ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

IDEAS

Study: AI “Creativity” Leads To Cultural Stagnation

The researchers called the outcomes “visual elevator music” – pleasant and polished, yet devoid of any real meaning. - The Conversation

It’s An Old Question, But Let’s Consider Art Versus Entertainment

Entertainment is about diversion and pleasure. Fun. It occupies our attention, distracts us from boredom, and amuses. But many things in life can do that: food, games, conversation, idle distractions. If we define art solely as entertainment, we risk conflating it with any activity that gives pleasure, and end up with nothing distinctive about art. - 3Quarks Daily

How Do We Compete When “Excellence” Is No Longer The Quality That Stands Out?

The question is no longer just "How do we play Beethoven better?" but "How do we survive as a cultural institution in a digitized, competitive economy?" in a way to convince 21st-century society that it is still worthy? - LinkedIn

Culture Change: Santa Fe Ties Its Minimum Wage To Cost-Of-Living

Starting next year, Santa Fe will become the first U.S. city to explicitly link the high cost of housing to the minimum wage. - Governing

The Allure Of “Lost” Civilizations

Who doesn’t want to know how a lost civilization got lost, or where it might be hiding? The trouble is that what gets touted as a lost civilization often turns out to have been there all along. - The New Yorker

Lately We’ve Praised Boredom. But Maybe It’s Not Really The Path To Resetting

 You might think that there’s so much at our fingertips now, surely boredom is gonna go away. But what we’re finding is that it’s actually increasing. So one speculation is that our capacity to connect well is diminishing, and as that’s happening, we’re getting more bored. - Nautilus

Adults Should Maybe Use Their Phones Less? It’s Really A Matter Of Culture

Ultimately, this is an issue not of screens versus humans, but of how families navigate connection in a world where attention is mediated by devices in every age group. - The Atlantic

Good Decisions Are About Culture (Which AI Doesn’t Have)

The most consequential decisions in business have never been about processing information faster or detecting patterns more efficiently. The most salient concerns are questions such as what kind of enterprise a firm should aspire to be, what culture it should embrace. - The New York Times

We Can’t Really ‘Unwind’ With Screens

“Although many people turn to screen-based activities to wind down, these activities may have the opposite effect biologically.” - The Conversation

Delroy Lindo Is Getting His First Oscar Nomination At 73

Many observers expected the actor to get a nod for Da 5 Bloods (as did the actor). There’s an easy answer about why he didn’t get a nod - it even has a hashtag - but there’s a more complex question about his characters and the movies he starred in. - The Root

AI Art’s Predictable Problem: The Cliché Machine Cranks On

As algorithms churn out endless variations on tired themes, human artists are discovering their secret weapon isn't perfection—it's the beautiful, messy unpredictability that no code can replicate. — Aeon

Justice System Meets Its Deepfake Moment

When seeing is no longer believing, Canadian courts face an existential crisis: how do you prove what's real when reality itself can be manufactured? The legal system's analog truth tests meet digital deception. — The Walrus

Why Movies Launch And Music Drops

A key reason why it’s now more complicated to promote an album than, say, a theatrically released film, is the ephemeral, immaterial nature of contemporary music consumption.  By comparison, most films that see a theatrical release maintain a predictable, streamlined promotional schedule. - The New Yorker

How We Lost The Art Of Paying Attention

Most of us are by now familiar with the broad mechanisms of the “attention economy” – the hijacking and monetising of consumer attention through addictive channels. The ravages of this system are ever more apparent. - The Observer

The Death Of The 20th Century Mono-Culture (And What It Means)

The implications for the battered-and-bruised entertainment industry are obvious. The impacts on our culture are just starting to fully materialize, but will be more significant. Instead of pulling us together, pop culture is another force dragging us apart. - The Wall Street Journal

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