11/10/2010 2:36:10 PM
indeed
11/10/2010 2:51:12 PM
haha, the CIA is fucking awesome. I'd like to go join them sometime in the future.
11/10/2010 2:54:30 PM
Rodchenko-style design and Russian avant-garde in general are pretty damn cool, though... I feel like it would have been a much stiffer competition if those movements had happened a few decades later than they did.
11/10/2010 3:04:33 PM
I've always had a strong distaste for most of what is called "modern art" there's some truly good stuff in there, but a lot of it is self-mastubatory garbage.
11/10/2010 3:10:01 PM
^ Q.F.T.
11/10/2010 4:39:34 PM
^^ ^ agreed
11/10/2010 5:41:51 PM
I think some shit's lameand some Lame shit is cooland that its all subjective
11/10/2010 5:44:45 PM
11/10/2010 7:02:19 PM
^I think it's just the opposite, actually...in America we are obsessed with individualismand therefore we are inclined to rate "creativity" and "intellectual freedom" very highlyto the point of accepting it as "art" when some dude smears shit on a canvasbut really, it just shows that we have very low artistic standards"intellectual freedom" and "creativity" are only valuable if you work outside the box and produce something good...we think that anything outside the box is good]
11/10/2010 7:11:01 PM
you think Rothko, Pollock, and de Kooning weren't good?good thing aesthetics is a subjective practice!
11/10/2010 7:15:53 PM
i'm out of this thread before i even get into it[Edited on November 10, 2010 at 7:26 PM. Reason : math doesn't make sense to me]
11/10/2010 7:23:35 PM
^^they're all right, I guess, but I prefer art that makes sense, and whose quality is self-evidentfor me, thisis a bunch of scribbles of various colors, end of story]
11/10/2010 7:24:53 PM
"makes sense" is a subjective statementthe value of this art is evident to some peoplemaybe not to youmaybe you don't like mustard on your sandwichesdoes this mean that mustard is without merit?come on, dudegrow up
11/10/2010 7:29:47 PM
the response to "art" says more about the viewer, than it does about the "art," in and of itself.
11/10/2010 7:30:27 PM
PaintingWillem de Kooning1948http://www.moma.org/collection/browse_results.php?criteria=O:AD:E:3213&page_number=3&template_id=1&sort_order=1[Edited on November 10, 2010 at 7:34 PM. Reason : -]
11/10/2010 7:33:40 PM
^^^A pile of dog shit is not art, regardless of how many art professors might claim otherwise. I'm not saying that Pollack is dog shit, but I'm not going to accept that something is awesome art, just because a bunch of art critics say sothe phrase "self-mastubatory" was used elsewhere in this thread, and I think intellectual masturbation has played a big role in the rise of abstract art...art critics get off on finding "genius" in strange places, and if others don't see the genius, well, that just shows that their taste is vulgar, while the critics' taste is sufficiently refined to see the beautyit's a continuum, of course, and I suppose Pollack is pretty good, or else people wouldn't like him; but I don't think all this crap is as brilliant as people make it out to be.
11/10/2010 7:39:59 PM
If you're going to demand that quality be "self-evident," then you need to define some metrics by which to judge quality.Personally, I would give Russia the edge, but I guess I mostly appreciate what they were doing before WWII. Malevich and the suprematist movement in general was badass as a forerunner to modern minimalism, and I think Kandinsky is an awesome example of abstract expressionism long before Pollock even took up a paintbrush.
11/10/2010 7:45:52 PM
YOU'RE SO UGLY YOU COULD BE A MODERN ART MASTERPIECE![Edited on November 10, 2010 at 7:47 PM. Reason : ]
11/10/2010 7:47:24 PM
Whether or not a pile of dog shit constitutes art is also dependent on how it is contextualized, and you seem to be ignoring that, intentionally or not. I agree that a lot of critics go overboard in looking for meaning in things that isn't there, but that doesn't devalue the meaning that can be inherent in utter simplicity or randomness when properly contextualized. That meaning shouldn't need to be totally spelled out by the artist, because that would deprive the work of much of its elegance, but that does unfortunately mean that works are left open to interpretation by overzealous critics.That's also one of the great things about art--that it's ok for people to disagree about how a work or an artist should be received. I've seen some bizarre stuff in reputable museums that I don't always love, but that's cool. [Edited on November 10, 2010 at 7:56 PM. Reason : ]
11/10/2010 7:55:25 PM
no wonder none of you got into UNCI'm AstralAdvent and i approved this message.[Edited on November 10, 2010 at 8:02 PM. Reason : buncha uncultured hicks from montanasville NC]
11/10/2010 8:01:50 PM
JeffreyBSG demonstrates his vast knowledge of art criticism and his years of training in aesthetics by misspelling Jackson Pollock's namecalling something art doesn't mean it is greator even goodbut it is still art
11/10/2010 8:13:30 PM
11/10/2010 8:14:09 PM
do you like this better than this
11/10/2010 8:18:20 PM
I can agree with this:
11/10/2010 8:18:59 PM
^^ I'm not going to be quizzed on TWW on what you perceive to be my artistic sensibilities]
11/10/2010 8:19:57 PM
but you will take the time to communicate that you will NOT be quizzed on TWWharumph!
11/10/2010 8:21:12 PM
yep...it's the principle of the thing
11/10/2010 8:21:55 PM
I concede to your superior intellect and unwavering principlesyou are correctnon-representative art is absolute hogwashand drunk driving is good
11/10/2010 8:23:52 PM
didn't you tell me to grow up earlier ITT?]
11/10/2010 8:24:41 PM
you lowered the barI say good day to you, sir!
11/10/2010 8:25:41 PM
11/10/2010 8:26:13 PM
11/10/2010 8:36:57 PM
I have indeed always associated art appreciation classes with "inculcation and dogma," as you say. But this business about "context," as it pertains to abstract art, makes all kinds of sense. I guess abstract art is, by definition, not easy to understand, but I can totally see the artist expecting his educated audience to be familiar with the society in which he lived, and to interpret his work in that light, through which it would become clear(er.) I've actually learned something from TWW today. ]
11/10/2010 8:53:56 PM