Kevin,
Thank you for replying. I won't deny that some pretty terrible work exists, but I think you're generalizing in a huge way. Abstract, Modern, Non-representational and Contemporary art covers a huge amount of ground, and the experts, (Just like the scientists who fell for
Project Alpha) are human and varied. From high school art teachers, to small gallery owners and museum directors, the establishment has a range of qualifications and opinions.
I'd like to use one piece as a jumping off point.
This is
Cloud Gate in Chicago.
Is this likely to be mistaken for trash? The work of a child? If it were accidentally placed upside down, would that be proof that it is without value? If you can't answer yes to any of these questions, is this piece included in your view of the modern art scam?[/URL]
No, no, no and, therefore, no.
If an "artwork" is indistinguishable from random junk, monkey painting, elephant painting or toddler painting and someone is presenting it as being
better than random junk (or whatever), particularly if they are presenting it as being worth significant amounts of money, that's a scam.
If an artwork is distinguishable from random junk but is also clearly the work of someone with lousy technical skills and no ability to produce a pleasant or effective piece (artists like Davida Allen leap to mind) then in my view presenting it as valuable is also a scam.
If an artwork is clearly distinguishable from junk or scrawl, and clearly the result of significant technical skill, then I've no predefined view of its merits and I'm even happy to accept that there may be multiple, equally valid appraisals of such works of art.
If modern art was all distinguishable from rubbish, and anyone who tried to pass off rubbish as art was laughed out of the gallery, I'd have no beef with it.
Before anyone starts a semantic debate, I've no interest in getting into a discussion about what counts as modern art versus postmodern art versus foo. I'm using the term to refer generally to post-Picasso impostures masquerading as art.
With regard to your other point, it's a woo-woo tactic I've seen before to throw supposed art experts off the boat when they let a urinal or whatever slip into a display. "Oh dear me", they say, "If they made such a mistake obviously they weren't a
real art expert. A real art expert would never be fooled like that, and I'm sure such people exist, although I could never name one, or determine ahead of time whether an art expert is real or not". The fact is they can't explain even with hindsight how you are supposed to tell the difference between a pair of old sneakers in a box labelled "Exploration Of Infinite Time And Space #217" and scam art, and that's because they cannot do so.