The Long Tail

December 14, 2007


In 1847, Karl Marx wrote that working for wages would
be 
superseded by what he called "self-activity." With the
economy
humming along, surplus time would free people to
study,
privately create and generally improve themselves. He
suggested
they might also hunt, fish, or even become critics in
their 
spare time. This, of course, was to happen under the
Communist
system. It didn't. But Marx's prophetic vision
continues to
prove him right.

What Marx did not foresee was the remarkable variety
of
interests that folks would pursue. Only a few years
ago a
person who painted on the heads of pins would be
considered an
eccentric oddball. Today's Internet can bring a world
of
pinhead painters together to share techniques,
one-hair 
brushes, magnifying devices, exhibition ploys, pinhead
history
and pinhead lore. A pinhead society is formed and a
pinhead
president is elected.

Chris Anderson's "The Long Tail," while essentially a
book on 
economics, talks about these sorts of esoteric
pursuits and
issues that will affect the lives and livelihoods of
artists.
The long tail is a graph that describes the vast
variety of
niches now available beyond the more standard fare.
Amazon, for 
example, by offering more than 800,000 CD titles as
compared
with the average Wal-Mart at 4500, is an example of
the retail
long tail in action. Without "the tyranny of the
shelf," and
with its ability to tolerate a great deal of what they
call 
"noise," Amazon offers stuff that is otherwise hard to
find.
Niches rule. We've put long tail graphs and their
implications
at the top of the current clickback. See URL below.

With the remarkable democratization of human activity,
older 
attitudes of scarcity may be waning. The bonanza of
choice is
affecting the ways people buy art. The "Star system"
may be on
its way out. Not only will people make art for their
own
consumption and those of their friends, but they will
buy 
locally and value individuality and connectivity
rather than
name. "Young people today," says media mogul Rupert
Murdoch,
"don't want to be told what's good and bad, they want
control
over their media, instead of being controlled by it."
The 
growing presence of large Internet art sites where art
is
arranged by genre and niche is part of this
phenomenon. "Are
you looking for a pinhead landscape or a pinhead
portrait?"

Best regards,

Robert

PS: "Noise can also be a huge problem in the long tail
market.
Indeed, if left unchecked, noise--random content or
products of
poor quality--can kill a market. Too much noise and
people
don't buy." (Chris Anderson) 

Esoterica: Not everyone sees the long tail as a good
thing.
"Sturgeon's Law," named after science fiction writer
Theodore
Sturgeon, states, "Ninety percent of everything is
crud."
Galleries, museums and even websites are in the
business of
filtering out what they consider to be crud. Part of
our job as
professional creators is to filter our own efforts. By
the way,
are standards rising? Maybe the democratization of art
can only 
go so far.

Current clickback: If you would like to see selected,
illustrated responses to the last letter, "Declining
sight,"
about the eye problems of Edgar Degas as well as
graphs of the
long tail, please go to: 
http://clicks.robertgenn.com/declining-sight.php

If you would like to comment or add your own opinion,
information or observations to this or other letters,
please do
so. Just click 'reply' on this letter or write
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"No matter how much the idiots may outnumber you, they're still the idiots."
--Daria Morgendorfer, animated philsopher

"Never underestimate the power of a large group of stupid people."
--George Carlin, occupation foole

'Each progressive spirit is opposed by a thousand mediocre
minds appointed to guard the past.' - Maurice Maeterlinck



Tamara Wyndham

http://www.tamarawyndham.com


      
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