1/ Mimetic desire and the Art Market
In the movie “Titanic,” Kate Winslet plays the rebellious Rose DeWitt Bukater, a beautiful, vivacious, open-minded and forward-looking young woman from a “good” family that is faced with dwindling financial prospects. Her mother’s
2/ solution is to marry her off to the wicked and banal Cal Hockley, a mendacious but very rich young man. In the movie, Rose chooses to not marry Cal, but rather pursue a life of adventurous discovery, inspired by her brief love affair with penniless and doomed artist
3/ Jack Dawson. But this isn’t about what happened in the movie, other than to look at the intersection between Rose and the art she bought while abroad. She loaded up on Picasso, Monet and Degas, whom her philistine fiancé Cal said “wouldn’t amount to anything” in the world.
4/ Hindsight allows us to be in on the joke, as all three artists are now considered among the greatest masters to ever paint. But what would have happened if the boat didn’t sink and Rose went through with her marriage to the despicable Cal?
5/ Likely, Rose would have established a beautiful home and Salon in New York City in which to display her, for the time, unconventional art collection. She no doubt would have many parties where older and younger couples would attend. The older set might look on young Rose’s
6/ collection with some condensation, as they “knew” what good art was, and her modern scribblings didn’t qualify. But the younger set—especially other young women-- would be intrigued not only with Rose’s taste in art but in Rose herself, would have taken very careful notice.
7/ They would perhaps be envious of Rose’s beauty and talent and they would unconsciously desire those things for themselves. And their husbands wouldn’t stand in the way, for they too would like to emulate the “sparkling” life of Mr. and Mrs. Hockley.
8/ They would begin inquiries at New York-based dealers, who would then have to investigate these young, brash painters if they wanted to remain at the top of the dealer world. Trips to Europe would ensue,
9/ and the most forward-looking of the dealer would make deals to represent the new artists in the new world. Perhaps slowly at first, other young, forward-looking couples would start displaying their new purchases at their parties, increasing both the exposure
10/ to and desire for similar work from other socially ambitious families. All this new art in New York’s finest homes would spark critics to start writing about the artists and the collectors—some mocking, but many lauding, both the intelligence of the collectors and the
11/ artists. The art dealers would do their very best to ensure positive reviews as the money they were earning from the sales would become increasingly large. A mimetic “tipping point” would be reached were the sheer number of fancy people displaying the new art would cause
12/ something of an arms race among the socially ambitious people of the day. Critics would tip and begin providing very sound and seemingly well thought out “reasons” for why the artists were geniuses and the early collectors astute and refined people. Many people would say
13/ (with the deepest of hindsight bias) that it was “obvious” to anyone with any taste at all why these painters were the new Rembrandts and Titans and the cycle would become self-reinforcing. Museums would start buying and early collectors would add significant prestige
14/ to their family’s reputation by loaning and donating their works to the leading museums of not just New York City, but the entire world. Mimetic desire leading to mimetic behavior would have created a new paradigm without anyone—save perhaps the art dealers—doing anything
15/ in a conspiratorial manner. All some things take to change the world’s taste is often the unplanned enthusiasm of bright, forward-looking people. People who inspire others and cause them to want to emulate them.
16/ And this isn’t just reserved to fields like art—watch any trends that develop at first slowly but then suddenly become the object of everyone’s fascination. Mimetic behavior is responsible for a lot of what we imbue with value.
17/ And taken to an extreme, is also the constant background for bubbles and other events that seemingly appear out of nowhere. Understanding that we all, to a certain extent, are driven by mimetic behaviors will help you understand a lot more than the art market.
18/ And finally, understand that you yourself will almost *never* think you are being mimetically driven, as your brain will thoughtfully provide you—post hoc—with all sorts of reasonable and rational reasons for why you’re doing something.
19/ It’s one of the reasons I think that bubbles and crashes are features and not bugs of the human experience.

#BroadlyApplicable

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More from @jposhaughnessy

Feb 17
1/ I'm recording an @InfiniteL88ps chat with @krishnanrohit today and going through his work is like catnip for me--I've been thinking about things that he opines on with a vastly better take than my early dreams on such as virtual reality.
2/ But what I think is cool is that we've been thinking about these things for a LONG time, exhibit A👇🏻(1988)

3/ It seems ideas take longer to become realities than many (very much including me) think they will, exhibit B 👇🏻
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Feb 12
Douglas Adams 🗣️

"Human beings, who are almost unique in having the ability to learn from the experience of others, are also remarkable for their apparent disinclination to do so."

"Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so."
“A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools.”

“I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.”
“Let's think the unthinkable, let's do the undoable. Let us prepare to grapple with the ineffable itself, and see if we may not eff it after all.”

“I'd take the awe of understanding over the awe of ignorance any day.”
Read 4 tweets
Jan 17
1/ Our team at @InfiniteL88ps wanted to experiment with the NFT marketplace in order to get a better understanding of how it worked and see if the online auction pace was similar to what we see offline.

We commissioned the artist @cernicageanina to produce the artwork 👇🏻
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As far as the behaviour of the auction, we found it *did* mimic that of
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Read 25 tweets
Jan 15
1/ “A good magic trick forces the spectator to tell a story that arrives at an impossible conclusion, and the clearer the story is, the better.”
~@DerrenBrown
The first job I ever got paid to do was that of a professional magician. I’d loved magic since my early childhood
2/ and badgered my mother to take me to the Eagle Magic Store in Minneapolis almost every Saturday, where I would linger for hours and bug adult magicians to teach me some of the tricks of the trade. Unlike many of my friends who had posters of their favorite bands or
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Read 19 tweets
Jan 14
1/ Recorded a great conversation with @RickDoblin, the Founder and Executive Director of @MAPS, the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies. We were joined by Amy Emerson, the CEO of the MAPS Public Benefit Corporation (MAPS PBC), a wholly-owned subsidiary of @MAPS
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Jan 1
“The ordinary man places his life's happiness in things external to him, in property, rank, wife and children, friends, society, and the like, so that when he loses them or finds them disappointing, the foundation of his happiness is destroyed.”
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In his book "Happy: Why More or Less Everything is Absolutely Fine," @DerrenBrown writes "The vital changes to our happiness do not come from outside circumstances, however appealing they might seem." and our failure to understand this leads many to mount the hedonic treadmill.
He illustrates how many of our desires--things we think will make us happy--are actually chased in order to impress other people, thinking that the approval of these 'other people,' many of whom we don't even know, will lead to happiness for ourselves.
Read 24 tweets

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