Wow, I am thrilled to discover that when I develop my ideas a bit more I'll have you guys to bounce them off. The Bourdieu scholars I hope to consult will be sympathetic towards Bourdieu, so it will be good to be able to tap into more critical positions (I believe Jonathan is in that camp too).
Rahsaan, I often wonder about the homogenizing effect of television, magazines, widely-read novels and self-help books, and now the internet. When people lived in greater cultural isolation from each other, I imagine there was much more idiosyncrasy. Thanks to technology, we increasingly drink from the same fountains, and our differences will probably become increasingly due to differing temperaments rather than different cultural baggages. My Bourdieu idea is still very raw, but if it comes to pass, I promise to be an equal opportunity exploiter/demeaner. I'll try not to be patronizing to the rich guy.
Joel, the checklists I tried to send you (your mailbox was full) are for this show only, which shows about 5% of the collection. Over the coming year I intend to develop complete files on each work, with all the info you mention, inc. provenance, price paid, etc. Guest curators are definitely in the cards. Your idea of developing a domesticity component in the Bourdieu idea is messy but fascinating! I can be a little anal sometimes, so anything that subverts that helps me. But I can't chose you: I need an everyman in each category, and, sorry, you have given ample evidence that you ain't. But there will be always be a cot or glass of it waiting for you here.
Steven, I will keep your position in mind when I do my research. Bourdieu's ideas would probably have a harder time without relying on class distinctions, and that is precisely where the crux of my interest lies. Despite my exhibition idea, I don't care so much about the difference in taste between the rich, the middle class, and the poor. The idea has the advantage of methodological clarity, but I am actually more interested in how taste might be a marker within subsections of single class. If one lived in an essentially classless society (perhaps a country like Iceland is close to qualifying), where everyone has access to the same information, there would still be differences in taste. What would these mean, if anything, is the more difficult area that interests me. Like what makes one middle class teenager a nerd and his next door neighbor a goth and the next one a jock, and how these organize into groups, and joust on the battlefield of esthetics.