
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sea changes in society.
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Manet, classically trained, figured out quickly that if he painted scenes of
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Parisian prostitutes in the same manner as his teacher painted Roman orgiasts,
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that wouldn’t cut it; he would have to invent a new kind of painting — flatter,
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franker — if he wanted to capture modern life. From then on, the creators who
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most decisively marked the history of art, again and again, described their
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work as a search for a new language, a new style, a new way of being. “I have
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transformed myself in the zero of form,” Kazimir Malevich wrote in 1915, and in
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his black square he found “the face of the new art.” Le Corbusier insisted that
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his open floor plans, enabled by reinforced floating columns, were not just an
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architectural aesthetic but an age: “Nothing is left to us of the architecture
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of past epochs, just as we can no longer derive any benefit from the literary
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and historical teaching given in schools.” Aimé Césaire, who would
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revolutionize French poetry in the 20th century as Baudelaire did in the 19th,
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understood that a modern Black expression required “a new language, capable of
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expressing an African heritage.” “In other words,” he said, “French was for me
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an instrument that I wanted to twist into a new way of speaking.”
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For 160 years, we spoke about culture as something active, something with
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velocity, something in continuous forward motion. What happens to a culture
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when it loses that velocity, or even slows to a halt? Walking through the other
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galleries of the Met after my third visit to “Manet/Degas,” I started doing
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that thing all the Salon visitors used to do in Paris in 1866: ignoring the
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paintings and scoping out the other spectators’ clothes. I saw visitors in the
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skinny jeans that defined the 2000s and in the roomy, high-waisted jeans that
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were popular in the 1990s; neither style looked particularly au courant or
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dated. Manet was a fashion maven, and I’d been marveling anew at the gauzy
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white-striped gown with flared sleeves that Berthe Morisot wears in [31]“The
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Balcony” to signal that she is a contemporary woman — that she is alive right
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now. What piece of clothing or accessory could you give a model to mark her as
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“Young Lady in 2023”? A titanium-cased iPhone is all that comes to mind, and
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even that hasn’t changed its appearance much in a decade.
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To audiences in the 20th century, novelty seemed to be a cultural birthright.
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Susan Sontag could write in 1965, with breezy confidence, that new styles of
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art, cinema, music and dance “succeed one another so rapidly as to seem to give
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their audiences no breathing space to prepare.” Today culture remains capable
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of endless production, but it’s far less capable of change. Intellectual
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property has swallowed the cinema; the Hollywood studios that once proposed a
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slate of big, medium and small pictures have hedged their bets, and even
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independent directors have stuck with narrative and visual techniques born in
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the 1960s. Have you tried to furnish an apartment lately? Whether you are at
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Restoration Hardware or on Alibaba, what you are probably buying are replicas
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of European antiques: “contemporary” designs first seen in Milan in the 1970s
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or Weimar in the 1920s. Harry Styles is rocking in the ’80s; Silk Sonic is
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jamming in the ’70s; somehow “Frasier” has been revived and they barely had to
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update the wardrobes.
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If the present state of culture feels directionless — it does to me, and
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sussing out its direction is literally my job — that is principally because we
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are still inculcated, so unconsciously we never even bother to spell it out, in
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what the modernists believed: that good art is good because it is innovative,
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and that an ambitious writer, composer, director or choreographer should not
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make things too much like what others have made before. But our culture has not
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been able to deliver step changes for quite some time. When you walk through
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your local museum’s modern wing, starting with Impressionism and following a
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succession of avant-gardes through the development of Cubism, Dada, Pop,
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minimalism, in the 1990s you arrive in a forest called “the contemporary,” and
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after more than 30 years no path forward has been revealed. On your drive home,
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you can turn on the decade-by-decade stations of Sirius XM: the ’50s, ’60s,
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’70s, ’80s and ’90s will each sound distinct, but all the millennial nostalgia
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of the 2000s station cannot disguise that “We Belong Together” and
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“Irreplaceable” do not yet sound retro. When I was younger, I looked at
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cultural works as if they were posts on a timeline, moving forward from Manet
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year by year. Now I find myself adrift in an eddy of cultural signs, where
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everything just floats, and I can only tell time on my phone.
