I'm gonna make a nice blanket generalisation. If your piece of 'art' can be mistaken for a literal piece of garbage that should be tidied up, it's probably not art.
procrasty said:ok, so it was a type of medicine that existed before regulatory bodies, or circumvented them. the safety, effectieness, and content of an injestable product is still not comparable to art and personal taste.Owyn_Merrilin said:Patent medicine was pretty darned subjective, too -- it wasn't actual medicine. If you were lucky, it contained some opium. More often than not, it was water and food coloring. Way to snip the actual relevant parts of my argument, though.
Edit: Actually, probably less "food coloring," more "turpentine." "Snake Oil" is more than just a turn of phrase; it was a literal brand of patent medicine from back in the day.
seeing as you insist i edited something important from this.Owyn_Merrilin said:They do when the people selling are con artists, and the people buying are little more than marks. Would you be saying the same thing if we were talking about patent medicine? A lot of that stuff actually contained opium, and therefore actually worked to a given definition of "worked," and the people consuming it certainly had good reason to enjoy it. However, the people selling it were still con artists.
no, they don't because the two things are still utterly different. art doesn't claim have a physical curative effect on the human body, the only effect it has is emotional, and that's a subjective matter.Owyn_Merrilin said:Perhaps not, but the analogy still works; snakeoil salesmen would come into town, make all of these extraordinary claims about what their medicine would do, and people not only fell for it, they actually believed it worked, thanks to a combination of opium and the placebo effect. Modern artists use very similar tactics.
It's also a comment on fact that if you're famous then if you say its art it becomes art. The artist intentionally provided an unaltered snow shovel as a comment on the art-world. He thought it was dumb and thus he provided an example of why.MrDeckard said:Ladies and Gentlemen, total proof of one thing:
Modern Art is shit.
My favorite example of this, I saw in the Guggenheim museum.
[image/]http://www.toutfait.com/issues/volume2/issue_5/articles/merritt/images/04_shovel_big.jpg[/IMG]
No really. That's it. It's an unaltered snow shovel hanging from the ceiling.
Art claims to have meaning, though -- meaning that the artist intended, not just meaning imposed by the viewer (which is another example of the emperor's new clothes effect.) Pray, tell what a solid red canvas means? Even with the context (It's apparently supposed to be a portrait of a peasant girl), it falls flat. This current breed of artist is selling an idea of cultural, emotional, and artistic depth that they fail to embody, but hope nobody will notice. I mean, if you guys just said you liked it aesthetically (some of the best uses of Jackson Pollock style paint splatters I've seen have been on "Trading Spaces" type shows, where they were made on the spot by an interior designer and used to complement the colors of a room, but not as art objects in and of themselves) you wouldn't be taking any crap for it. It's when these "artists" claim their art has some deeper meaning that we start to call bullshit on it.procrasty said:no, they don't because the two things are still utterly different. art doesn't claim have a physical curative effect on the human body, the only effect it has is emotional, and that's a subjective matter.Owyn_Merrilin said:Perhaps not, but the analogy still works; snakeoil salesmen would come into town, make all of these extraordinary claims about what their medicine would do, and people not only fell for it, they actually believed it worked, thanks to a combination of opium and the placebo effect. Modern artists use very similar tactics.
well that was rude... but quite appropriate.KorLeonis said:"The world has lost a valuable, irreplaceable piece of art", no it definitely has not. If your "art" is indistinguishable from trash, you are a failure. You are a drain on society and a waste of space. Go get a real job loser.
*sigh* you don't see that in it, but it doesn't mean that the people who do are fools, or wrong, or being conned. again i could tell you what i see in a solid red canvass, but to what end? for you to tell me than i'm wrong to get something out of it?Owyn_Merrilin said:Art claims to have meaning, though -- meaning that the artist intended, not just meaning imposed by the viewer (which is another example of the emperor's new clothes effect.) Pray, tell what a solid red canvas means? Even with the context (It's apparently supposed to be a portrait of a peasant girl), it falls flat. This current breed of artist is selling an idea of cultural, emotional, and artistic depth that they fail to embody, but hope nobody will notice. I mean, if you guys just said you liked it aesthetically (some of the best uses of Jackson Pollock style paint splatters I've seen have been on "Trading Spaces" type shows, where they were made on the spot by an interior designer and used to complement the colors of a room, but not as art objects in and of themselves) you wouldn't be taking any crap for it. It's when these "artists" claim their art has some deeper meaning that we start to call bullshit on it.procrasty said:no, they don't because the two things are still utterly different. art doesn't claim have a physical curative effect on the human body, the only effect it has is emotional, and that's a subjective matter.Owyn_Merrilin said:Perhaps not, but the analogy still works; snakeoil salesmen would come into town, make all of these extraordinary claims about what their medicine would do, and people not only fell for it, they actually believed it worked, thanks to a combination of opium and the placebo effect. Modern artists use very similar tactics.
