Snack_Bolshevik

joined 4 years ago
[–] [email protected] 3 points 7 months ago (1 children)

playing in tune and in time is fascist

[–] [email protected] 22 points 8 months ago (5 children)

Anyone else's para social relationship with this website so bad that you daydream about posting and venting on here?

[–] [email protected] 14 points 9 months ago (1 children)

low dose ketamine? shy

[–] [email protected] 8 points 9 months ago

take me back to 2022 where i was in a one sided, unreciprocated, delusional, obsessive relationship but at least those delusions drove me to see a dentist for the first time in a decade, go out to concerts/shows, expand my social circle, and generally improve my quality of life

[–] [email protected] 15 points 9 months ago (1 children)

idk if it’s the disease itself or just the fact that i got it a third time but i think this last bout of covid has actually cooked my brain. i’ve been getting mood swings, irritability, thoughts of self harm, trying to sabotage relationships, etc. and i can’t fucking self medicate since i operate heavy machinery at work and am under familial supervision while at home. all i want is to have a cathartic crying/screaming meltdown but i can’t even tear up. torment

literally have become one of those people who just posts about their mental illness online that 17 year old me would have made fun of

joker-shopping

[–] [email protected] 25 points 10 months ago (4 children)

anyone else lowkey hate their families? i live with my parents, they aren’t bad people or abusive, but fucking christ some of there behaviors and expectations are completely insufferable.

i get that at their age learning self-reflection is a tall order but this shit is driving me nuts

[–] [email protected] 30 points 10 months ago (2 children)

(almost posted this in the previous mega before it got locked so now y'all get read my garbage screm-cool )

so like it was weird that I as a "straight cis man" was excited at the prospect of people reading me as queer when I began exploring self expression via fashion. My daily work clothes rotation included 4 button downs in the following colors: light blue, white, light grey, and pink. My shoes were light grey with light blue and pink accents. Literally all of my jeans were high waisted. I may as well have been wearing a trans flag cape shit was so obvious. Now you could say that my clothing choices were just things that complimented each other right? The years of LGBT overrepresention in my social media feeds and of consuming LGBT media definitely didn't influence things. Sure... I'm gonna use this moment to kinda sorta come out. No hard labels or anything, I just know that (at least as of right now) I'm closer to something within the realm of queerness than what decades of cis heteronormativity social conditioning have led me to believe.

I will continue posting cringe hexbear-gay-pride

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

well my train of thought was that they haven’t responded to my texts in months and we have been drifting prior to that, they are more preoccupied with other friends, family, work, and other activities, and i felt i was putting too much into relationships where i’m where in the periphery of their social circle

taking these things into consideration, i figured it was a new year and time to move on

[–] [email protected] 5 points 10 months ago (2 children)

how easy is it to get on antidepressants assuming i haven’t seen a medical professional in a decade and have crappy insurance?

[–] [email protected] 15 points 10 months ago
[–] [email protected] 25 points 11 months ago

welcome to the club! cat-trans

 

slight disclaimer: I am a bit of an outsider to the subject I am about to present so forgive me if everything isn't correct but I do think that there is at least some interesting discussion to be had

Recently fashion designer Tremaine Emory left the creative director position at the brand Supreme because of systematic racism in the company and more specifically the cancellation of a collaboration with artist Arthur Jafa. This would have featured depictions of black men being hanged and of slaves with lashes on their back.

Some background on the parties involved:
-Tremaine Emory is a black American designer who has worked with brands and artists like Off-White and Frank Ocean. In his own clothing line he has featured black cultural aesthetics

-Supreme is a company founded by James Jebbia that produces streetwear culture products aimed at skateboarding and hip hop subcultures. They have also been involved in controversy in depicting edgy/distasteful subject matter and copyright/trademark messes. Also worth noting that they were bought out by VF Corporation which owns several other large clothing companies.