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Image
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Credit...Illustration by Tim Enthoven
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We are now almost a quarter of the way through what looks likely to go down in
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history as the least innovative, least transformative, least pioneering century
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for culture since the invention of the printing press. There is new content, of
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course, so much content, and there are new themes; there are new methods of
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production and distribution, more diverse creators and more global audiences;
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there is more singing in hip-hop and more sampling on pop tracks; there are TV
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detectives with smartphones and lovers facing rising seas. Twenty-three years
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in, though, shockingly few works of art in any medium — some albums, a handful
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of novels and artworks and barely any plays or poems — have been created that
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are unassimilable to the cultural and critical standards that audiences
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accepted in 1999. To pay attention to culture in 2023 is to be belted into some
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glacially slow Ferris wheel, cycling through remakes and pastiches with nowhere
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to go but around. The suspicion gnaws at me (does it gnaw at you?) that we live
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in a time and place whose culture seems likely to be forgotten.
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To any claim that cultural progress is “over,” there is an easy and not
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inaccurate retort: Well, what about X? And sure enough, our time has indeed
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brought forth wonderful, meaningful cultural endeavors. I find the sculptures
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of [32]Nairy Baghramian, the [33]videos of Stan Douglas and the [34]
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environments of Pierre Huyghe to be artistic achievements of the highest
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caliber; I think [35]Ali Smith is writing novels of tremendous immediacy; I
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believe [36]“Transit” and [37]“Drive My Car” reaffirm the vitality of cinema; I
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love [38]South African amapiano and [39]Korean soap operas and [40]Ukrainian
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electronic music. My own cultural life is very rich, and this is not some rant
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that once everyone was so creative and now they’re all poseurs. I am asking a
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different and peskier question: why cultural production no longer progresses in
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time as it once did.
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I have a few theories, but one to start with is that the modernist cultural
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explosion might very well have been like the growth of the economy more
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generally: not the perpetual forward march we were promised in the 20th
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century, but a one-time-only rocket blast followed by a long, slow,
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disappointing glide. As the economist Robert Gordon has shown, the
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transformative growth of the period between 1870 and 1970 — the “special
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century,” he calls it — was an anomalous superevent fueled by unique and
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unrepeatable innovations (electricity, sanitation, the combustion engine) whose
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successors (above all information technology) have not had the same economic
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impact. In the United States, the 2010s had the slowest productivity growth of
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any decade in recorded history; if you believe you are living in the future, I
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am guessing you have not recently been on United Airlines. In this
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macroeconomic reading, a culture that no longer delivers expected stylistic
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innovations might just be part and parcel of a more generally underachieving
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century, and not to be tutted at in isolation.
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But more than the economics, the key factor can only be what happened to us at
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the start of this century: first, the plunge through our screens into an
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infinity of information; soon after, our submission to algorithmic
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recommendation engines and the surveillance that powers them. The digital tools
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we embraced were heralded as catalysts of cultural progress, but they produced
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such chronological confusion that progress itself made no sense. “It’s still
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one Earth,” the novelist Stacey D’Erasmo wrote in 2014, “but it is now
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subtended by a layer of highly elastic non-time, wild time, that is akin to a
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global collective unconscious wherein past, present and future occupy one
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unmediated plane.” In this dark wood, today and yesterday become hard to
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distinguish. The years are only time stamps. Objects lose their dimensions.
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Everything is recorded, nothing is remembered; culture is a thing to nibble at,
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to graze on.
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If there is one cultural work that epitomizes this shift, where you can see our
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new epoch coming into view, I want to say it’s [41]“Back to Black,” by Amy
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Winehouse. The album dates to October 2006 — seven months after Twitter was
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founded, three months before the iPhone debuted — and it seems, listening again
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now, to be closing the door on the cultural system that Manet and Baudelaire
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established a century and a half previously. As the millennium dawned, there
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had been various efforts to write the symphony of the future (the last of which
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was probably Missy Elliott’s “Da Real World,” a “Matrix”-inspired album from
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1999 that promised to sound like “not the year 2G but the year 3G”). There had
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also been various retroprojections, trying to inaugurate a new century with
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pre-Woodstock throwbacks (waxed mustaches, speakeasies; perhaps you recall an
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embarrassing circa-2000 vogue for swing dancing).
