Girl with Peaches by Valentin Serov. — javi2541997
It is interesting that you and I perceived the same -- The girl felt self-conscious about something. I guess the expression of her eyes and the innocent position of her hands caught our attention. — javi2541997
Collingwood says the purpose of art is to express the artist’s experience. Our goal in looking at art is to try to share that same experience with them. — T Clark
Language itself or how language is used? Do you have a favourite aesthetic experience out of poetry, painting, architecture or nature? — Tom Storm
That's right, there was some ambiguity there. My position was that language is any form of communication and that all forms of communication are representative, metaphoric, non-specific, and infused with personal perspective. That is, the line between what we designate as poetic and literal is arbitrary and that all is poetic at some level.
That's what I meant. — Hanover
Language itself or how language is used? — Tom Storm
Do you have a favourite aesthetic experience out of poetry, painting, architecture or nature? — Tom Storm
For what it’s worth, I’ve also found beauty in well thought out and well written legal decisions. — T Clark
I just wrote what I consider a most beautiful work of art. It argued that the condominium covenants did not bind the association to protect against water heater leaks from individual units, but that obligation rested entirely with the individual unit owners. It was a work so maginficent, it made the Sistine Chapel look like a steaming pile of cat shit. — Hanover
But seriously, don’t you ever read a legal argument or decision that you think is beautiful, wonderful. I do. — T Clark
But seriously, I think you're using the term "beautiful" here in a pretty broad way, so maybe a legal argument could be beautiful, but not like a sunset — Hanover
My view of art is that it is a form of language, and the expression through painting is just another way of speaking, writing, or grunting. — Hanover
It's just an alien concept exclusive to those who have perfect or otherwise functional vision — Outlander
I really don't follow how I've been incosistent is arguing that all language offers some degree of metaphor and then in my asking for a definition of beauty that allows it to apply across diverse experiences. I might generously read in that you're suggesting if art is omnipresent in communication than beauty must also be (which might be true if all art must contain beauty), but that hardly is contradicted by my asking for a definition of art.For some reason in this thread I have this post of yours quoted, so I'll include surely it only ages to show my point. For shame! — Outlander
I don't see how you derived that from what I said. — Hanover
a legal argument could be beautiful, but not like a sunset. — Hanover
The question was what was consistent within the term "beauty" that makes it apply across all uses of the term beauty (which could include written essays, sunsets, music, or whatever). — Hanover
I really don't follow how I've been incosistent is arguing that all language offers some degree of metaphor and then in my asking for a definition of beauty that allows it to apply across diverse experiences. — Hanover
My view of art is that it is a form of language — Hanover
You first claim "art" is a form of language. Meaning it can be fully, or at least sufficiently experienced by those who are limited to such (say, the blind). Yet, people who can see enjoy art and visual experiences, they consider this a staple of the human experience. Do you disagree? — Outlander
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