Art is an expression of nature, by using space, either directly, or by some other mode.
Cause monkeys also have been recorded doing art, Brett.
Here's food for thought.
Is my smile art? When is it art? — Qwex
Your criticism of Sheakspeare's work is divorced from reality and it's focus on plot is naive. You should appreciate the context in which it was written and performed. — Punshhh
Is my judgement better than most because I have so much experience? — Qwex
Are there lesser and greater judges of art? — Qwex
Anyway, I listen to all genres, classical - rap - metal - this is the best I've come across. — Qwex
I’ve tried many mediums and forms to try and capture (for better use of a word) my experience in the world. But I feel like I’ve failed in every attempt. Whatever I do never quite makes it. Not that anyone would necessarily know that. But I’ve realised I’ll always fail because art is artifice, a synthetic version of my experience. How could it possibly succeed at capturing my experience? — Brett
I think that as our consciousness has speeded up with the increased use of IT etc, we have become exposed to and accustomed to aesthetic narratives and these have become part of the nature of our consciousness. I think that if one looks to examine these issues philosophically this phenomena should be understood, for what it is and the aesthetic narratives identified. A knowledge of previous aesthetics would also be appropriate.My other thought, as I mentioned, is the modern consciousness. Is it real? If so then does it need new ways of regarding itself?
Yes, I think that poetry, or writing could convey the beach experience, as it is something which can be evoked, reminding the viewer, or listener of when they personally had the experience.Edit: a person could sit on the beach and write down on paper every word that comes to mind over a 60 minute period then hang it in a gallery. Is that any less than a painting
- expressing their consciousnessto sum up what art is is how a person expresses what they see, feel, imagine, etc. — Julia
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