I know. But speculation and opinion pieces by people in the art world are a dime a dozen & are not evidence that the entirety of human history and culture thinks and believes arts and crafts are lame because women do them. I also didn't say that women and their interests are not looked down upon by society - I said that in times of less prosperity and safety arts and crafts will be discarded because they are not as important as security, food and shelter. Not because it's a "woman's thing". Arts are disposable and are worth only what somebody is willing to pay for them, and people know this. This is just logical fact and is nothing to do with sexism. Some people may look down on them because women do them, but men also do them, and on the whole this is not why arts are not considered "important".
I am not dismissive of the term Patriarchy but the phrase "because Patriarchy" I see used often to assert that a patriarchy exists and always has existed for the sole purpose of screwing women over to the benefit of men, and use it as an excuse for everything. I added that patriarchal societies screw everyone over, including men, and that there are likely many reasons behind why women were less represented in the arts beside mustache-twirling Patriarchs. Historically it was difficult for anybody to get into the arts unless they were part of a family business having done it for generations, or managed to snag a rich patron. Usually the church or a royal family for things like painting and jewelry making and would have been subject to the whims and tastes of the patron. Being an artist or artisan in Michelangelo's or Mozart's time was not so flattering as today. It was considered menial work and creativity took a back seat to the patron's demands most of the time. When you look into it, it's not surprising only the most gifted or determined people tended to stick it out as a profession, and those born into it had little choice.
Also, what? Who dismissed your personal experiences? What I countered was your assertions about 'Patriarchy' preventing women ever being celebrated as artists, but I'm sure you were not around in the historical past so me talking about that, or about society at large, hardly dismisses your personal experiences. I wasn't talking about your career, is that what you find offensive? I don't believe I said anything that was personally offensive or dismissive.
I am not denying men historically held more professions and recognitions, but as I said those were tougher times when people's lives were typically short, women had many children early and men had to work to support them. There are logical reasons why women weren't in the workplace in such numbers, and therefore why there were less professionally recognized artistic women; only as quality of life and longevity of life have improved have both men and women been freed from rigid roles and divisions of labor. And that's not really because some 'Patriarchy' concocted it... it's because biology shackled women with having children and men with providing for them, and both with the burden of doing it in order to be seen as productive members of their society. Then women being frowned upon for wanting to be artists not mothers, and men being frowned on for wanting to do the same and not being lucrative workers would come in. It's less some mass-organized evil scheme to keep women from ever doing anything 'great' and more just the unfortunate state of human biology. That's where sexism itself ultimately comes from.
And if you want proof of that, look at the developed world. Women can be artists, can become recognized, and likely outnumber men in the field now. The necessity of procreating in a harsh world is not there anymore, and they are not 'held back' as artists/artisans. I can see that with my own eyes.