A sense of serenity within the midst of chaos, as the smiling Chines girl makes her way through the sheltering mulberry grove during a windstorm.... Do you feel anything off it?
How's that?
A sense of serenity within the midst of chaos, as the smiling Chines girl makes her way through the sheltering mulberry grove during a windstorm.... Do you feel anything off it?
Yeah. Ugly art.
Considering that it looks like a 3 year-old threw a bunch of paint buckets on a canvas, I'm not sure how you can feel anything off it.
How about this:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_60804cd3e34a28ddb.jpg
I made that with MSPaint in about 2 minutes. Do you feel anything off it ?![]()
I would say that Art is any imitation of nature that provokes an emotional reaction in the viewers.
Look Billy, I understand you really don't like the idea of Cage's work being art and personally, I find that one work of his is a load of BS too, but of course it's been performed many times!
I'm not sure the impact is lost after the punch line is revealed. But regardless, I think that your attempt at diminishing other people's experience with that work (or other works you don't like) by claiming it is inferior to a Mona Lisa is nothing else but projection on your part. The raw truth is you simply hate the idea that a work like that can be considered art. I however think that Cage was at least smart enough to maybe push the line and see if people would appreciate a work that consists in nothing but a big tacet (which means silence). If you watch Cage interviews you will see he's not kidding when he asserts that silence and street noises are sounds that to him are as musical and even more musical than a Beethoven Symphony. I personally don't agree with this feeling and I'm sure neither do you, but it is as valid to him as my personal feelings are to me. So I don't go around and say "That is not art". No. What I say is "That art is not for me". And you should try that too.
There is no comparison between 4:33 and the Mona Lisa.
There is no comparison between street noises and A Beethoven symphony.
Well, then, it seems that pretty well anything can be considered art.
The only proviso seems to be that it must elicit a response. Any response, be emotional or intellectual. And it only needs to elicit a response in one person. However, there does not need to be intent. So even accidental art is acceptable. Any scene in nature can be art. Any accidental object can be art.
So I guess what we are really asking is: By what criteria does the art community determine what art deserves special praise by being displayed in art houses and museums? And, for that matter, what crtieria defines an art community.
I guess it's the asnwers to those questions that can never be agreed upon.
There is also art that can be appreciated on the intellectual level.
This sounds dangerously close to post-modernism to me.
Let's get real here:
There is no comparison between 4:33 and the Mona Lisa.
There is no comparison between street noises and A Beethoven symphony.
Indeed. Cage's work is a realisation of the impossibility of silence, a high concept piece of deceptive simplicity that places the audience at the heart of the work. The Mona Lisa is an unremarkable portrait by a competent dauber. There is a comparison between the Mona Lisa and a velvet elvis.
Quite so. Street noises are live, vibrant, ever-changing, the language of life, the beauty of being and the poetry of the population. A Beethoven symphony is a manipulation of emotion, a laboured appeal to primitive responses. There is a comparison between a Beethoven symphony and a cola advert.
Considering that it looks like a 3 year-old threw a bunch of paint buckets on a canvas, I'm not sure how you can feel anything off it.
How about this:
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_60804cd3e34a28ddb.jpg[/qimg]
I made that with MSPaint in about 2 minutes. Do you feel anything off it ?![]()
That's because the museum is interested in storing aesthetic objects, not just art objects. An object may not have been conceived as art, but the curator sees that the object has beauty (or some other aesthetic) and wants to exhibit that item. The curator's selection and exhibition of the object is itself art, but the original object is not.
Go to a museum and ask them if they made that differentiation you just made up. Ask them if they have cataloged/separated their art works by "Art" and "Strong aesthetic objects".
You've just proven that any description of art as a body of knowledge or meaningful intellectual pursuit is fully vacuous.
It's ridiculous that anyone would want to give their life to such offal.
Saying "your definition of art is not in all circumstances identical with the way the term is used today" would have been quicker, and I would have agreed with you.
Art museums aren't displaying art; they're displaying aesthetic objects. There's simply a significant overlap between the two.
A sense of serenity within the midst of chaos, as the smiling Chines girl makes her way through the sheltering mulberry grove during a windstorm.
How's that?
![]()
I defy you to randomly throw buckets of paint onto a canvas to achieve a result similar to the Jackson Pollock.
The reds are too finely distributed and the blues over-represented. Worse still are the curved pink lines. They are clearly unbalanced. And that white slash is absolute rubbish.![]()
(Again the personal opinion used as if other people's opinions didn't also count)
That you personally can't see how someone would feel anything for it, doesn't change the fact that other people do feel things for it.
In other words, do you realize that what you said can be said verbatim by someone else regarding a piece of art that you have very strong feelings about?
For your argument to be taken seriously
we would first need to take your painting and ask every single human being in the world if any of them feels anything about it.
It was not a 3 year old who just randomly threw a bunch of colors on a canvas, and thus the result isn't the same.
Regardless of all, your personal example is no proof against Pollock's work
and it doesn't change the fact that a lot of people are moved by Pollock and that Pollock has an audience that considers his works art, in the same way that you belong to an audience of people who consider other people's works art (insert any example of anything Belz considers art)
That's funny. Where did I say or imply this ?
Ah, but in your post you highlight a very subtle distinction between what was said and what you're answering to. "Feeling off" and "feeling FOR" are very different. You can feel strongly for pretty much anything. But a bunch of random lines doesn't communicate much emotion, per se. It's all in the interpretation.
No. I'm simply illustrating that such a work of "art" has no intrinsic emotional value. You have to make it up as you go. It's easier to make a case for emotional value if something represents, for instance, a real thing.
Actually, it looks very similar to me. If a 3 year old produced that crap I wouldn't encourage him/her to continue down that path. That an adult produced this and decided it was a finished piece of art is... troubling. Hey, whatever works for him !
Indeed, and they are quite justified in feeling whatever they are feeling. And I am justified at being completely mystified by the fact that they feel anything towards it.
Did you not see the MSPaint picture I linked ? Pretty much the same style of stuff.
Then it wasn't random - as you implied of the Pollock you were allegedly mimicking.Anyway, maybe the distribution of the colours IS the point of the picture I linked !!
Well, I'll let Ron answer that one since he's already crtiicised me for the same error.That's why I hate abstract art. It means nothing except what you make up as you go along. In my opinion, art should represent something.
My family was tragically killed by a rabid vacuum. Hence I join nature in abhoring them.Oh, and what do you have against vacuity?
In that case, carry on.No, it would be ridiculous if you did that - you think it's offal. Mostly we're in it for the girls, by the way.![]()
Your assertion that "a bunch of random lines doesn't communicate much emotion per se" is your individual perception. It's irrelevant since different people have completely different perceptions and the same bunch of lines are not random to them and they do communicate stuff to them.
Oh no, Belz. You realize you're using Southwind type of rhetoric now?
Of course it's all in the interpretation! That's what art is all about!
You interpret Pollock as crap.
Your personal feelings about a work of art are not more "valid" or "objective" than anyone else's.
And yet you seem to imply there's something inherently "bad" about Pollock's art
Your assertion that "a bunch of random lines doesn't communicate much emotion per se" is your individual perception.
See the parts I bolded?
Yes. You seem to be getting it now.