I. Art Cannot Live in a Scene
Art exiled to a scene becomes theater without an audience.
When a culture speaks of an “art scene,” it confesses its own failure. The phrase announces that art has been quarantined and confined to an enclave of peculiar people, obscure jargon, and self-congratulation. What ought to stand at the center of civic life is instead exiled to lofts, galleries, and grant applications.
The scene pretends to nurture art but in truth it sterilizes it. Art becomes an accessory for the wealthy, a pastime for neurotics, a spectacle for the bored. Its language becomes unintelligible, its makers detached from the people they claim to represent. Art no longer grows out of the streets or the squares; it is curated in studios and defended by committees.
For the ordinary man, art is no longer something he owns or contributes to. It is something he is expected to consume politely and without comprehension, as if attending a ritual performed in a dead language. A sculpture is no longer a prayer; it is an investment. A mural no longer celebrates the city; it flatters the commissioner.
A civilization that hands over its art to a professional class will soon find itself surrounded by ugliness it cannot explain. It will forget how to decorate its own walls and speak its own dreams. It will come to believe that beauty is something strange, foreign, and expensive — something to be tolerated rather than shared.
The “art scene” is a cage that flatters the wardens and starves the culture. It cannot be reformed. It must be broken.
II. The Square Was Replaced by the Scene
The square taught people to belong; the scene teaches them to watch.
Once, art belonged in the square. It adorned the fountains, crowned the cathedrals, and framed the markets. Everyone passed through it, and everyone understood it belonged to them. The square gave art a stage where the whole community could see itself made noble.
That square no longer exists. It has been replaced by private galleries, basement theaters, and sterile museums. What had been public became exclusive. Art retreated from the streets and was hidden behind walls, guarded by docents and velvet ropes. What was once made for the many is now made for a few.
This retreat was celebrated as sophistication. In reality it was cowardice. As cities emptied their public spaces of meaning, the art that had animated them was herded into salons and called avant-garde. The result was predictable. The people began to see art as something foreign - a performance by and for those who lived elsewhere and spoke a language they could not understand.
A mural on a courthouse once told a town who they were. Now a gallery in Manhattan tells a few patrons how clever they are. The square, stripped of art, became a parking lot. The cathedral, stripped of art, became a museum. And the people, stripped of art, became customers.
The scene supplanted the square by pretending to preserve art while quietly stealing it from the people. A culture that permits this theft has already decided that beauty is too good for its own streets.
III. The Scene Thrives on Isolation
The scene survives by flattering the very cities that suffocate it.
The art scene does not merely exist in certain cities by chance. It thrives in ideological fortresses because it depends on uniformity and insulation. Leftist strongholds provide the wealth, the social consensus, and the bureaucratic infrastructure needed to maintain its illusions.
Within these enclaves, artists perform rebellion on cue, careful never to cross boundaries their patrons quietly enforce. They speak a dialect of dissent that never risks real alienation. What passes for defiance is often a ritual of conformity, staged for audiences who already agree.
This geography hardens into a caste system. Art remains clustered in coastal cities, where its audience can afford both the prices and the pretense. The farther one travels from these centers, the less art appears. And when it does, it arrives as an insult. Rural visitors who encounter contemporary installations in museums are greeted not by beauty but by contempt thinly disguised as sophistication.
This is not the audience’s failure. It is the scene’s triumph. By confining itself to ideological and geographic bubbles, it has absolved itself of speaking to the nation at large. Instead it cultivates obscurity and calls it purity.
The more detached the scene becomes, the stranger its work grows, and the more ordinary people turn away. In this way, the scene ensures its own irrelevance while congratulating itself for staying ahead of the masses.
A culture that permits its art to become a private dialect spoken in a single room has already decided the rest of the house can remain silent.
IV. Wealth Has Warped the Artist
Vanity pays better than vision, but it leaves nothing behind worth keeping.
Wealth does not merely support the art scene. It distorts it. Once, patronage demanded grandeur and permanence. A church commissioning a fresco expected majesty because the work bore witness to something larger than any individual. The modern collector, by contrast, demands novelty and spectacle because his interest is vanity, not vision.
The scene now revolves around auction houses and hedge funds. Paintings are treated as stocks to be flipped, installations as conversation pieces for cocktail parties. The artist becomes a supplier of eccentricity to a market addicted to shock.
In this economy, sincerity is a liability. To attract collectors, artists must appear clever, provocative, and inscrutable. They learn to coat shallow ideas in academic jargon and mistake confusion for depth. What matters is not whether a piece speaks to the public, but whether it appears unique enough to justify its price.
The public senses this instinctively. They see that the work displayed in these galleries and fairs is not meant for them, but for people playing an insider’s game. They turn away not because they lack taste, but because they refuse to be patronized.
A culture that allows its highest art to serve as currency instead of communion is a culture that will soon forget why it began making art at all. The scene rewards perversity and punishes honesty, ensuring that beauty, when it appears, arrives by accident rather than design.
When wealth becomes the judge of art, the artist learns to paint for the wallet instead of the soul.
V. The Collapse of Civic Imagination
Empty squares breed empty hearts faster than any ideology can repair.
When art abandoned the square and fled into the scene, it left behind a vacuum no ideology could fill. Art’s highest function was never to amuse the individual but to unify the community. It gave visible form to its shared memory, faith, and aspiration. Without that presence, a people begins to shrink in its own estimation.
Once, art crowned the festivals, sanctified the altars, and glorified the city itself. It gave dignity to work and poetry to grief. It allowed even the illiterate to see themselves as part of a story larger than their lives. These works did not flatter their patrons; they uplifted their people.
Now, what remains are installations too cryptic for public squares and performances too shrill for public devotion. The result is a society that thinks of art as an alien language spoken by an irrelevant class. Where once there stood a monument, now there is nothing but empty pavement. Where once there hung a tapestry, now there is a flat screen advertising soft drinks.
This decline is not a small inconvenience. It is a moral wound. A people without art woven into its daily life loses the ability to imagine itself at all. It forgets what greatness looks like. It ceases to believe it is capable of grandeur.
A culture that confines art to private corners leaves its public spaces bare. And its soul follows suit. The scene congratulates itself for surviving, but the city is dead around it.
VI. A Vision Beyond the Scene
The highest art makes itself unavoidable to everyone, everywhere.
The scene must be dismantled if art is to live again. It cannot remain a spectacle staged in glass boxes for an initiated few. It must return to the streets, the walls, the festivals. and to the rhythms of ordinary life where it can once again speak plainly and command respect.
This is not a call for mediocrity. It is a demand for relevance. The highest art does not hide in jargon or retreat into private salons. It confronts a people in the open and lifts them toward what they did not yet know they could become.
In a culture freed from the scene, the artist ceases to play the clown or the contrarian and assumes the role of a citizen. His duty is no longer to impress a gallery but to remind his people of their own dignity. He creates not to be noticed but to be understood.
Such a vision would refuse to recognize art as the property of cities alone. It would recognize that beauty belongs wherever there are people — in town halls, in parish churches, on school walls, on market facades. The artist does not bring the strange into their midst; he brings clarity, splendor, and memory.
For this to happen, the machinery of the scene — its ideologues, its investors, its gatekeepers — must lose their grip. Their approval cannot remain the measure of greatness. Art belongs not in their custody but in the keeping of those willing to look at it with clear eyes.
Well stated!
There's much I agree with here but I think art does need scenes, particularly today, where there is such decentralised mass that we need some ways to tie artists together into dialogue. And the tradpub world has turned to hyper-genrified slop to put people into their silos. They can no longer be trusted to organise artists.