Comparatively few people care for art at all, and most of them care for it because they mistake it for something else.
—Arthur Symons
Recent attitudes toward art have thrust what has traditionally been known as high art into the shade, and placed its admirers on the defensive. While this situation is sensed as a unique crisis by many, it is in fact the continuation of a long development. The apparent threat is considerably ameliorated by the fact that high art continues to be made and that history suggests that it will, by the reverse of Gresham’s law that has always characterized it, triumph in the end. Good art has never failed to drive out bad by the sheer staying power of its aesthetic—that is to say, emotional—conviction.
Art that is less good has tended to capture general attention quickly and easily at least since the time of the French Revolution, when the first glimmerings of the change that was to produce modernism were to be seen. Never before now has such art been so noisily victorious, however. In part this is due to the growth and sophistication of the processes of publicity. In larger part, it is due to the tremendous increase in an affluent and more or less well-educated audience, particularly in the United States. This audience consumes painting and sculpture in ever greater quantities. It does this from traditional motives of status, and probably from the unconscious realization that, despite the secularization of