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Old 11-25-2003, 05:53 AM   #81 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Mr Mephisto
I advise you, with all due respect, to actually familiarize yourself with an artist before making sweeping generalizations about him and his work.
I do respect your love of art Mr Mephisto, it rivals my love of music. therefore, because i have no knowledge of visual art, i will make my arguement using music as my example. if i create a piece of music, i believe it to be a representation of myself. i dont think people who hear it need to listen to my other composistions to understand what my whole motive for making music is.

it must be the same with visual art. and as far as this art goes, i hate it. its just my opinion. no big deal. in fact, i think its so bad that no arguement can make me think otherwise or find any significance in it. the man mixed some colors together to make one color and put it on a canvas. i think that is, for lack of a better word, lame. if that was his intent then great. although i cant see this man (or any artist) getting satisfaction out of people not liking his work.
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Old 11-25-2003, 12:00 PM   #82 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by costello
I do respect your love of art Mr Mephisto, it rivals my love of music. therefore, because i have no knowledge of visual art, i will make my arguement using music as my example. if i create a piece of music, i believe it to be a representation of myself. i dont think people who hear it need to listen to my other composistions to understand what my whole motive for making music is.

it must be the same with visual art. and as far as this art goes, i hate it. its just my opinion. no big deal. in fact, i think its so bad that no arguement can make me think otherwise or find any significance in it. the man mixed some colors together to make one color and put it on a canvas. i think that is, for lack of a better word, lame. if that was his intent then great. although i cant see this man (or any artist) getting satisfaction out of people not liking his work.
Well said and duly noted.

But it's still "art", if you will! :-)

Personally, I can't stand heavy metal ("thrash metal") or some of the "ghetto" rap music you hear. I don't like a lot of the R&B that seems to clog the charts these days either.

My preference? I would prefer to sit down and listen to a Miles Davis record, or perhaps something by Chopin. Quite a difference from Regurgitator as you can see.

But I don't say "That's not music!".

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Old 11-25-2003, 09:14 PM   #83 (permalink)
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but that song isnt just one note... prolonged.. ive never heard a song like that... it would be dead air... not music... or a system test
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Old 11-25-2003, 10:15 PM   #84 (permalink)
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I find this a piece of art. I wouldn't call it a "work" of art, but it's a piece. Call me nutty, but I tend to find beauty in almost everything from the veins of a leaf to an empty evening lit street. I'd be interested to see the piece in person, with something like this I would hope that if you got up close and personal with it you'd noticed slightly different textures, maybe even brush strokes.

That's where I think the real art would lie. How did the piece come to life, sometimes if you watch how the strokes of a painting unfold, even a simple painting like this, you get to delve a little into the mind of the creator. Dunno, call me a fucking nut, but that's what I find interesting about people's art, get a fun reflection of their personality, and possibly even get to ponder things for yourself too.

The fact that people have to ask if it's art or not makes it art to me. I would never buy a blue canvas, or even paint one and put it in my home. I'd rather just paint the whole wall. But then again, I'm a nut with a mutlishaded room and a painting of the crab nebula on my ceiling (was a pain in the ass to do, but worth it).
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Old 11-26-2003, 08:24 AM   #85 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by jvwgtr
Arguing that Klein's painting isn't art because he used only one color -- and you could duplicate the work in mere seconds -- is like insisting that INSERT BAND NAME HERE's work isn't music because they only use three chords, and your five-year-old can play it on his Fisher Price guitar.

I have yet to hear a successful musician that made an entire song with a single note. Even three chords can be used to convey something. One note cannot in my opinion unless your point is "le vide" .I know you were using it as an example, but I don't think most 5 year olds could play a three chord song in correct time, but any child with hands can take electric blue and cover a canvas with it. Any child under supervision could set a canvas on fire. I guess I just expect more from visual art than gimmicks. Is that elitist? Maybe so, but it's my belief on this subject.

Gotta go now. I'm a little broke this week and I'm gonna piss in a jar and stick a crucifix in it to make some cash. Gotta practice my pretentiousness to appear genuine tho.
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Old 11-26-2003, 01:33 PM   #86 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Holo
Gotta go now. I'm a little broke this week and I'm gonna piss in a jar and stick a crucifix in it to make some cash. Gotta practice my pretentiousness to appear genuine tho.
LOL

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Old 11-26-2003, 01:55 PM   #87 (permalink)
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I don't see this as art. Everyone could make this.
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Old 11-26-2003, 05:11 PM   #88 (permalink)
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It is art. in fact i love his work. and don't even get me started on Pollock. Besides MC Escher, i think Pollock, to me, is the most artistically and mathmatically inspiring artist. Pollock was able to create fractal like image and share his perspection of the world with us. Oh well, i'm going off topics. But i do believe it is art
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Old 11-26-2003, 05:31 PM   #89 (permalink)
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I'm glad someone agrees with me arael!