All I have to say to this is that it's not wrong if you personally derive meaning from said red canvas, but the meaning is your own, and it comes from you, not the artist. If you find meaning in it, cool, but you're the one creating the actual art in that case; all the artist did was throw something up on a wall and let other people do the actual work. In the same way that The Lord of the Rings is not an allegory for World War II[footnote]Look it up if you don't believe me; Tolkien is on record saying that none of his books are an allegory for anything; he hated allegory.[/footnote], that red painting is nothing more than a red painting; a nice accent piece for interior decorating, but not something that can stand on its own.procrasty said:*sigh* you don't see that in it, but it doesn't mean that the people who do are fools, or wrong, or being conned. again i could tell you what i see in a solid red canvass, but to what end? for you to tell me than i'm wrong to get something out of it?Owyn_Merrilin said:Art claims to have meaning, though -- meaning that the artist intended, not just meaning imposed by the viewer (which is another example of the emperor's new clothes effect.) Pray, tell what a solid red canvas means? Even with the context (It's apparently supposed to be a portrait of a peasant girl), it falls flat. This current breed of artist is selling an idea of cultural, emotional, and artistic depth that they fail to embody, but hope nobody will notice. I mean, if you guys just said you liked it aesthetically (some of the best uses of Jackson Pollock style paint splatters I've seen have been on "Trading Spaces" type shows, where they were made on the spot by an interior designer and used to complement the colors of a room, but not as art objects in and of themselves) you wouldn't be taking any crap for it. It's when these "artists" claim their art has some deeper meaning that we start to call bullshit on it.procrasty said:no, they don't because the two things are still utterly different. art doesn't claim have a physical curative effect on the human body, the only effect it has is emotional, and that's a subjective matter.Owyn_Merrilin said:Perhaps not, but the analogy still works; snakeoil salesmen would come into town, make all of these extraordinary claims about what their medicine would do, and people not only fell for it, they actually believed it worked, thanks to a combination of opium and the placebo effect. Modern artists use very similar tactics.
i like rothko paintings, love in fact, and many people get nothing from his work at all, and that's fine. but them not getting anything out of it doesn't mean i'm wrong because this work happens to mean a lot to me, or that he was committing a con act when creating them, it just means i have my own tastes.
and this is the only point i'm trying to make, people will get a lot from aspects of culture which others will get nothing from, nether side is right, or wrong. it's not a war, or a debate, it's just taste.
g'night
Or about cleanliness .GeorgW said:Maybe you care about money?standokan said:This enrages me somehow, so apperently I care about art ..odd
honistly, last one now.Owyn_Merrilin said:All I have to say to this is that it's not wrong if you personally derive meaning from said red canvas, but the meaning is your own, and it comes from you, not the artist. If you find meaning in it, cool, but you're the one creating the actual art in that case; all the artist did was throw something up on a wall and let other people do the actual work. In the same way that The Lord of the Rings is not an allegory for World War II, that red painting is nothing more than a red painting; a nice accent piece for interior decorating, but not something that can stand on its own.
Because people like you keep insisting that these works have meaning. They don't; literally all of the meaning is provided by the viewer. That's not ambiguity. That's a completely blank canvas by another name. I don't have a problem with liking abstract art for its aesthetic functions; pretty colors are pretty, I'm not denying that. I am denying that these are profound works of art worth so much as a hundred dollars, let alone millions. There's nothing profound about them; they're just wall decorations.procrasty said:honistly, last one now.Owyn_Merrilin said:All I have to say to this is that it's not wrong if you personally derive meaning from said red canvas, but the meaning is your own, and it comes from you, not the artist. If you find meaning in it, cool, but you're the one creating the actual art in that case; all the artist did was throw something up on a wall and let other people do the actual work. In the same way that The Lord of the Rings is not an allegory for World War II, that red painting is nothing more than a red painting; a nice accent piece for interior decorating, but not something that can stand on its own.
fine art isn't a language, it's not about getting a message across to an audiance with no margin for error, that's illustration, or graphic design (and even then only to a greater extent rather than entirely). a work having ambiguity is not failure on the part of the artist, and it cirtainly doesn't mean they didn't try (please stop assuming malice, there is a really massive gulf between "i don't get what the artist is trying to say" and "they just threw it up on a wall").
the meaning that an artist puts into a work doesn't have to match perfectly with what the viewer takes from it. you say the red canvass is "supposed to be a portrait of a peasent girl" as if the viewer is supposed to be able to tell that from looking at it, and assume that if they can't, not only has the art failed but the artist was just bullshitting all along. different works come from different places, some are trying to tell stories, others are reactions to things, some can be "read" others are more just experiances. titles can offer some context, some are intended to push the viewer in a perticular direction (titles can form part of the work). looking at that painting purely as a red fild and looking at it as a peasent girl changes the way it's being viewed, but it's still not about getting a very speficic message across.
a work can be trying to get a meaning across without that meaning having to be exact.
yeah, i know i said bed, and this is probably starting to read as me being tired. i guess the thing i still don't undersatnd is why it all has to be framed this way? why can't an artist just make work you don't like, or don't get, why does that have to make them a con artist, or mean they're not trying? art and culture is weird and huge and varied enough that everyone should have more than enough room in there to find something they love without needing to get into any scapes about it.
and i disagree with you.Owyn_Merrilin said:Because people like you keep insisting that these works have meaning. They don't; literally all of the meaning is provided by the viewer. That's not ambiguity. That's a completely blank canvas by another name. I don't have a problem with liking abstract art for its aesthetic functions; pretty colors are pretty, I'm not denying that. I am denying that these are profound works of art worth so much as a hundred dollars, let alone millions. There's nothing profound about them; they're just wall decorations.
Piss Christ is a great way of demonstrating that Christians, who make a big deal of being more tolerant than other religions can be just as bad.idarkphoenixi said:She did the world a favour if you ask me, hire her in all the "art" museums.
P.S You think thats bad? Perhaps I should introduce you to this: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/d/de/Piss_Christ_by_Serrano_Andres_%281987%29.jpg/220px-Piss_Christ_by_Serrano_Andres_%281987%29.jpg
Piss Christ...A little crusifix covered in urine. It's in an art museum as we speak.