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  • Essay / Evan Robarts - 988

    Trants occupy a large part of our scope in life in this new millennium. In a society concerned with maintaining a vital root in both the visual and virtual world, diatribes are gaining power. The power of the open letter can erase a person's public image. In this way, one can crown oneself as an outcast for one's past practices and beliefs, thereby removing the gravity of mundane musings and podcasts hungry for signs of vulnerability. At this rate, opinion forums are multiplying without a second thought, with virtual trash cans of prose dating back to the beginnings of the Internet. Self-validation is not a disease that afflicts the modern world and relies on hackneyed Western ideologies, but a way of being. It’s just a simple way to make connections in the age of technology, to be recognized. The cacophony of public introspection aside, it has become difficult to decipher the distinct voices in the masses and experts are beginning to doubt their ability to determine validity, to criticize without fear. This is because incomplete and underdeveloped standards are being adopted at an alarming rate. As the art world wages war against the deepening connection between capitalism and the creative world, it's not hard to identify with Detective "Rust" Cohle as he shoots up his jet. dark pontifications about the crumbling society before him. The TV crime drama True Detective shines best with this particular character's sharp delivery and ability to provoke questions. I think it evokes in the audience the need to dissect what is in front of them, as if their senses are always lying to them. Rust's disdain, his almost biting disappointment with the state of things resonates clearly in my head every time I try to look toward the ar...... middle of paper ......der to find ingenuity and golden arguments to progress. in the sea of ​​opinions. She also argues that art should exist without context or theory, but that the two are now interchangeable in contemporary language and processes. Left to their own devices, some artists will continue to protest against the consensus. More intellectuals need to dig in, stay committed to highlighting honest artists, and write. To write. Write even if it's wrong, making mistakes to start the conversation. Without artists like Evan, who don't rely solely on process and dogma to bring their work to life, there will be more misguided blog posts. No more thinking, no more ego stroking, no more complacency. Artists must stick to their logic and eagerness when taking the next step, doing it because it's what they need to do. Maybe we're all doing it wrong, but some artists are just trying to create substance..