-Arthur Jafa is a black American artist whose work depicts the wide variety of the black experience in the U.S. primarily through video and film

Now, I bring this all up because I have seen people defend and condemn Supreme for cancelling this project. Some defenders of the cancellation have said that it is gross for company like Supreme (that is majority operated by white people and whose largest market is also majority white) to profit off the depiction of black pain/trauma. Some of those condemning have said that Supreme is being unfair since they have not shied away from similar edgy depictions in the past and that they specifically hired a creative director whose previous work was in a similar vein. Of course most this discourse is being had by people who may not have the same understanding of how capitalism and history works compared to people on this forum.

On one hand, my initial thoughts were that yeah Supreme shouldn't do this project since it is just a further commodification of black trauma. I feel that further normalizing these depictions of violence in consumer spaces rather than education spaces does more harm than good usually. On the other hand, corporations shouldn't be able to control the way artists want to present their work. I do see that the artists are in quite a bind here. One of the only ways for an artist of a marginalized group to reach the masses of people who may be interested in their work is to work with companies who actually have the resources to distribute on a large scale. Without knowing their ideological stances, it is impossible to know if these people understand that for art to reach the masses under capitalism it is ultimately going to be diluted and subsumed into reproducing the status quo.

There are so many trains of thought to follow from here. Like what is the place for the art of marginalized groups under capitalism? How should outsiders engage with the art of marginalized groups outside of consumerism? Was there a way for Supreme to present this art without being disrespectful? Should artists always expect the dilution of their art when trying to reach a mass audience?

Y'all's thoughts? I'm especially interested if anyone has any reading material related to the topics above

 

slight disclaimer: I am a bit of an outsider to the subject I am about to present so forgive me if everything isn't correct but I do think that there is at least some interesting discussion to be had

Recently fashion designer Tremaine Emory left the creative director position at the brand Supreme because of systematic racism in the company and more specifically the cancellation of a collaboration with artist Arthur Jafa. This would have featured depictions of black men being hanged and of slaves with lashes on their back.

Some background on the parties involved:
-Tremaine Emory is a black American designer who has worked with brands and artists like Off-White and Frank Ocean. In his own clothing line he has prominently featured black cultural aesthetics

-Supreme is a company founded by James Jebbia that produces streetwear culture products aimed at skateboarding and hip hop subcultures. They have also been involved in controversy in depicting edgy/distasteful subject matter and copyright/trademark messes. Also worth noting that they were bought out by VF Corporation which owns several other large clothing companies.

-Arthur Jafa is a black American artist whose work depicts the wide variety of the black experience in the U.S. primarily through video and film

Now, I bring this all up because I have seen people defend and condemn Supreme for cancelling this project. Some defenders of the cancellation have said that it is gross for a company like Supreme (that is majority operated by white people and whose largest market is also majority white) to profit off the depiction of black pain/trauma. Some of those condemning have said that Supreme is being unfair since they have not shied away from similar edgy depictions in the past and that they specifically hired a creative director whose previous work was in a similar vein. Of course most of this discourse is being had by people who may not have the same understanding of how capitalism and history works compared to people on this forum.

On one hand, my initial thoughts were that yeah Supreme shouldn't do this project since it is just a further commodification of black trauma. I feel that further normalizing these depictions of violence in consumer spaces rather than education spaces does more harm than good usually. On the other hand, corporations shouldn't be able to control the way artists want to present their work. I do see that the artists are in quite a bind here. One of the only ways for an artist of a marginalized group to reach the masses of people who may be interested in their work is to work with companies who actually have the resources to distribute on a large scale. Without knowing their ideological stances, it is impossible to know if these people understand that for art to reach the masses under capitalism it is ultimately going to be diluted and subsumed into reproducing the status quo.

There are so many trains of thought to follow from here. Like what is the place for the art of marginalized groups under capitalism? How should outsiders engage with the art of marginalized groups outside of consumerism? Was there a way for Supreme to present this art without being disrespectful? Should artists always expect the dilution of their art when trying to reach a mass audience?

Y'all's thoughts? I'm especially interested if anyone has any reading material related to the topics above

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