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Originally posted by Skyfloating
reply to post by krossfyter
This is my experience too. The right-winger doesnt really understand art. He's too dumb to understand art. And the left-winger doesnt really understand beauty. he's too hate-filled to understand beauty. Hence you have Nazis destroying good art,and left-wingers worshipping excrement (as seen in this thread).
Modern (or old) art, like all other things, has the monetary value that people want to give it.
Originally posted by mblahnikluver
I could never understand how something so simple could be worth millions. Personally modern art and modern architecture are boring.
The fact that people are prepared to pay large amounts of money for it, just that.
I always wondered what makes something so simple worth so much money.
Hitler was an artist himself, although not that good.
Originally posted by niv
The Nazi's were notorious art lovers and routinely stole the best art they came across.
Originally posted by White Haven
... all that guy did was painting vibrant colorful stripes, but WHO made him so popular...or why is not every 1st grader considered an artist?
The dictum by Gombrich, in the introduction of his well-known The Story of Art , is perhaps less “clear” than it may appear at first. To apparently "shift" the problematic of art from objects, categories and processes to the agent, the producer, does not eliminate the need to clarify the concept “art” itself.
For it is evident that the artist, as a producer, is defined by his product. An artist is somebody who makes art. To identify the artist we must be able “first” to tell, to identify, to know the artistic product, therefore to say both what is art and what art “is”.
There are only artists on display. Through their work, they are revealed. So, when we value art, we are really putting value onto the artist themselves.
To me, yes.
Originally posted by Spiramirabilis
so, if an artist works in complete isolation - and nothing he produces ever sees the light of day - is it still art?
edit to add: or rather - are they still an artist?
They become an artist after they've died and then been discovered. Case in point, Henry Darger, a janitor whose work wasn't discovered until they cleaned out his apartment after he died.
Originally posted by Spiramirabilis
so, if an artist works in complete isolation - and nothing he produces ever sees the light of day - is it still art?
No, it has to exist in any form, so the artist can interact with it in the same way other people will, so it has to pass the thought-only phase.
Originally posted by Spiramirabilis
my thinking - what if you do it all in your head?
still art - still an artist?
We don't have to agree. At what point do you say "it's cold" or "it's hot"? Not only that changes from person to person, it also changes according to your state of mind, so what you find cold once you may find hot in other circumstances, the same happening with art or any other thing that needs our interpretation to exist.
intent, artist/audience participation and appreciation - comprehension, imagination - what all goes into establishing that something is art?
how do we agree what is and isn't art?
No, it has to exist in any form, so the artist can interact with it in the same way other people will, so it has to pass the thought-only phase.
We don't have to agree.
At what point do you say "it's cold" or "it's hot"? Not only that changes from person to person, it also changes according to your state of mind, so what you find cold once you may find hot in other circumstances, the same happening with art or any other thing that needs our interpretation to exist.
The idea is valid, but as it was not created, it was only imagined, I don't think that can be considered art.
Originally posted by Spiramirabilis
if I can visualize the painting I want to create in my head - but then never go on to actually paint it - is the idea any less valid because I've got nothing to show for my effort?
It has to get to our senses.
how tangible does an idea have to be to be considered art?
Yes, like all things related to our senses. I may not like (and I probably wouldn't, if it's artificial) what someone may think is a wonderful perfume. I may find irritating some sound that other people think calm, etc.
you see? all conditional, subjective, personal - it needs our interpretation to exist
That's the problem that appears with the translation of written works, specially poems. When you are translating something into something that can be interpreted by people that were otherwise unable of interpreting it, you become part of the problem, so you may destroy an artistic piece or you may create a new, even better, one.
if I describe a painting to someone who's blind - where does the art start or stop?
The audience always receives the last messenger's message. That's why looking at 600 pixels wide image on a computer screen is not the same thing as looking at a real painting.
who's message is the audience receiving then?
Wouldn't the description to the blind person then be the true art, though literary? There are many ways to describe a painting. One could say "I put some dazzling blue next to a vivid red" or one could say "I put one pigment next to another pigment." Each equally describes the painting but one conveys more "art" than the other.