JackDaydream wrote: ↑April 21st, 2023, 2:37 pm subversive art styles in the twentieth first century. Is the idea of the bohemian outsider and the antihero an artefact of individualism. In the context of the extent of the critique of consumerism in the face of the daunting prospects of climate change what is the future for the alternative arts and aesthetics? To what extent does the artistic imagination matter any longer?
The Individual Romantic Rock and Roll Counterculture Artist Lives!
Is the current underground counterculture in the spotlight and as noticable like it was in 1968, or in the “Indie” era of the mid 1980s with alternative rock, independent cinema, etc? Counterculture has at times been in large part Youth culture. The “Over 30 adults” haven’t traditionally been invited to the Youth party so it’s hard to know how vibrant the real underground scene is. It's range, it's effectiveness, it's polis isn't viewed until history looks back on the generation in hindsight. I don't mean to be rude or indelicate but maybe we're just old and it's hard to see contemporary arts.
Escaping the Oppressive Culture Tower, the illusion of social media
All generations of artists have to battle against their contemporary co-opting forces.
“You do you” is a current saying which champions that Romantic and existential ideal of the Individual being authentic. Affirmations of a creed like the Romanitic “Truth Beauty Love” or “You do You” may lose power in the over amplified, trendy lifestyle generators like instagram text posts and Twitter generated catch-phrases. Ironically social media waters it all down. It’s social media that co-opts the urge of the authentic individual and transforms it into a sheeple commodified propaganda slogan.
Even if they never listen to rock and roll, anyone can buy an already “distressed” Woodstock concert tee shirt at a big box store. You can order clothes online and dress like a surfer, you can learn to talk like a surfer, you can adopt personal and political attributes of a surfer, but if you don’t surf, you don't surf. ..You ain’t punk. Adam Curtis’ Century of the Self episode 3 gets into how Stanford Research Institute surveyed the American public in the early 1970s to look into the counterculture movement. "Hippies were identified as having a lifestyle. Counterculture was then co-opted, assimilated back into the Culture through consumerism, turned into the commodifiable “Lifestyle”. That’s the fancy way of understanding “selling out” without knowing they were selling.
60 year old Punk Rockers are retired and touring again in London, San Francisco…
I’m pretty old, in my early 50s, married, kid, and I had lost touch with rock n roll as a counterculture force, a lifelong passion of mine. I found myself disconnected from the underground, stuck floating in the currents of pop culture suburbia. I aimed to reconnect and find the current underground, and was successful and I see it is alive and well. A local punk band recently had a concert on a subway train car. Somewhere in middle america a punk band had a concert as a record release party by renting a Denny's as it was the cheapest venue. I’ve seen other old dudes like me at some of the “underground counterculture” concerts here in San Francisco and Oakland.
Retro is embraced. Like the 60 year punk rockers mentioned above in this thread, one of the best “early punk” 60s bands Sonics “Have Love Will Travel” have recently had shows and made videos. Face melting psych rock heavy bands of today like Earthless cover little known early underground rock gems like the 70s band the Groundhogs’ song “Cherry Red”. Gothic Romantic poet Novalis will open for gothic bands Bauhaus and the Cure at Cruel World music fest.
The authentic Artist creating new work is by nature against oppressive culture, an integral part of rebellion and rebellion is at the core of the human desire for freedom.
I believe the artistic urge is inherently counterculture because to be authentic it is inevitably counter to the existing mass culture, otherwise it's not novel and not authentic. (it might be influenced by or similar too but if the art isn't personal, it's not art it's design). If it is not novel it is a copy, merely a re-imaging of the already accedpted arts of the culture power structures.
Is freedom a moral issue? I just listened to the Partially Examined Life’s podcast on Schiller, arguing that the arts facilitate abstract thinking, and abstract thinking (or maybe critical thinking) lead to developing the moral. The arts are a spearhead for freedom, free thinking.
My paranoid critique (nod to Dali) is that the power hungry cultural leaders, the fat cat politcians intentionally limit the arts at least in USA, defund and undermine arts education, as an early detourant against future free thinkers, activists, who might challenge issues, the system and therefore the corrupt fat cats' wealth. They won't allow the counterculture arts to thrive economically or socially or politically because it threatens their wealth and power (The are opporating in survival mode not a moral mode).
Counterculture is continually co-opted by big tech / big money, assimilated, to undermine it's counter force but the Individual is still here, free and making art and making moves.