Excerpt:
...How strange it is. A society that demands a resume
summarizing the formal education and professional training
of everyone seeking entry into its work force, has decided
somehow that it will esteem its artists precisely for
their lack of such credentials. The fashionable artist
today is 'self-taught.' In fact, 'un-taught' is preferred.
Everyone is talking about self-taught/outsider artists.
Make it clear, we are not just continuing the old conversation
about naive and folk art here. We are looking at a new
and wider conversation in the contemporary fine art
scene. What we are finding is a shift of the old paradigm
in which art was presumed to mirror a culture's collective
life. This traditional model is being replaced by one
in which art is expected to negate cultural experience
via a celebration of the personal experience of its
maker -- a creator whose credibility as an artist is
directly tied to his or her isolation from cultural
life of any sort.
Thus, the peculiar scenario in which dealers promoting
new artists all across America have been overheard assuring
collectors that even though a certain talent being showcased
in their gallery did study at Yale (or the Art Institute
of Chicago -- or wherever) this 'academic' exposure
had no effect whatsoever on the artist's creative development.
Somehow (despite his or her degree certification) the
newcomer is represented as immune to the taint of pedagogy
-- a true artist following a 'private vision' -- a self-taught
OUTSIDER. How, exactly, does this work?...and how did
we get here?