When they changed the definition of art they brought culture with them. Culture allowed itself to be changed. It was receptive to the new definition, and so it adopted it. — Pop
Obviously from my posts I don’t go along with that. Artists don’t create culture and culture doesn’t allow itself to be changed by anybody. If art changes then it’s because culture has shifted. Culture creates art. But I don’t think there’s “new” cultures, just ones that have not had legitimacy up until then, even though it always existed. The art is one way of making its presence felt. Punk was not invented. That working class attitude was always there, it was just repressed and devalued by social mores and power bases. — Brett
↪Brett
Of course. But they themselves and their ability to project reflect instantaneously their time, which can only be cultural. Post WWll art reflected the trauma of the war, the tearing apart of reality.
— Brett
Just false (and a bit gibberishy). — Brett
In the 70s Malcolm Mclaren as a joke created a punk group - the Sex Pistols
Punk culture grew out of that. — Pop
But in Australia and Britain this is how it started. — Pop
So by that point it was no longer genuine, and in fact may have already been commercialised and made irrelevant in the UK. Generally, I feel, by the time the media and elites discover something “new” it’s already gone and all that remains is a commercial replica. — Brett
First, one does not need to know anything about Van Gogh the man in order to be able to recognise his works as artworks (indeed, very great ones). — Bartricks
I agree that if the artist deems it art then it should be judged in that way, but there is also the audience who have their say, so we have the King.If the artist means something in it's art, then the correct way to interpret it is by that degree.
However, is it ok to interpret art incorrectly? I think so.
Unless, per se, there is a greater judge, who thinks 'no, it means this in it's best light', then the artist's meaning loses it's credibility. Perhaps, it's a matter of judgement.
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