CONCEPTUAL CONSUMABLES Art is really the ultimate consumable. Experiencing it yourself is the very act that devalues it. If you buy a toaster that works well, you keep on using it. But nobody stops watching movies, listening to music, reading books, etc. etc. just because they've found one that they like. Sure they're more likely to watch/listen/read that work again, but inevitably they'll go on searching for new works that are more valuable to them simply for the fact that they haven't experienced them before. So enormous numbers of people work to feed us a constant stream of new art, spending vast amounts of time and money, and when they hit on something people like, making vast amounts of money in return. The old art withers away, left behind on the trail marched by generations long forgotten, with but a selection of works dragged along as an example of culture, of the art that makes us what we think we are. But really art is just a tool we use invoke emotion in ourselves, a mind-trick on ourselves that we're all naturally addicted to. The favoured art is the favoured emotion; what society wants to feel. A substitute for whatever inner dream we're trying to remember, or forget. Yet the precise emotions don't matter, all that matters is that they change, decade-to-decade, generation-to-generation, so that products like that toaster can be designed to match a fashion. Formal, funky, sleek, crisp. So that it too is rooted to a time by way of whatever irrelevent emotion it's designed to inspire. Bombarded constantly by the desperate efforts of endless artists and designers to push new art at us, we barely even notice devices like our toaster singing in tune with it all, much less feel the emotive effect that those anonymous designers try to put into them. Yet what we do notice is when that emotion is out of place, reflecting a time passed, and so we know it's old, needs to be replaced. By making the toaster art, the manufacturer makes it a consumable. But whereas we won't pay much to see a movie or a song, we value a device with all the functionality that it provides, yet as an artwork we also see it as a consumable. The more artistic it is, the more consumable it is, so whether it's a toaster, a smartphone, or even a computer operating system, we're always still looking and paying for something new. For something that looks like how we're supposed to feel. - The Free Thinker