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Old 11-26-2003, 06:35 PM   #90 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Peetster
I think it's art. Bad art.
sure enough
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Old 11-29-2003, 07:19 PM   #91 (permalink)
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"What is art?" is a question that seems to keep recurring here.

On one level, it is simply a semantic question. The meaning of a word is determined by its usage. Therefore, over time time, we can be a part of deciding what art is.

I like to doodle with shapes and designs. They are not art, but they could be studies for art if I ever took the next step. In my mind, this is an example of a study. The artist "experimented" with this color of his; but he did not make the effort to turn it into art.

I would prefer to call this "design." The blue canvas might look great in a number of settings. Imagine a public room in a modern house with high ceilings and large windows with while walls and furniture with a few primary colors, or maybe just black. This painting would really stand out. Of course it would be better if you had three of them.
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Old 11-29-2003, 08:02 PM   #92 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by jvwgtr
Am I now a music elitist because I like Nirvana, and Mom & Dad don't "get it?"...
The stripped-down exploration of raw sound and emotion of punk and other genres is widely accepted as pushing music to new levels...yet in the visual arts, the masses regard similar work as "crap."
I don't know. I would say there's a mass of people who view Nirvana as crap. So that doesn't make you elitist, just a little silly.

If you like it, it's good for you. That's the bottom line. (I am almost entirely kidding in the previous paragraph. The almost is the hangover from people comparing Cobain to Hendrix simply because he made music and died young.)
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Old 11-29-2003, 11:59 PM   #93 (permalink)
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Poop SEX IS ART!
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Old 11-30-2003, 01:21 AM   #94 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by jam161
but that song isnt just one note... prolonged.. ive never heard a song like that... it would be dead air... not music... or a system test
Quote:
Originally posted by Holo
I have yet to hear a successful musician that made an entire song with a single note.
Modern classical composer John Cage (1912-1992) is perhaps most famous for a piece entitled 4'33" which consists of 4 minutes and 33 seconds of silence (or, perhaps more accurately, the absence of intentional musical sound.) It is a very interesting musical analogue to the subject of this thread.
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Old 11-30-2003, 02:09 AM   #95 (permalink)
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after thinking about this for a while, it occurred to me that maybe we've been talking about (at least) two different kinds of art -- art which is stunning to the senses (like great visual art), and art that's stunning to the mind. does anyone follow me?

you can look at a painting, and just be amazed at the art in it's form. or listen to a tune and think wow that's incredible. or you could consider the blue painting, or listen to 4'33", and think about the effect it has on its audience. while all good art in any form usually has a profound effect on its audience anyway, it seems to me that there's a kind of art that focuses more on the audience, than the actual work of art itself...

Last edited by Fearless_Hyena; 11-30-2003 at 02:13 AM..
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Old 11-30-2003, 03:21 AM   #96 (permalink)
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right, Klein's art is essentially conceptual...
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Old 11-30-2003, 12:36 PM   #97 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Peetster
Far more interesting.

Are those dead frogs being used as stamps???

haha... that is original. and funny. awesome.
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Old 11-30-2003, 01:36 PM   #98 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Fearless_Hyena
after thinking about this for a while, it occurred to me that maybe we've been talking about (at least) two different kinds of art -- art which is stunning to the senses (like great visual art), and art that's stunning to the mind. does anyone follow me?

you can look at a painting, and just be amazed at the art in it's form. or listen to a tune and think wow that's incredible. or you could consider the blue painting, or listen to 4'33", and think about the effect it has on its audience. while all good art in any form usually has a profound effect on its audience anyway, it seems to me that there's a kind of art that focuses more on the audience, than the actual work of art itself...
I think you have a great point. One that I have been struggling to communicate, but that you have described perfectly.

Art does not have to be just "nice pictures" (a la Rembrandt, Whistler, David etc), or even just "impressionistic" (a la Monet, Degas, Pissaro etc).

What about the abstract impressionist art of Pollack? Surely that does not constitute "bad art", does it?

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Old 11-30-2003, 03:34 PM   #99 (permalink)
Insane
 
Re: is this art? ::i hope i just didn't say that outloud::

Quote:
Originally posted by jaker

"Monochrome Bleu"
Yves Klein, 1960
The only art involved with that work of "art" was the con job by the "artist" in convincing the art community that pice of blue was art. It is lame, boring, meaningless, etc....
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Old 11-30-2003, 04:09 PM   #100 (permalink)
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Re: Re: is this art? ::i hope i just didn't say that outloud::

Quote:
Originally posted by phaedrus
The only art involved with that work of "art" was the con job by the "artist" in convincing the art community that pice of blue was art. It is lame, boring, meaningless, etc....
Have you read the entire thread?