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Image
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Amy Winehouse at the Highline Ballroom in New York in 2007.Credit...Michael
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Nagle for The New York Times
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“Back to Black” was the first major cultural work of the 21st century that was
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neither new nor retro — but rather contented itself to float in time, to sound
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as if it came from no particular era. Winehouse wore her hair in a beehive, her
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band wore fedoras, but she was not performing a tribute act of any kind. Her
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production drew from the Great American Songbook, ’60s girl groups, also reggae
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and ska, but it never felt anachronistic or like a “postmodern” pastiche.
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Listen again to the title track and its percussive piano line: a stationary,
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metronomic cycle of D minor, G minor, B-flat major, and A7. The bass line of
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the piano overlays the chords with a syncopated swing, while a tambourine slaps
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and jangles with joyless regularity. We are back to Phil Spector’s Wall of
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Sound, we are waiting for the Shangri-Las or the Ronettes to come in, but
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instead Winehouse delivers a much more ragged and minor-keyed performance, with
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a vulgarity in the song’s second line that Martha Reeves would never pronounce.
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There is a discrepancy between vocals and instrumentation that is never
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resolved, and the artistry is all in that irresolution.
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Who cares if it’s novel as long as it’s beautiful, or meaningful?
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What Winehouse prefigured was a culture of an eternal present: a digitally
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informed sense of placelessness and atemporality that has left so many of us
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disoriented from our earlier cultural signposts. Each song on “Back to Black”
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seemed to be “borrowing from all the last century’s music history at once,” as
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the media scholar Moira Weigel once observed, though there was something
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contemporary about that timelessness too. Extracted from the past into
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lightweight MP3s, all the girl-group and jazz prefigurations began to seem just
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as immediate as Winehouse’s North London present.
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As early as 2006, well before the reverse chronology of blogs and the early
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Facebook gave way to the algorithmic soup of Instagram, Spotify and TikTok,
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Winehouse sensed that the real digital revolution in culture would not be in
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production, in the machines that artists used to make music or movies or books.
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It would be in reception: on the screens where they (where we) encountered
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culture, on which past and present are equidistant from each other. One upshot
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of this digital equation of past and present has been a greater disposability
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of culture: an infinite scroll and nothing to read, an infinite Netflix library
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with nothing to watch. Though pop music still throws up new stars now and then
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(I do really like [42]Ice Spice), the market for new music fell behind older
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music in the middle of the last decade, and even the records that sell, or
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stream, cannot be said to have wide cultural impact. (The most popular single
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of 2022 in the United States was [43]“Heat Waves,” a TikTok tune by a British
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alternative-pop group with little public profile called Glass Animals; and
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what’s weirdest is that it was recorded in 2020.)
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Outside of time there can be no progress, only the perpetual trying-on of
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styles and forms. Here years become vibes — or “eras,” as Taylor Swift likes to
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call them. And if culture is just a series of trends, then it is pointless to
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worry about their contemporaneity. There was a charming freakout last year when
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Kate Bush’s 1985 single “Running Up That Hill” went to the top of the charts
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after its deployment on yet another nostalgic television show, and veterans of
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the big-hair decade were horrified to see it appear on some 2022 playlists
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alongside Dua Lipa and the like. If you think the song belongs to 1985 in the
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way “Young Lady in 1866” belonged to 1866, the joke is now officially on you.
