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6/16/2025, 6:52:38 PM
>>18465117
>i'm collecting these disorders like pokemon
Welcome to the club. But as you said, when you're handing them out like candy yourself...
>>18465169
>much like how fashion designers are usually known for their most extravagant runway pieces
This is not true anymore because no one is exclusively consuming fashion content through runways, meaning that the pieces most commonly associated with designers over the last thirty years are less and less their most extravagant runway pieces and increasingly items consumers have had hammered into their brain through repeated transmission on social media, which also tend to be accessible, and unremarkable. This, plus the increase in consumers buying designer fashion in North America and Europe from the rise of online marketplaces like Vestiaire, Grailed, and Poshmark, has radically changed the relationship dynamic between a fashion designer and their audience. Not to get too into the weeds on fashion, but this issue remains the case in architecture and industrial design (for lack of a better overarching term), as the barrier to entry is significantly higher than in fashion. Presumably, this barrier will last longer despite the internet's best attempts, and perhaps even grow as more and more people are locked out of ownership.
>People turn themselves into products
Speak for yourself, I post a bit of everything.
>The artistic gourmand looks at the fans of these works and accuses them of jealousy.
Comedian, sure. Fountain... not so sure. I've never met anyone who didn't like Fountain or deny its brilliance, except for those who reject modernism wholesale (and group it in with contemporary art lol). You may have to extrapolate on this 'artistic gourmand' character.
>Architects and designers that provoke through simplicity or elevate the expected.
I mean the first who comes to mind is Judd, especially given your mention of Rothko and the parallels with Rothko's own attempts at architecture, but hardly an epiphany here.
>i'm collecting these disorders like pokemon
Welcome to the club. But as you said, when you're handing them out like candy yourself...
>>18465169
>much like how fashion designers are usually known for their most extravagant runway pieces
This is not true anymore because no one is exclusively consuming fashion content through runways, meaning that the pieces most commonly associated with designers over the last thirty years are less and less their most extravagant runway pieces and increasingly items consumers have had hammered into their brain through repeated transmission on social media, which also tend to be accessible, and unremarkable. This, plus the increase in consumers buying designer fashion in North America and Europe from the rise of online marketplaces like Vestiaire, Grailed, and Poshmark, has radically changed the relationship dynamic between a fashion designer and their audience. Not to get too into the weeds on fashion, but this issue remains the case in architecture and industrial design (for lack of a better overarching term), as the barrier to entry is significantly higher than in fashion. Presumably, this barrier will last longer despite the internet's best attempts, and perhaps even grow as more and more people are locked out of ownership.
>People turn themselves into products
Speak for yourself, I post a bit of everything.
>The artistic gourmand looks at the fans of these works and accuses them of jealousy.
Comedian, sure. Fountain... not so sure. I've never met anyone who didn't like Fountain or deny its brilliance, except for those who reject modernism wholesale (and group it in with contemporary art lol). You may have to extrapolate on this 'artistic gourmand' character.
>Architects and designers that provoke through simplicity or elevate the expected.
I mean the first who comes to mind is Judd, especially given your mention of Rothko and the parallels with Rothko's own attempts at architecture, but hardly an epiphany here.
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