If you have, and you still think Klein's work is a "con", let me ask you the following questions.


Do you consider this to be art?


Marcel Duchamp. Fresh Widow. 1920. Miniature window: wood painted blue and eight rectangles of polished leather. 77.5 x 45 cm on a wooden board, 1.9 x 63.3 x 10.2 cm. The Museum of Modern Arts, New York, NY, USA.


What about this?


Jackson Pollack. Cathedral. 1947: Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, Texas, USA.


Perhaps you also consider this a con?


Pablo Picasso. Still life with a pidgeon. 1941. Oil on canvas. Not sure of collection


The whole point here is that should be considered in its context, not simply the paint on the canvas. If that were not the case, artists like Pollack, Picasso, Mastisse, Kandinski, Milo etc would be thought of as simple "scribblers".

One has to consider what the artist is trying to say, what they want to communicate, the medium in which they work etc.

Some art may not appeal. Indeed, I don't like a lot of modern art myself (Damien Hirst is a good example), but that doesn't mean the artist is a con-man.

I don't suppose I will convince you though. :-)


Mr Mephisto

Last edited by Mephisto2; 11-30-2003 at 04:13 PM..
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Old 11-30-2003, 04:57 PM   #101 (permalink)
Insane
 
Re: Re: Re: is this art? ::i hope i just didn't say that outloud::

Quote:
Originally posted by Mr Mephisto
The whole point here is that should be considered in its context, not simply the paint on the canvas. If that were not the case, artists like Pollack, Picasso, Mastisse, Kandinski, Milo etc would be thought of as simple "scribblers".

One has to consider what the artist is trying to say, what they want to communicate, the medium in which they work etc.

Some art may not appeal. Indeed, I don't like a lot of modern art myself (Damien Hirst is a good example), but that doesn't mean the artist is a con-man.
I supposed there are countless ways to examine art. For me there are two that matter. The first is on it's own merits, the second is the context in which it was created.

A cave man's paintings when compared to more sophisticated art (say a Rembrandt), would not so much be art on its own merits? But it is art in the context in which it was created. It was revolutionary. A major progression if you will. But would it be art if a modern (time, not style) artist were to go into a cave and paint a crude cow? My answer is no, yours might be yes. Art is always subjective.

So I look at that piece of blue. And I ask my self is it art on its own merits? I answer, no, it is just blue, a color test at best. Is it art based on the context of the time? No. It was not revolutionary. It was not that original. Perhaps the artist was trying to challenge our notion of art. Perhaps he was protesting war. Who knows, it could mean anything because it says nothing. We want it to have meaning, but it says nothing. So we can accept what the critic or artist say it means or we can stubbornly insist is means nothing because it says nothing. I am stubborn. It means nothing, it says nothing. It is neither pretty nor did it require great skill to make. It is a fraud.

Of course, art is always subjective. To me it is a fraud, to that museum's curator, it is art.

Quote:
Originally posted by Mr Mephisto
I don't suppose I will convince you though. :-)
Correct. Nor will I convince you.
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Old 11-30-2003, 05:36 PM   #102 (permalink)
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Re: Re: Re: Re: is this art? ::i hope i just didn't say that outloud::

Quote:
Originally posted by phaedrus
So I look at that piece of blue. And I ask my self is it art on its own merits? I answer, no, it is just blue, a color test at best.
A particulary vibrant and ultra-marine. One that took years to develop and was considered so unique that a patend was granted.

Quote:
Is it art based on the context of the time? No. It was not revolutionary. It was not that original.
I would contest both of these statements. It was revoluntionary. The movement itself was revolutionary.

Quote:
Perhaps the artist was trying to challenge our notion of art.
EXACTLY! I refer you to the web-pages I mentioned above. I even quoted the artist himself.

Quote:
Perhaps he was protesting war. Who knows, it could mean anything because it says nothing. We want it to have meaning, but it says nothing.
Perhaps to you. But it does "talk" to me. I like it. I don't think it's a masterpiece, but I appreciate it. I like the colour (which our monitors do not do credit). I like the "concept".