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Down at the baseline where cultural innovation used to happen, in the forms
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that artists once put together to show us something new — in the sounds of the
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recording studio, the shapes on the canvas, the movements of the dancers, the
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arrangements of the verse — something has stopped, or at least slowed to such a
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lethargic pace as to feel stopped. Such a claim may sound familiar if you were
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around for the postmodernism debates of the 1980s. The philosopher Arthur Danto
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averred that art ended with Andy Warhol’s Brillo Boxes, while the literary
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critic Fredric Jameson declared in 1984 that the whole of modernity was “spent
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and exhausted,” that there was no more style, indeed no more self, and that
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“the producers of culture have nowhere to turn but to the past: the imitation
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of dead styles.” As for the influence of digital media, as early as 1989 the
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cultural theorist Paul Virilio identified a “polar inertia” — a static pileup
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of images and words with no particular place to go — as the inevitable endpoint
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for culture on a “weightless planet” constituted of ones and zeros.
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And yet looking back now, the “postmodern” turn of the later 20th century looks
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much more like a continuation of the modernist commitment to novelty than a
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repudiation of it. John Cage’s noteless composition “4'33"” was no last music,
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but flowered into the impostures of Fluxus and the ambient experiments of Brian
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Eno. The buildings of Frank Gehry and Zaha Hadid did look like nothing that
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came before, thanks in part to new rendering and fabrication technologies (CAD
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software, laser cutting machines). The digitally produced music of Massive
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Attack and even, I hate to say it, Moby did sound different from what was on
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the radio 10 years before. No one style could be called the true vanguard
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anymore, sure — but that did not preclude the perpetual discovery of new ones.
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The forecast at the end of the 20th century was a plurality of new images and
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sounds and words, powered perhaps by new, heavy desktop production machines.
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Since the start of the 21st century, despite all recent digital accelerations
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of discovery and transmission, no stylistic innovations of equivalent scale
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have taken place. The closest thing we can point to has been in rap, where the
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staccato nihilism of drill, deeply conversant with YouTube and SoundCloud,
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would sound legitimately foreign to a listener from 2000. (When the teenage
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Chief Keef was rapping in his grandmother’s Chicago apartment, he was following
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in the tradition of Joyce and Woolf and Pound.) In fact, the sampling
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techniques pioneered in hip-hop and, later, electronic dance music — once done
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with piles of records, now with folders of WAV files — have trickled down into
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photography, painting, literature and lower forms like memes, all of which now
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present a hyperreferentialism that sets them slightly apart from the last
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century’s efforts. In the 2010s, hip-hop alone seemed to be taking the
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challenge of digital progress seriously, though it, too, has calcified since;
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having switched from linear writing and recording of verses to improvising
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hundreds of one-verse digital takes, rappers now seem to be converging on a
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single, ProTools-produced flow.
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There have also been a few movies of limited influence (and very limited
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box-office success) that have introduced new cinematographic techniques: Ang
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Lee’s “Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk” (2016) was the first film shot at an
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eerily lifelike 120 frames per second, while at the other extreme, Steven
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Soderbergh shot all of “Unsane” (2018) with an iPhone 7 Plus. Michael Bay’s
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“Ambulance” (2022) included first-person-view drone shots, flying the viewer
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through the windows of exploding cars the way your dad shot your last
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beach-vacation memory reel. But by and large the technologies that have changed
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filmmaking since 2000 have stayed in the postproduction studio:
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computer-graphics engines, digital tools for color grading and sound editing.
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They have had vanishingly little influence on the grammar of the moving image,
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in the way that lightweight cameras did for the Nouvelle Vague or digital kits
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did for American indie cinema. Really, the kind of image that distinguishes
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this century is less the spectacular Hollywood image than what the German
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artist Hito Steyerl has called the “poor image” — low-res compressed pictures
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like memes, thumbnails, screenshots — whose meaning arises from being
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circulated and modified.
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It may just be that the lexical possibilities of many traditional media are
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exhausted, and there’s no shame in that. Maybe Griffith and Eisenstein and
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Godard and Akerman did it all already, and it’s foolish to expect a new kind of
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cinema. Certainly that exhaustion came long ago to abstract painting, where
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every possible move can only be understood as a quotation or reboot. (Kerstin
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Brätsch, one of the smartest abstract painters working today, has acknowledged
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that any mark she makes is “not empty anymore but loaded with historical
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reference.”) Consider last year’s hit “Creepin’,” by The Weeknd: a 2022
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rejigger of the 2004 Mario Winans song “I Don’t Wanna Know” with no meaningful
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change in instrumentation in the nearly two intervening decades. It was hardly
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the only recent chart-topper to employ a clangingly obvious sample, but it’s
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not like the endeavors of the 1990s, when Puffy and family were rapping over
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“Every Breath You Take.” Back then the critic Greg Tate could still celebrate
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such sampling as a motor of cultural progress; by “collapsing all eras of Black
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music onto a chip,” a new generation had new tools to write a new chapter of
|
||
sound. Twenty-five years later, the citation and rearrangement have become so
|
||
automatic as to seem automated — as our recent fears about artificial
|
||
intelligence and large language models suggest we already know.
