Well, I count a large exhibit at the Clark, which is one of the premier art museums in the US, as indicating it worked fine in that particular case
. What you're referring to is that the eye goes to bright and high contrast material. That suggests that most of us, most of the time, should avoid bright or high contrast material on edges, but it doesn't mean that artists can never successfully use bright areas on edges. Another artist who violated this rule is Olivia Parker, who was a successful and remarkably creative photographer. (The story is that Ansel Adams disparaged selenium half toning until he saw Parker's. He then invited her to teach with him, which she did for years.)
My mother, who at one point in her life was a musician, said something apropos, although about music. When I was young and had just discovered jazz (she was a classical musician), I had a conversation with her about musicians breaking the rules. Her reply: you need to know the rules to break them successfully.