Quote:
So we can accept what the critic or artist say it means or we can stubbornly insist is means nothing because it says nothing. I am stubborn. It means nothing, it says nothing. It is neither pretty nor did it require great skill to make. It is a fraud.
Well, I don't mean to be unnecessarily argumentative, but you're actually wrong. It took significant time and effort to create. It does say something - challenging contemporaeous attitudes toward art, colour and content - and it did require skill.

Quote:
Of course, art is always subjective. To me it is a fraud, to that museum's curator, it is art.
...
Nor will I convince you.
:-) Indeed.

Actually, I can understand your position. It's just that I disagree. But I enjoy the debate none the less! \

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Old 11-30-2003, 08:21 PM   #103 (permalink)
Insane
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: is this art? ::i hope i just didn't say that outloud::

Quote:
Originally posted by Mr Mephisto
A particulary vibrant and ultra-marine. One that took years to develop and was considered so unique that a patend was granted.
I did not know you could get a patent for a color. That seems odd to me. Is this something that is normally done by paint companies? Is the color protected or just the method of making that exact color?
Quote:
Originally posted by Mr Mephisto
Well, I don't mean to be unnecessarily argumentative, but you're actually wrong. It took significant time and effort to create. It does say something - challenging contemporaeous attitudes toward art, colour and content - and it did require skill.
Time and effort do not equal skill, and skill at mixing colors is not what I would consider artistic skill, but a craftsman's skill.

Last edited by phaedrus; 11-30-2003 at 08:23 PM..
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Old 11-30-2003, 09:33 PM   #104 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by jvwgtr
Arguing that Klein's painting isn't art because he used only one color -- and you could duplicate the work in mere seconds -- is like insisting that INSERT BAND NAME HERE's work isn't music because they only use three chords, and your five-year-old can play it on his Fisher Price guitar.
I might be able to learn the chords to "Smells Like Teen Spirit", and I could definitely learn the words, but no matter how hard I tried, it wouldn't be Nirvana.

This blue square on the other hand, I could duplicate perfectly without any art training whatsoever.
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Old 11-30-2003, 10:44 PM   #105 (permalink)
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: is this art? ::i hope i just didn't say that outloud::

Quote:
Originally posted by phaedrus
I did not know you could get a patent for a color. That seems odd to me. Is this something that is normally done by paint companies? Is the color protected or just the method of making that exact color?
Many paint making companies do in fact patent "productized" colours. However, you're right that a specific colour itself cannot be patented.

To add fuel to the fire, so to speak, let me quote what the Tate Modern gallery itself has to say about this work, and more generally Klein himself.

Quote:
IKB 79 was one of nearly two hundred blue monochrome paintings Yves Klein made during his short life. He began making monochromes in 1947, considering them to be a way of rejecting the idea of representation in painting and therefore of attaining creative freedom. Although it is difficult to date many of these works precisely, the early ones have an uneven surface, whereas later ones, such as the present work, are finer and more uniform in texture. Klein did not give titles to these works but after his death in 1962, his widow Rotraut Klein-Moquay numbered all the known blue monochromes IKB 1 to IKB 194, a sequence which did not reflect their chronological order. Since then further examples have been identified and these have also been given IKB numbers. In 1974 Rotraut Klein-Moquay wrote to Tate saying that she was fairly certain that IKB 79 was one of about four monochrome paintings Klein made when they were together at Gelsenkirchen, West Germany in 1959.

The letters IKB stand for International Klein Blue, a distinctive ultramarine which Klein registered as a trademark colour in 1957. He considered that this colour had a quality close to pure space and he associated it with immaterial values beyond what can be seen or touched. The announcement card for his one-man exhibition at the Galleria Apollinaire, Milan in 1957 described IKB as 'a Blue in itself, disengaged from all functional justification' (quoted in Stich, p.81). By this time Klein had arrived at a means of painting in which the incandescence of IKB could be maximised. First he stretched his canvas or cotton scrim over a wooden backing, which had been treated with a milk protein called casein. This assisted the adherence of the paint when it was applied with a roller. Then he applied an industrial blue paint, similar to gouache, which he mixed with a highly volatile fixative. When the paint dried the pigment appeared to hover over the surface of the canvas creating a rich velvety texture and an unusual appearance of depth.

Many of Klein's artistic activities, such as selling zones of 'immaterial' space for the price of gold, trod a fine line between shamanism and commercialism. Like other artists of the Nouveau Réaliste movement in France, or the Italian artist Piero Manzoni (1933-1963), Klein's practice was strongly influenced by the originality, irreverence and wit of the French artist Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968). The production of monochrome paintings was probably conceived by Klein as both a spiritual and a marketable activity. At his 1957 exhibition in Milan, he displayed a series of eleven ostensibly identical blue monochromes, each with a different price which he claimed reflected its unique spirit. As he explained: 'Each blue world of each painting, although the same blue and treated in the same way, presented a completely different essence and atmosphere. None resembled any other - no more than pictoral moments resemble each other - although all were of the same superior and subtle nature (marked by the immaterial) ? The most sensational observation was from the "buyers". They chose among the eleven exhibited paintings, each in their own way, and each paid the requested price. The prices were all different, of course.' (quoted in Stich, pp.86-7.)

