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paintingshould

Paintingshould is a neologism used in contemporary art discourse to describe the normative claims critics and artists make about what painting ought to be or accomplish. It frames evaluation and expectation as explicit conditions that painting might meet, rather than as purely descriptive observations of what is currently seen on canvas.

The term appears in online essays, curatorial notes, and artist statements from the early 2020s onward, where

Core themes associated with paintingshould include materiality and process, the tension between abstraction and representation, the

As a concept, paintingshould sits at the intersection of painting theory, debates about autonomy and context,

discussions
about
the
place
of
painting
in
a
digitized,
AI-influenced
visual
culture
are
prominent.
It
is
not
an
established
movement
or
school,
but
a
rhetorical
tool
used
to
examine
how
painting
should
respond
to
technical
innovations,
social
topics,
and
shifts
in
audience
engagement.
role
of
painting
in
relation
to
digital
media,
and
the
ethical
dimensions
of
depiction.
Proponents
might
argue
that
painting
should
retain
a
distinct
hand
or
tactility,
address
time
and
slowness,
or
participate
in
public
and
political
discourse.
Critics,
by
contrast,
caution
that
normative
claims
can
constrain
experimentation
or
privilege
certain
aesthetics
over
others.
and
the
broader
postdigital
art
landscape.
It
is
primarily
used
as
a
framework
for
critique
rather
than
a
codified
doctrine,
inviting
ongoing
discussion
about
what
painting
ought
to
be
in
a
rapidly
evolving
visual
culture.
See
also
contemporary
painting,
art
criticism,
and
normativity
in
art.