I'm not suggesting that some art does not have the ability to advertise. I'd argue that some propaganda pieces could be intended to advertise, as could some religious works.
I'm saying that not all art is necessarily advertising. Advertising requires the intention of inciting a behaviour, not just elliciting an emotion.
That's not the definition I used. Stating 'who made it' is not the same as inciting a behaviour in the target.
That's not advertising.
So? I didn't ask for a definition for graffiti.
Whoa cowboy. Let's start with what you think 'advertise' means first. If you think it's any form of art that says anything at all, then show where you get that definition.
art can exist which isn't a form of advertising.
Why is that art?
I like to look at it, it makes me think and I find the construction of it quite elegant.
To me it's art. Do you disagree? If so why?
Which propaganda pieces do not advertise?
Which religious works do not advertise?
If I understand you correctly, you are saying that you can have an emotion that does not incite a behavior?
I also included other things. However, "who made it" is, in the case of graffiti, an expression of "hey, we're cool! If you admire it, copy it! Let's have a graffiti slam!"
Really? Why not?
I didn't post it as a definition of graffiti, but as an example of how graffiti is advertising.
No. Let's start with your claim which hinges on your definition of "advertise". You claimed that:
Whatever definition of advertising I use has nothing to do with your claim and your definition of "advertise".
So,
What work of art exists which isn't a form of advertising?
Why is that art?
If you want a professional opinion (I'm an art historian) - all advertising is art; not all art is advertising. That's the formalist model, anyway.
This argument becomes semantic and uninteresting pretty quickly.
If you want a professional opinion (I'm an art historian) - all advertising is art; not all art is advertising. That's the formalist model, anyway.
This argument becomes semantic and uninteresting pretty quickly.
Oh, it isn't up to me to define what is art to you.
But, given your description of what is art: What is not art - to you?
Claus, everyone knows what art is. Art is bought because they relate to it or find it personally relevant, interesting, ironic, humorous, or conversationally fun. Art itself is simply a more very advanced, abstract form of communication to varying psychological depth. Typically associations which require volumes of words are summed up instantly through imagery. Imagery, sound and motion being however ideal.
Try for example, to summarize the force of nature that is Claus Larson, the destroyer of keyboards, into colorless shapeless words. Pages would be required to fully frame - even among an audience of strong atheists, the gravity of the futility. You have to be there with a migraine headache and a sense self-idiocy, catching yourself staring at five pages of failed exchange over common sense, and what instead of a man could very be Curious George hunched over his desk with his nose buried in a mountain of cocaine with an advocacy of evolution and a look of resentment of the saying about a million monkeys typing in his eyes.
Thanks Volatile. I don't suppose you can seal the statement with a link? (I believe you, but it'd be nice to have the red stamp just to make it official).
Oh, and 'semantics' is just Latin for 'Claus'.
Athon
SirPhillip is in good form this morning. I especially liked the Clint Eastwood.
My friend and I were so horrified by billboards of Benetton ads in the Boston area that we seriously considered defacing them. We even bought paint & ski-masks and had a plan. He considered it idolatry. I considered it a worse-than-tasteless blurring of the line between company promotion and exploiting images of suffering. This ad, also, makes me sick. If Benetton were a charity, I would still think these ads were over the line.
actually, by making the grievers look swinish, this image is disgusting on every possible level--which, although interesting, is just too...too.
2¢.
So in other words, it is a very powerful artistic image for you?![]()
I hold that advertising has the goal of portraying a product favorably, usually for monetary, but sometimes for ego reasons. It may and usually does contain art, but that is not its purpose. Art needs no purpose.
So in other words, it is a very powerful artistic image for you?![]()
This was a very good example of advertising that is not, under most definitions, art. It could even be a "fill-in-the-blank" form. And classified ads are quite numerous. Some include some "eye-catching" graphic, but many are just information.Advertising usurps the concept of art, in order to parasite our minds, for the purpose of selling something.
Not all artwork is parasitic, but most forms of advertising utilize parasitic artwork.
And as Martu points out, it would be hard to argue that abstract art advertises anything. Look at the works of Mark Rothko*. Hell, look at Van Goph. What was "Wheat Field with Crows" advertising? Suicide?There is nothing artistic about the classified section of your local newspaper. "For sale, 1979 Chrysler, 98,000 miles, runs, best offer". Ads can contain art. Art must contain artistic expression.
Try for example, to summarize the force of nature that is Claus Larson, the destroyer of keyboards, into colorless shapeless words. Pages would be required to fully frame - even among an audience of strong atheists, the gravity of the futility. You have to be there with a migraine headache and a sense self-idiocy, catching yourself staring at five pages of failed exchange over common sense, and what instead of a man could very be Curious George hunched over his desk with his nose buried in a mountain of cocaine with an advocacy of evolution and a look of resentment of the saying about a million monkeys typing in his eyes.
T
*Funny story. There is a small gallery in Houston called the Rothko Chapel. I had never seen any of Rothko's work but I knew he was a famous artist, and one day as I was strolling by, I decided to pop in. I went in the chapel and all I saw was a circular room with black panelling. I went out to the front lobby and asked the attendant, "Are the paintings out on loan?" She gave me the look that a snobby art student gives an ignorant philistine and said, "Those are the paintings." Can you blame me for being confused?
[qimg]http://www.rothkochapel.org/NTryptich.jpg[/qimg]