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Old 12-01-2003, 01:50 PM   #106 (permalink)
Insane
 
That is an interesting read, while it does not influence my position, it does make me think. 200 pieces of blue! Wow.
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Old 12-01-2003, 02:55 PM   #107 (permalink)
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perhaps its already been said and i missed it, but one of the ideals of art is to evoke an emotion in the viewer, i'd say after reading this thread, that did happen. Artists often generate pieces to do this.

art is defined simply as using the imagination to express a feeling or idea, blue for me can definetely be a feeling
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Old 12-01-2003, 02:58 PM   #108 (permalink)
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It's not art. I could do that and hang it on my wall.
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Old 12-01-2003, 03:11 PM   #109 (permalink)
Junkie
 
So Capt.JamesHook, what you are saying is that you feel you are incapable of producing art yourself?

Interesting...

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Old 12-02-2003, 05:49 AM   #110 (permalink)
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I'm tired of seeing these hacks under this modern art guise get recognition for what anyone could do. I have to wonder where the talent is. No, I can't make art. Go look at the works of Vincent Van Gogh and return when you realize what talent is.
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Old 12-02-2003, 09:45 AM   #111 (permalink)
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no thats not art in any way shape or form. thats just a color. thats what someone does when they cant think of what to paint.
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Old 12-02-2003, 11:10 PM   #112 (permalink)
Junkie
 
Location: North Hollywood
Van Gogh only ever sold one painting during his life, so he himself was a failure as a commercial artist, in the modern day hes considered to be one of the best artists of all time.

Yet during his life he was treated badly, and had a pretty horrible existance.

Of course art isn't defined as something thats sold, but commercial art is obviously, and he did try to do that, originally as an art dealer and later as an artist.

I've often heard people say that arts rubbish and they could do it themselves, but of course they end up missing the point of the piece. Theres a TV show on BBC called "faking it" where one episode takes a painter and decorator and attempts to turn him into an artist in four weeks, to fool a panel of judges that hes been doing it for years.

He too starts off with the notion that pieces he doesn't understand are rubbish, of course eventually when he learns art appreciation he sees it in a different light, he then went on to become a sucessful conceptual artist himself, some of his pieces I could definetely see people saying, i could do that, as many say about other artists such as pollock etc, but thats not the point.

He looked at damien hirsts work as something he did everyday, as a painter and decorator who traps flys and other insects in paint, but thats only the superficial.

unfortunately (or fortunately depending on how you look at it ) not all art is valuable on a simple viewing of it, sometimes you have to get inside the artists head or find the deeper meaning behind it.

whether or not you can reproduce a piece of art easily or not, has nothing to do with its value.
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Old 12-03-2003, 03:00 AM   #113 (permalink)
Junkie
 
Quote:
Originally posted by Capt.JamesHook
Go look at the works of Vincent Van Gogh and return when you realize what talent is. [/B]
SIGH

So we are reduced to personal insults now?

I don't need you telling me I can't recognize talent, thank you very much. I'm quite sure I have a more healthy respect and appreciation for art than that displayed by you with your comments.

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Old 12-03-2003, 03:02 AM   #114 (permalink)
Junkie
 
Quote:
Originally posted by charliex
whether or not you can reproduce a piece of art easily or not, has nothing to do with its value.
Well said.

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Old 12-03-2003, 08:42 AM   #115 (permalink)
Addict
 
art is art. It is not possible to judge it using objective or absolute terms, especially if you feel compelled to say somethng is "not art". Basically, if someone thinks something is art then it is art. You personally don't have to agree but it really isn't smart, or good form to then actually come out and say "this isn't art". Art is personal and subjective. The reason I don't like "that's not art" statements is because all too often this is the argument for someone with a mission to eradicate or censor what they consider to be objectionable art. I assume this is not your motivation and that the question is posed from innocent curiosity. Like anything else, if you don't like it - look at the next painting - change the channel - walk out of the museum.

Also, sometimes people say "Heck Cletus, I could a painted that!". Well, to that kind of comment I say: "You didn't paint it though. When you paint someting that ends up in a museum or gallery then maybe you can venture such statements more honestly." (this isn't directed at the poster - just a related mini-rant).
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