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InkL0sed wrote:I think this is an interesting question. What do you guys think?
icedagger wrote:InkL0sed wrote:I think this is an interesting question. What do you guys think?
Art is dead, dude *drags on spliff*
jnd94 wrote:However you express yourself. Whether it be painting, writing music, writing books, making movies or tv shows, radio stuff, all of that.
InkL0sed wrote:jnd94 wrote:However you express yourself. Whether it be painting, writing music, writing books, making movies or tv shows, radio stuff, all of that.
So if you taped yourself standing on a street yelling at traffic for 10 minutes, that would be art? You would be expressing yourself.
static_ice wrote:InkL0sed wrote:jnd94 wrote:However you express yourself. Whether it be painting, writing music, writing books, making movies or tv shows, radio stuff, all of that.
So if you taped yourself standing on a street yelling at traffic for 10 minutes, that would be art? You would be expressing yourself.
Photography can be less original...
Which is why I don't think art is always about expressing yourself. Sometimes it can be about expressing your observations. For example a professional photographer might see a statue but he doesn't just snap a shot and skip along he pauses and thinks about where he wants to place it in the photo, what angle, how close up. He's expressing something else how he sees it.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
hecter wrote:Art is a means of expression for the senses that requires skill on the part of the artist and provokes both thought and/or an emotional response in the people experiencing the artistic works.
EDIT: That means, of course, that what is considered art varies from person to person. It's all a matter of perspective and what you choose to call it. While you may not consider a video tape of a drunk hobo yelling at traffic for ten minutes, why can't somebody else? Dadaism is considered an art form, but I certainly would not give it that title.
mandyb wrote:hecter wrote:Art is a means of expression for the senses that requires skill on the part of the artist and provokes both thought and/or an emotional response in the people experiencing the artistic works.
EDIT: That means, of course, that what is considered art varies from person to person. It's all a matter of perspective and what you choose to call it. While you may not consider a video tape of a drunk hobo yelling at traffic for ten minutes, why can't somebody else? Dadaism is considered an art form, but I certainly would not give it that title.
I read recently of a South American 'artist' who tied a starving dog up in one of his exhibitions - he also surrounded it with his collages made from dog food.
'Thought provoking and extremely emotional' it may have been, but art, definitely not.
Amazingly enough, he wasn't prosecuted and continues to exhibit despite violent protests.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
MeDeFe wrote:I'll take a different angle from the rest of you, you've all been talking about expressing oneself and emotions and so forth. But it's really a lot simpler than that, art is what we consider to be art.
A possible point of criticism is that the same thing might be considered as art by one person and as not-art by an other. But I don't see that as a problem really. In fact it rather nicely corrseponds with what we can observe. Some people said that inducing miscariagges over a period of time and presenting the results to the public is art, others said it isn't. The same was true when the exhibition with that dog came up, some said it was art, others said it wasn't.
To conclude, art, like most things in society, is a human construct and can only be satisfactorily defined from the angle of human perception.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
btownmeggy wrote:*yawn*
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Neoteny wrote:MeDeFe wrote:I'll take a different angle from the rest of you, you've all been talking about expressing oneself and emotions and so forth. But it's really a lot simpler than that, art is what we consider to be art.
A possible point of criticism is that the same thing might be considered as art by one person and as not-art by an other. But I don't see that as a problem really. In fact it rather nicely corrseponds with what we can observe. Some people said that inducing miscariagges over a period of time and presenting the results to the public is art, others said it isn't. The same was true when the exhibition with that dog came up, some said it was art, others said it wasn't.
To conclude, art, like most things in society, is a human construct and can only be satisfactorily defined from the angle of human perception.
Could it really not be defined by the intentions of the producer? That doesn't make it any less subjective, or easier to really define, but I think it's still rather concrete, as far as abstract definitions go.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
MeDeFe wrote:Neoteny wrote:MeDeFe wrote:I'll take a different angle from the rest of you, you've all been talking about expressing oneself and emotions and so forth. But it's really a lot simpler than that, art is what we consider to be art.
A possible point of criticism is that the same thing might be considered as art by one person and as not-art by an other. But I don't see that as a problem really. In fact it rather nicely corrseponds with what we can observe. Some people said that inducing miscariagges over a period of time and presenting the results to the public is art, others said it isn't. The same was true when the exhibition with that dog came up, some said it was art, others said it wasn't.
To conclude, art, like most things in society, is a human construct and can only be satisfactorily defined from the angle of human perception.
Could it really not be defined by the intentions of the producer? That doesn't make it any less subjective, or easier to really define, but I think it's still rather concrete, as far as abstract definitions go.
However, that doesn't account for some people considering something as art while others do not. Also it is hypothetically possible that an object not originally regarded as art can become art, whether purposely by being placed in a new context, or by chance if it is regarded from a different perspective than otherwise. I'm very sceptical about defining art from intention of the artist, especially seeing how the artist is already aware of our conventions about art and is reacting to them.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
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