
In Part 2 of the Hilde Lynn Helphenstein (Jerry Gogosian) conversation, the discussion turns raw, vulnerable, and deeply structural. Hilde speaks candidly about burnout, public vilification, online pile-ons, and the emotional cost of living as a persona inside an unforgiving attention economy. She describes losing followers overnight, being labeled with extreme political accusations, and watching the art world take visible pleasure in her public failures while remaining silent during her successes.
She recounts the personal toll of constant media exposure, professional pressure, and economic precarity: marriage collapse, total exhaustion, and a year-long withdrawal from work following multiple suicide attempts. Jerry, she explains, has evolved from a meme engine into a living, walking performance — where even the most banal moments of daily life become content whether she wants them to or not. The episode confronts what it means to live as a meme in a broken matrix of attention, validation, and misrecognition.
The conversation pivots into economics and geography. Drawing on her business school training, Hilde walks through quantitative tightening, interest rates, the collapse of NFTs and crypto, and the bursting of the 2022 speculative bubble. She frames art explicitly as a Veblen good — a luxury asset that fails first when the economy tightens. She argues forcefully that New York is no longer an artist city, but a financialized transaction hub. Instead, she advocates for artists to relocate to affordable cities like Chicago or even small towns, building localized collector bases rather than chasing validation from elite centers.
What emerges is a sharp, pragmatic model of survival: cultivate 12 lifelong collectors, embrace regional ecosystems, make work for people you actually live with, and stop imagining museum permanence as the only measure of success. Hilde rejects the mythology of infinite institutional validation, arguing instead for circulation, use, disposal, and lived attachment. The episode closes on the tension between speculation and sustainability, between global markets and local communities, and between career branding and genuine artistic life.
Hilde Lynn Helphenstein / Jerry Gogosian
https://www.instagram.com/jerrygogosian/
New Art Dealers Alliance
https://www.newartdealers.org/
John Waters
https://www.johnwaters.com/
Peaches (musician/performer)
https://peachesmusic.net/
Beeple (Mike Winkelmann)
https://www.beeple-crap.com/
Maurizio Cattelan
https://www.guggenheim.org/artwork/artist/maurizio-cattelan
Brice Marden
https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/brice-marden-1577
Magnus Resch
https://www.magnusresch.com/
Pace Gallery
https://www.pacegallery.com/
Roxy Theatre, San Francisco (The Roxie)
https://roxie.com/
Soho House
https://www.sohohouse.com/
Ice Palace Studios, Miami (Art Fair Venue)
https://www.icepalacestudios.com/
New York MTA (Metropolitan Transportation Authority)
https://new.mta.info/
Federal Reserve (The Fed)
https://www.federalreserve.gov/
Whitney Museum of American Art
https://whitney.org/
Chicago, IL
https://www.choosechicago.com/
New York City, NY
https://www.nyc.gov/
Dahlonega, Georgia
https://www.dahlonega.org/
Miami Beach, FL
https://www.miamibeachfl.gov/
Basel, Switzerland
https://www.basel.com/en
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