Thanks for this post. I would argue that part of an explanation here could also be economic: modernity brings specialization and a move from the artisan economy of objects as uncommon, expensive, multipurpose, and with a narrow user base (illuminated manuscripts, decorative furniture) to a more utilitarian and targeted economy. Early artisans need to compete for a small number of rich clients by being the most impressive, artistic, etc., whereas more modern suppliers follow more traditional laws of supply and demand and track more costs (cost-effectiveness, readability and reader’s time vs. beauty and remarkableness). And consumers similarly can decouple their needs: art as separate from furniture and architecture, poetry and drama as separate from information and literature. I think another aspect of this shift, that I’m sad we’ve lost, is the old multipurpose scientific/philosophical treatises with illustrations or poems (my favorite being de Rerum Natura, though you could argue that Nietzsche and Wagner tried to revive this with their attempts at Gesamtkunstwerke).
Thanks for this post. I would argue that part of an explanation here could also be economic: modernity brings specialization and a move from the artisan economy of objects as uncommon, expensive, multipurpose, and with a narrow user base (illuminated manuscripts, decorative furniture) to a more utilitarian and targeted economy. Early artisans need to compete for a small number of rich clients by being the most impressive, artistic, etc., whereas more modern suppliers follow more traditional laws of supply and demand and track more costs (cost-effectiveness, readability and reader’s time vs. beauty and remarkableness). And consumers similarly can decouple their needs: art as separate from furniture and architecture, poetry and drama as separate from information and literature. I think another aspect of this shift, that I’m sad we’ve lost, is the old multipurpose scientific/philosophical treatises with illustrations or poems (my favorite being de Rerum Natura, though you could argue that Nietzsche and Wagner tried to revive this with their attempts at Gesamtkunstwerke).