|
||
|
||
Trapped on a modernist game board where there are no more moves to make, a
|
||
growing number of young artists essentially pivoted to political activism —
|
||
plant a tree and call it a sculpture — while others leaned hard into absurdity
|
||
to try to express the sense of digital disorientation. You saw this Dadaist
|
||
strategy in the hyperpop of 100 gecs, in the crashed-and-burned “post-internet”
|
||
art of the collective Dis, and above all in the satirical fashion of Virgil
|
||
Abloh. (Abloh, who died in 2021, was outspoken about how comedy functioned as a
|
||
coping mechanism for a generation lost in a digital fog: “It’s not a
|
||
coincidence that things have gravitated toward this invented language of
|
||
humor,” he said in 2018. “But then I often wonder: Is streetwear hollow?”)
|
||
|
||
It wouldn’t be so bad if we could just own our static position; who cares if
|
||
it’s novel as long as it’s beautiful, or meaningful? But that pesky modernist
|
||
conviction remains in us: A work of art demonstrates its value through its
|
||
freshness. So we have shifted our expectations from new forms to new subject
|
||
matter — new stories, told in the same old languages as before. In the 20th
|
||
century we were taught that cleaving “style” from “content” was a fallacy, but
|
||
in the 21st century content (that word!) has had its ultimate vengeance, as the
|
||
sole component of culture that our machines can fully understand, transmit and
|
||
monetize. What cannot be categorized cannot be streamed; to pass through the
|
||
pipes art must become information. So, sure, there are new songs about texting
|
||
and ghosting; sure, there are superhero movies about trauma and comedies about
|
||
climate change. But in privileging the parts of culture that can be summarized
|
||
and shared — the narratives, the characters, the lyrics, the lessons — digital
|
||
media have bulldozed an autonomous sphere of culture into a moral terrain that
|
||
Aristotle would find familiar: We again want our “content” to authentically
|
||
reflect the world (mimesis) and produce healthy feelings in its consumers
|
||
(catharsis).
|
||
|
||
Very unfortunately, this evangelical turn in the arts in the 21st century has
|
||
been conflated with the long-overdue admission of women, people of color and
|
||
out sexual minorities into the culture industry — conflated, not least, by its
|
||
P.R. departments. A gay rom-com is trotted out as “the first”; a Black Little
|
||
Mermaid is a “breakthrough”; our museums, studios and publishing houses can
|
||
bring nothing new to market except the very people they once systematically
|
||
excluded. If resisting such market essentialism was once a primordial task of
|
||
the artist — “I am not burying myself in a narrow particularism,” Césaire made
|
||
clear in 1956 as he forged a French poetry that could span the Black Atlantic —
|
||
today identities keep being diminished, brutally, into a series of searchable
|
||
tags.
|
||
|
||
This institutional hunger for novelty combined with digital requirements for
|
||
communicability may help explain why so much recently celebrated American
|
||
culture has taken such conservative, traditionalist forms: oil portraiture,
|
||
Iowa-vintage coming-of-age novels, biopics, operettas barely distinguishable
|
||
from musical theater. “It scandalizes progressive sensibility to think that
|
||
things were so much more complex in this domain a generation ago than they are
|
||
now, but there you have it,” said Darby English, the art historian and author
|
||
of “How To See a Work of Art in Total Darkness,” when asked in 2021 about the
|
||
recent efflorescence of Black American art in museums and the market. “Because
|
||
the core project is communication,” English said, “anything that resists the
|
||
art-communications apparatus fails to leave a mark. Form has become
|
||
increasingly irrelevant during these 20 years.”
