↪Brett
I agree with you, art sends a message. — Schzophr
But it's the audience that judges art, not the artist. — Pattern-chaser
They may pass judgement in all ignorance of what they’re looking at. Is that proof that art is entertainment? — Brett
And if the audience judges art, not the artist, does that mean the audience determine what art is and that being entertaining is all that’s required? — Brett
I’ll go along with that.
Of course Zhoubotong will argue that ‘Transformers’ does exactly that. — Brett
The primary difference (I believe) between the first and second painting is that the first is primarily about the subject and the second is about the artist (self portrait aside). — Brett
That question aside for the moment, if the viewer can get out of a film what the filmmaker put into it then there is shared meaning, full stop. Quibbles along the lines that the meaning in the viewer's head is not "numerically identical" to the meaning in the film, which is not numerically identical to the meaning in the filmmaker's head on account of their different spatiotemporal locations would seem to be quite irrelevant. — Janus
But is the message sent by the artist the same as the message received by the audience? — Pattern-chaser
Art is complex product, but it's a product. When a chair maker creates a chair, customers are not scratching their heads wondering what to do with "the contraption". When a news writer publishes an article, readers are not bewildered in how to interpret the markings on a screen. Essentially, it is the same with art. — Henri
Art is complex product, but it's a product. When a chair maker creates a chair, customers are not scratching their heads wondering what to do with "the contraption". When a news writer publishes an article, readers are not bewildered in how to interpret sentences they read.
Essentially, it is the same with art. There is more complexity to art than to chair or news article, so an explanation can be expanded, but essentially, what author creates, the audience gets. — Henri
Art is not a product, I don't think. Art is a form of communication. — Pattern-chaser
When we see art for the first time (or hear, if it's music, etc), we don't know what it's for, or what it means, or is intended to mean. — Pattern-chaser
It's a product as "a thing that is the result of an action or process". A man made thing. It doesn't just happen. It's produced. Maybe more precisely to say - a piece of art is a product. — Henri
I wouldn't say it's communication, especially not in terms of literal messages. It does communication as means to transfer experience, which is the goal. So it's a transfer of experience. If you want to call that communication also, ok. — Henri
Which one of the two provides more experience, a sense, a feeling, of "war is wrong"? — Henri
And it doesn't hold much value nevertheless, as I see it. — Henri
I didn't ask what is the difference between literal message of the paintings — Henri
I don't negate objective reality. I believe I have a good hold on what is good and bad, objectively — Henri
That's good, because I didn't answer that particular question. — Pattern-chaser
You present these two paintings... — Henri
I merely offered Guernica as one of (very) many examples. — Pattern-chaser
The fact that there is not much experience you get from Guernica, and the thing you get, a message, is after you learn some extra info about the painting, hints at how low of a quality that painting is. — Henri
I don't negate objective reality. I believe I have a good hold on what is good and bad, objectively — Henri
Then I have nothing more to offer on this subject that you will be able to hear. :sad: — Pattern-chaser
Well then you’re talking about entertainment. That’s different from art. ‘Transformers’ is entertainment. So is Shakespeare, or was. Now it’s an idea, of what art is. Once you begin viewing everything through the prism of entertainment then you have a few basic parameters to judge it by: dollars and asses.
So your attitude to art is very warped by your entertainment expectations. Other than that you have education: art as an instrument of instruction. So for you art is just utilitarian. — Brett
a triceritops who's colour changes to repent other predators. — Schzophr
It takes a keen eye to know how to respond to this question. — Schzophr
lasting appeal of a piece is down to interest keeping art hype alive. — Schzophr
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