Tip of the Berg

@tipoftheberg

cogitationes et preces
Followers
91
Following
70
Account Insight
Score
16.1%
Index
Health Rate
%
Users Ratio
1:1
Weeks posts
There is a sadness settling over contemporary culture that people keep mistaking for sophistication. Everywhere you look: smoothness. Professionalism. Correct lighting. Correct politics. Correct ambiguity. Correct scale. Correct references. An entire managerial class of culture producers endlessly metabolizing risk into atmosphere. Nothing bleeds. Nothing sweats. Nothing truly desires. Because desire is inefficient. The city itself no longer permits it. Real estate has accomplished what censorship never could. It has rendered genuine experimentation economically irrational. You can still make difficult work, of course. You just can’t place it anywhere without immediately feeling the pressure of financial gravity acting against it. Everything must justify its footprint now. Every room must produce. Every gesture must circulate. Every deviation from market legibility arrives carrying debt inside it. And so culture folds inward. It becomes self-protective. Administrated. Curated into obedience by overhead. The tragedy is that most artists are not cowards. They are exhausted organisms adapting intelligently to hostile conditions. I include myself in this. I earn my living building things for artists I care about. Frames. Walls. Structures. Support systems. The invisible architecture surrounding the object. Somehow through this strange arrangement I ended up with access to a large industrial space in Los Angeles. And lately I’ve become increasingly unable to tolerate the idea of using it responsibly. Not because I think I have solutions. I don’t. But because I would rather watch something fail catastrophically from excessive ambition than continue participating in this endless regime of tasteful caution masquerading as cultural seriousness. At minimum I would like to create temporary conditions where people can think dangerously again. Where embarrassment is again possible. Where contradiction is allowed to remain unresolved. Where conversation escapes optimization. Where difficult work is not immediately anesthetized by market fluency and career management. I am not looking for audiences. I am looking for accomplices. @tipoftheberg #contemporaryart
77 17
2 days ago
“Art is not a mirror held up to reality but a hammer with which to shape it” -Bertolt Brecht Photo of work by Darren Bader @moses_hosiery
45 4
2 days ago
0 3
3 months ago
We’re building out a new space in the warehouse to kick back—just a little—against what’s happening out there. You feel it every time you step into an art event. Something is off. At some point, meaning stopped being something we shared and became something we privately negotiated. That wasn’t an accident. When meaning floats, power doesn’t have to argue with you—it just has to outlast you. Here’s the trick: if anything can mean anything, then nothing has to mean anything. Responsibility evaporates. Position disappears. Community collapses into vibes. Decades ago, institutions figured this out. Certain kinds of art weren’t supported because they were radical, but because they couldn’t be pinned down. Work that refuses to say what it means is easy to circulate, easy to sanitize, easy to sell as “freedom” while staying politically harmless. You don’t censor it. You just let it hang there. Now you don’t even need that machinery. Algorithmic capitalism does the job faster and cheaper. Platforms don’t care what you make—only that you keep making it. They don’t suppress meaning; they drown it. Speed over touch. Reach over risk. Everything becomes content. Community becomes “engagement.” Artists are expected to survive in cities where rent alone costs five grand a month, selling work into a system that mathematically can’t support them. So people get scared. Edges soften. They stop saying what they see. They call access “community” and gratitude “politics.” That’s not a failure of character. It’s a pressure system doing exactly what it’s designed to do. Look at David’s painting of Marat: a body, a wound, a position taken in public. No ambiguity. It didn’t float. It landed. People knew what it was saying—whether they agreed or not. That kind of clarity terrifies systems that live off blur. This show isn’t here to fix that. It’s here to refuse it. A room. Real work. Real bodies. Community over commodity. Everything else is drift. Bring the failures. The experiments. The shit that would turn JD Vance’s stomach. Unregulated hang of small works. Very soon. . @tipoftheberg
79 10
3 months ago
Los Angeles doesn’t have an art scene. It has a market. .. not proposing an alternative here.. ..merely testing resistance. 📍 Los Angeles #losangelesart #contemporaryart #antimarket #artistdriven #projectspace notagallery
31 3
4 months ago