|
||
|
||
Image
|
||
Credit...Illustration by Tim Enthoven
|
||
|
||
There is no inherent reason — no reason; this point needs to be clear — that a
|
||
recession of novelty has to mean a recession of cultural worth. On the
|
||
contrary, non-novel excellence has been the state of things for a vast majority
|
||
of art history. Roman art and literature provides a centuries-long tradition of
|
||
emulation, appropriating and adapting Greek, Etruscan and on occasion Asian
|
||
examples into a culture in which the idea of copying was alien. Medieval icons
|
||
were never understood to be “of their time,” but looked back to the time of the
|
||
Incarnation, forward to eternity or out of time entirely into a realm beyond
|
||
human life. Even beyond the halfway point of the last millennium, European
|
||
artists regularly emended, updated or substituted pre-existing artworks at
|
||
will, integrating present and past into a more spiritually efficacious whole.
|
||
|
||
Consider also the long and bountiful history of Chinese painting, in which,
|
||
from the 13th century to the early 20th, scholar-artists frequently
|
||
demonstrated their erudition by painting in explicit homage to masters from the
|
||
past. For these literati painters, what mattered more than technical skill or
|
||
aesthetic progression was an artist’s spontaneous creativity as channeled
|
||
through previous masterpieces. There’s a painting I love in the Palace Museum
|
||
in Beijing by Zhao Mengfu, a prince and scholar working during the Yuan
|
||
dynasty, that dates to around 1310 but incorporates styles from several other
|
||
periods. Spartan trees, whose branches hook like crab claws, derive from Song
|
||
examples a few centuries earlier. A clump of bamboo in the corner coheres
|
||
through strict, tight brushwork pioneered by the Han dynasty a thousand years
|
||
before. Alongside the trees and rocks the artist added an inscription:
|
||
|
||
The rocks are like flying-white, the trees are like seal script,
|
||
The writing of bamboo draws upon the bafen method.
|
||
Only when one masters this secret
|
||
Will he understand that calligraphy and painting have always been one.
|
||
|
||
In other words: Use one style of brushwork for one element, another for
|
||
another, just as a calligrapher uses different styles for different purposes.
|
||
But beyond the simple equation of writing and painting, Zhao was doing
|
||
something much more important: He was sublimating styles, some from the recent
|
||
past and some of great antiquity, into a series of recombinatory elements that
|
||
an artist of his time could deploy in concert. The literati painters learned
|
||
from the old masters (important during the Yuan dynasty, to safeguard the place
|
||
of Han culture under Mongol rule), but theirs was no simple classicism. It was
|
||
a practice of aesthetic self-fulfillment that channeled itself through
|
||
pre-existing gestures. Without ever worrying about novelty, you could still
|
||
speak directly to your time. You could express your tenderest feelings, or face
|
||
up to the upheavals of your age, in the overlapping styles of artists long
|
||
dead.
|
||
|
||
Image
|
||
“Elegant Rocks and Sparse Trees,” by Zhao Mengfu, circa 1310.Credit...Palace
|
||
Museum, Beijing
|
||
|
||
Someone foresaw, profoundly, that this century was going to require something
|
||
similar: that when forward motion became impossible, ambitious culture was
|
||
going to have to take another shape. Winehouse, as producers and collaborators
|
||
have reminded us since her death, was an inveterate collector and compiler of
|
||
musical clips. (The drummer and music historian Ahmir Thompson, better known as
|
||
Questlove, remembered: “She would always be on her computer sending me MP3s:
|
||
‘Listen to this, listen to this. ... ’”) She was living through, and channeling
|
||
into “Back to Black,” the initial dissolution of history into streams of
|
||
digital information, disembodied, disintermediated, each no further from the
|
||
present than a Google prompt. She freely recombined those fragments but never
|
||
indulged in nostalgia; she was disappointed by the present but knew there was
|
||
no going back. And at enormous personal cost, she created something enduring
|
||
out of it, showing how much harder it would be to leave a real mark amid
|
||
fathomless data — to transcend mere recombination, sampling, pastiche.
