True, but I need to know what is meant by original. — Brett
In regards to art specifically? — Noble Dust
Representative might be better, though this usually includes works of art that look like things we encounter (or can't encounter like unicorns) but which the artist did not work with a model to create. But I think his point was that if one is merely copying, it isn't creative. The creation was all in the thing itself. But the thing itself is generally very different from representative art based on it or representing it. It is creative to manage to represent and how one represents is generally a style, which is creative. I am sure there are some works of art that are direct copies, but they are rare.Call if representative if you want. — Brett
Representative art based on studying the real thing is not copying. If its a study of a bowl of fruit, copying would be putting the bowl of fruit in some futuristic 3d printer and making a direct atomic level copy. The originality of representative art is in how the original thing is conveyed/used/represented. What facets are focused, what ignored, the style. Even 'trying to be realistic' means using tricks of perspective and shading and also choosing amongst possible facets. And it will include a philosophical/aesthetic take on what the thing 'really' looks like. Pointillists and Impressionists could argue they are more realistic than people who use so called realistic ways of conveying what is represented.Wouldn't that just be copying things then and not being original or creative?
Art, specifically the viewing experience is much more than (forgive me for using this word but) "simple qualia." It is often a deep, philosophical, transporting, even transformational experience. Someone once said "the power of art is its ability to take something that no one thought was beautiful before and transfiguring it into something that is." Or something like that. Another said "it [art] brings affirmation in joy and consolation in sorrow.", essentially it has a redeeming quality. Take "American Gothic", it's just two people standing in front of a house. Or so it seems. Not quite willing to write out the meta/context but you could interpret/imagine a great more than what is displayed. — Outlander
Yes art can be called creative, but not necessarily original. — Brett
Representative might be better, though this usually includes works of art that look like things we encounter (or can't encounter like unicorns) but which the artist did not work with a model to create. — Coben
The creation was all in the thing itself. — Coben
But the thing itself is generally very different from representative art based on it or representing it. — Coben
It is creative to manage to represent and how one represents is generally a style, which is creative. — Coben
Representative art based on studying the real thing is not copying. I — Coben
The originality of representative art is in how the original thing is conveyed/used/represented. — Coben
Even with the Picasso Dora Marr you can tell it's her, there isn't anything original about it. — Darkneos
But it wouldn't be creative though would it because it's nothing new. — Darkneos
It's all been done before just with a different skin. But if that is the case then what is the point of making art then? I mean I wouldn't be making anything new. — Darkneos
I would agree that we may have reached a point of stasis today in the visual arts. And I think you’re also right: what’s the point of making art if it’s just rehashing existing firms? Which is why art seems to have found itself in places like therapy. If that’s it’s purpose then it’s now nothing more than moving paint around on a surface for peace of mind. — Brett
Yes, memory, though it need not be a specific face, it could be memory supported imagined people or things. A landscape that is not a rendering of any particular landscape, viewpoint over a landscape, the artist has seen.By this I take it you mean someone may draw a face or figure from memory, not a model. — Brett
I would say this supports the position I am arguming, in fact I nearly mentioned the cubists, because yes, part of what they are doing is showing that what the realist painters are doing is not copying, but is itself also a style and perhaps not one as real as theirs.To represent the jug in a painting, in what we might call a realistic style, we’re relying on the same laws that manage the way we see things with our own eyes: perspective, depth of field, form, etc. Applied to a painting these are what you might call “tricks” to imitate how we see. Picasso and Braque tore that idea apart. In their cubist paintings they created a way of perceiving that might be considered more truthful because when we look at a jug we know there is a reverse side to it and we have thoughts about jugs and so on. More importantly they did away with the tricks of perspective and depth of field. — Brett
I'm not saying it is a door to understanding creativity, I am saying there is no neutral copying that is not creative. Even what someone might call copying - rendering what I think would naively be called a realist rendition of a thing or person's image - is actually creative. You are making stuff up that that is not 'out there'.So a style can make use of the “tricks” or it can discard them totally. So I don’t think style is a door into understanding creativity or originality. — Brett
I don’t think that quite works as a sentence. If it’s representative then it relies on the “tricks”. No matter what you do, if it’s structured on those “tricks”, it remains a copy of the object. Otherwise you would not recognise it. — Brett
I am saying there is no neutral copying that is not creative. Even what someone might call copying - rendering what I think would naively be called a realist rendition of a thing or person's image - is actually creative. You are making stuff up that that is not 'out there'. — Coben
because, at least in my individual experience, these experiences of artistic originality that elicit these strong emotions often feel familiar. It's not a feeling of "oh this is totally new I don't know what this is". It's a feeling of "this is totally new and yet...I'm feeling almost deja vu". Maybe that's just me. But my sense is that this subjective originality experience (if you will) carries with it some kind of psychological/spiritual detritus (choose whichever adjective fits your worldview). — Noble Dust
If it is just drawing from things that already exist? Wouldn't that just be copying things then and not being original or creative? — Darkneos
You sound envious! — Noble Dust
Too many metaphors broh! — Noble Dust
I studied art therapy and I saw that it was a way of tapping into the deep levels of imagery, uncovering layers of meanings and emotions — Jack Cummins
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