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Fame as an Illusion of Creativity: Evidence from the Pioneers of Abstract Art

Author

Listed:
  • Banerjee Mitali

    (HEC Paris - Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales)

  • Paul Ingram

Abstract

We build a social structural model of fame, which departs from the atomistic view of prior literature where creativity is the sole driver of fame in creative markets. We test the model in a significant empirical context: 90 pioneers of the early 20th century (1910–25) abstract art movement. We find that an artist in a brokerage rather than a closure position was likely to become more famous. This effect was not, however, associated with the artist's creativity, which we measured using both objective computational methods and subjective expert evaluations, and which was not itself related to fame. Rather than creativity, brokerage networks were associated with cosmopolitan identities—broker's alters were likely to differ more from each other's nationalities--and this was the key social-structural driver of fame.

Suggested Citation

  • Banerjee Mitali & Paul Ingram, 2020. "Fame as an Illusion of Creativity: Evidence from the Pioneers of Abstract Art," Working Papers hal-02895931, HAL.
  • Handle: RePEc:hal:wpaper:hal-02895931
    DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3258318
    as

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