Creative Output
Nothing new here. Vermeer was all but unknown for 200 years, and Van Gogh: ignored to death. By comparison, Norman Rockwell and Thomas Kinkade became household names- each early in his life. The history of the arts abounds with such examples. (Who here watches Jenny Saville, Tai-Shan Schierenberg, Ann Gale, David Kassan?) Not to say there aren’t exceptions - there are, but they live in that sliver of overlap.
We like to think of social media as efficiently exposing previously or otherwise hidden talent, but I think something quite opposite is going on. Thanks to social media, the circle on the right seems to grow exponentially year-over-year, while the circle on the left, at best, resists shrinking.
Internet!
I don’t think there’s a single thing about this that I can disagree with.
Man. So glad that I’m neither great nor popular. I have all that fucking white space to myself!!!
you can expand this beyond just creative output...include politicians.
good lord. so i took a double dose of adderall, and just wrote a lot. there’s no way i’m editing all of this all at...
Don’t even get me started on Thomas Kinkade.
I’ve always been a small circle kind of person. This explains it!(not that *I’m* great, just that I prefer the thoughts...
the ROCKS GLASS is one of those fancy-schmancy Tumblr sites that happens to be curated by Kansas City-based creative generalist Jeremy Fuksa.
“Creative generalist” sounds like an aggrandized term. It is. But, it rolls off the tongue much easier than Designer, Developer, Writer, Broadcaster, Filmmaker, Speaker, Musician, Photographer and Attention Whore. Plus, it looks way cooler on a business card.
The author wishes to acknowledge that there are bare wires laying about. Please take care not to trip on them.
