With no explanation, label text_A→text_B with either "DON'T KNOW", "NO" or "YES".
text_A: The avant-garde art world has made deliberate attempts to challenge the Mona Lisa's popularity. Because of the painting's overwhelming stature, Dadaists and Surrealists often produce modifications and caricatures. In 1883, "Le rire," an image of a "Mona Lisa" smoking a pipe, by Sapeck (Eugène Bataille), was shown at the "Incoherents" show in Paris. In 1919, Marcel Duchamp, one of the most influential modern artists, created "L.H.O.O.Q.", a "Mona Lisa" parody made by adorning a cheap reproduction with a moustache and goatee. Duchamp added an inscription, which when read out loud in French sounds like "Elle a chaud au cul" meaning: "she has a hot ass", implying the woman in the painting is in a state of sexual excitement and intended as a Freudian joke. According to Rhonda R. Shearer, the apparent reproduction is in fact a copy partly modelled on Duchamp's own face.
text_B: If these avant-garde artists had instead lived many decades later, in the age of search engines, would they have mixed feelings about the continuing popularity of the Mona Lisa because they a.) viewed it as undeserving, but b.) saw the chance to get more visibility for their own works alongside vanilla search queries?
YES.