Think about this, though: cultural appropriation, which is indeed a basis for much art, is a problem when it reduces the ability of some artists to get their (perhaps more authentic) work before and accepted by the broader public. Quoting Lauren Michelle Jackson’s brief article “When We Talk About Cultural Appropriation, We Should Be Talking About Power”:
[Most] discussions about appropriation have been limited to debates about freedom and choice, when [we] should be [dissecting] power. The act of cultural transport is not in itself an ethical dilemma. Appropriation can often be a means of social and political repair…. And yet. When the powerful appropriate from the oppressed, society’s imbalances are exacerbated and inequalities prolonged.
Art production should certainly celebrate and question the influences on the artist: how could it not? However, when the borrowing is from – and especially in – the voices, images, or styles of others, those others and their paths need to be acknowledged in ways that lead the listener, viewer, or reader to seek their work and their stories.