Last week I wrote about expertise and how it sometimes kills creativity. About being uninhibited as a beginner (or possible just naive) can lead to breakthrough creativity. But there's another side to this story.
The audience.
You and me.
The people consuming all this art, music, writing, and creativity. We play a bigger role in this dynamic than we might realize.
We Forgive the Amateur What We Punish in the Professional
Think about Nirvana's first album "Bleach." I’ve heard it was recorded for just $600 at a local studio in Seattle. By traditional standards of professionally produced albums, it was rough, unpolished, and imperfect. But those imperfections weren't just tolerated: they became part of its charm. The fuzzy guitars, Kurt's vocals, and the raw “garage-y” production contributed to its authenticity. Critics and fans (including high school me) loved these qualities because it felt real.
We don't just tolerate these imperfections. We celebrate them.
We call them "authentic." "Raw." "Honest."
Now imagine if Adele released an album tomorrow with the same technical flaws. The internet would explode with criticism. At best, people would try to find deep meaning to why a polished performer would put something out so unrefined. And if the answer wasn’t satisfactory, the reviews would be merciless. The industry would question if she had lost her touch, and social media would overflow with hot takes about her decline.
The double standard is striking (and it affects how artists evolve).
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The Romance of the Untrained
We have a cultural fascination with untrained genius. The high school dropout who codes a revolutionary app. The brilliant outsider artist discovered living in isolation. The musician who "never learned to read music" but plays by ear.
These stories captivate me far more than the ones about diligent practice and methodical improvement. There's something really irresistible about natural talent unfettered by convention. It feels magical. And I love re-telling these anecdotes to my kids and other people that need inspiration.
The Beginner's Hall Pass
When someone is just starting out, audiences grant them an unofficial permission slip to experiment. "It's their first novel," we say. "Can you believe it?" The very fact of being new becomes part of what we're evaluating.
We don't just judge the work. We judge it “relative to experience level”.
This creates a strange window of opportunity for creators. A brief moment when bold choices are not just allowed but expected. But this window closes fast.
By the second album, the second novel, the second collection, audiences start applying different standards. They expect growth. Refinement. Maturation.
And paradoxically, they often mourn the very rawness they pushed the artist to move beyond.
The Career Death Spiral
This audience dynamic creates a predictable trajectory for many artists:
* Early work: Praised for freshness and originality despite technical limitations.
* Middle work: Technical skills improve, but audience begins to miss the "original spark."
* Later work: Artist either continues refining toward technical perfection (and gets labeled "too polished") or deliberately tries to recapture early rawness (and gets accused of "trying too hard to be authentic").
It's a no-win situation (and our contradictory expectations are partly to blame). The latitude for risk-taking shrinks with success.
Amplifying the Paradox
Professional critics make this situation even worse. They're trained to identify innovation and technical excellence simultaneously. An impossible standard.
They praise a debut for "breaking all the rules" then criticize the follow-up for "not showing growth." And their opinions shape public reception in powerful ways.
They become the voice saying, "Yes, but" to whatever choice an artist makes.
But also early adopters make things bad too. I admit that I am like this: especially for music. In the 90’s this was the most apparent when I just couldn’t get into Radiohead’s OK Computer when others who may have not followed them since Pablo Honey found it so revolutionary. I wanted more of the Bends but OK Computer’s artistic vision and departure from the previous style was too much for me to jump on to.
By all measures, OK Computer is not only a fantastic album musically, their evolution of sound and constant re-invention throughout their body of work is the true measure of creativity!
The Liberation of Obscurity
There's a freedom that comes with being unknown. With having no audience expectations to fulfill. No critics analyzing your evolution. No fans demanding you recapture past magic.
This is why some established artists release work under pseudonyms. Why authors switch genres using different names. Why musicians form side projects with deliberately limited audiences. They're trying to recreate that beginner's hall pass. That freedom from the weight of reception.
Imagine if in the 90’s Garth Brooks just released a rock album instead of under the not-so-secret pseudonym, Chris Gaines? Would your opinion of him change?
Finding Balance in the Paradox
So what can we do with these ideas? As creators, maybe we need to just tune out audience reaction and criticism. This is a lot easier said than done. Or maybe we just need to remember that reception often has more to do with the audience's relationship to our journey than to the work itself.
As audience members, we might try to be more consistent in how we evaluate art. To ask whether we're holding different artists to different standards based on their stories rather than their work. To consider whether we're part of the pressure that stifles the very originality we claim to value.
The Human Thread of Reception and Creation
In last week’s post, I explored the tension between expertise and creativity. Now I see that tension exists not just within the artist but in the space between artist and audience.
Have you noticed this paradox in how you respond to art? Do you find yourself judging beginners and experts by different standards? Have you felt the weight of expectations change how you create or share your own work?
I'd love to hear your experiences with this. In the end, we're all both creators and audience members in this great conversation.
The Human Thread weaves ideas worth sharing. To receive new essays and join our growing community, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Your support makes these explorations possible.