|
||
|
||
If the arts are to matter in the 21st century, we must still believe that they
|
||
can collectively manifest our lives and feelings: that they can constitute a
|
||
Geistgeschichte, or “history of spirit,” as the German idealists used to say.
|
||
This was entirely possible before modernism, and it is possible after. The most
|
||
ambitious abstract painters working today, like Albert Oehlen and Charline von
|
||
Heyl, are doing something akin to Winehouse’s free articulation: drawing from
|
||
diverse and even contradictory styles in the hunt for forms that can still have
|
||
effects. Olga Tokarczuk structured her 2007 book, “Flights,” as a constellation
|
||
of barely connected characters and styles, more fugitive than the last
|
||
century’s novels in fragments; to read her is less like looking at a mosaic
|
||
than toggling among tabs. Bad Bunny, working at the crossroads of trap,
|
||
reggaeton, bachata and rock, is crafting pick-and-mix aggregations of small
|
||
pieces, like “Back to Black,” that are digital in every way that matters. All
|
||
of them are speaking out of parts of the past in a language that is their own.
|
||
|
||
We have every ability to live in a culture of beauty, insight, surprise, if we
|
||
could just accept that we are no longer modern, and have not been for a while;
|
||
that somewhere in the push and pull of digital homogeneity and political stasis
|
||
we entered a new phase of history. We have been evading our predicament with
|
||
coping mechanisms and marketing scams, which have left all of us disappointedly
|
||
asking, What’s new? Surely it would be healthier — and who knows what might
|
||
flower — if we accepted and even embraced the end of stylistic progress, and at
|
||
last took seriously the digital present we are disavowing. And the perpetuity
|
||
of “Back to Black,” still playing in the background of avocado-toast
|
||
dispensaries in East London and West Hollywood after 17 years, suggests to me
|
||
that we have not lost our ability to identify voices of our time, even if they
|
||
are fated to speak a language yoked to the past. Culture is stuck? Progress is
|
||
dead? I died a hundred times, a poet once said, and kept singing.
|
||
|
||
[44]Jason Farago, a critic at large for The Times, writes about art and culture
|
||
in the U.S. and abroad. [45]More about Jason Farago
|
||
|
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A version of this article appears in print on , Page 38 of the Sunday Magazine
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with the headline: Out of Time. [46]Order Reprints | [47]Today’s Paper | [48]
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[13] https://www.nytimes.com/
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[14] https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/13/magazine/jesmyn-ward-let-us-descend.html
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[15] https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/12/magazine/taylor-swift-eras-tour.html
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[26] https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/10/magazine/stale-culture.html
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[27] https://www.nytimes.com/by/jason-farago
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[28] https://www.nytimes.com/by/jason-farago
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[29] https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/21/arts/design/manet-degas-met-museum.html
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[30] https://www.nytimes.com/audio/app/2023/10/10/magazine/stale-culture.html?referringSource=audioAppPromo
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[31] https://www.musee-orsay.fr/en/artworks/le-balcon-707
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[32] https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/06/arts/design/nairy-baghramian-met-facade-nyc-sculpture.html
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[33] https://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/12/arts/design/stan-douglass-the-secret-agent-offers-a-refracted-vision-of-history-and-terrorism.html
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[34] https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/11/arts/design/pierre-huyghe-serpentine-gallery-london-artist.html
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[35] https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/02/books/review/companion-piece-ali-smith.html
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[36] https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/28/movies/transit-review.html
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[37] https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/24/movies/drive-my-car-review.html
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[38] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ou0luMrf1mU
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[39] https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/07/watching/k-drama-streaming-guide.html
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[40] https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/23/arts/music/cxema-ukraine.html
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[41] https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/01/arts/design/amy-winehouse-design-museum.html
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[42] https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/20/arts/music/ice-spice-like.html
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[43] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRD0-GxqHVo
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[44] https://www.nytimes.com/by/jason-farago
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[45] https://www.nytimes.com/by/jason-farago
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[46] https://www.parsintl.com/publication/the-new-york-times/
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