SEOUL — The couple saw brushes and paint cans in front of a paint-splattered canvas at a gallery in a Seoul shopping mall. So they added a few brush strokes, assuming it was a participatory mural.
Not quite: The painting was a finished work by an American artist whose abstract aesthetic riffs on street art. The piece is worth more than $400,000, according to the organizers of the exhibition that featured the painting.
Now it’s hard to tell where the artist’s work ends and the vandalism begins. “Graffitied graffiti,” a local newspaper headline said last week. — New York Times
Couple mistakes $400,000 art work for participatory art project"...
Question: If you can't tell where the "art work" ends and the "vandalism" begins, then how much creative value does the work have? — Bitter Crank
Should we just call it garbage and be done with it? — Bitter Crank
The painting was a finished work by an American artist whose abstract aesthetic riffs on street art. — New York Times
Question: If you can't tell where the "art work" ends and the "vandalism" begins, then how much creative value does the work have? — Bitter Crank
Are petroglyphs more archeological in value, or is this "art"? It doesn't seem like there is much art in this particular petroglyph. It seems like graffiti or "practice" maybe. The 21st century assholes weren't very talented either, though in 3,000 years, it may be considered significant. — Bitter Crank
It clearly represents the journey and return of a soul - that orange blob in the middle - to a spiritual realm and then back. — T Clark
Well, it is art by the praxis criteria - It is presented with the intention that it be judged on an aesthetic basis. — T Clark
No,no -- you totally missed the point of the piece: the green splotches represent the sacredness of commercial activity in capitalist economies, threatened by the insidious creep of socialism--performed by the red blotches. I don't know how you could have missed that -- it is so obvious. — Bitter Crank
It also conforms to Duchamp's criteria: If the brush holder calls it art, then it IS art. That leads to this...
Or, your crooked snowman is art if you so designate it. (You are required to publish the announcement in the official Art Register, however.) Without proper documentation, millions of snow art pieces are lost forever. Just fucking tragic. — Bitter Crank
Opinion: That indeed looks like modern art, actually.Question: If you can't tell where the "art work" ends and the "vandalism" begins, then how much creative value does the work have? — Bitter Crank
Col. John Coleman, former chief of staff for the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force in Iraq, told the BBC that if the head of the Iraqi antiquities board wanted an apology, and “if it makes him feel good, we can certainly give him one.”
But he also asked: “If it wasn’t for our presence, what would the state of those archaeological ruins be?”
The Marines spent five months in 2003 based at Babylon, 50 miles south of Baghdad.
Last year, the British Museum said that U.S.-led troops using Babylon as a base had damaged and contaminated artifacts dating back thousands of years.
The German Archaeological Institute said U.S. and Polish troops based at Babylon had caused “massive damage” to the site in 2003 and 2004.
I started a thread under Philosophy o Fart about a defaced painting, It won't go anywhere. — Bitter Crank
Also - I like it. — T Clark
Decoration, however, isn't art, in my opinion. — Bitter Crank
Painting a wall color #F0EAD6, otherwise known as eggshell (type of bird not defined) is not art in any way, shape, manner or form. — Bitter Crank
Hotels, hospitals, and clinics buy cheap reproductions of recognized art work to hang on the wall. They also buy framed photographs of trees and flowers, hills and mountains, water etc; truckloads of occasional furniture of various styles, even manufactured assemblages of bits and pieces that have a Duchampian 'found art' appearance, but are not. The overall effect is kind of neutral, not bothersome, sort of pleasant. — Bitter Crank
Cosmic Latte starts out as a tiresome shade of pale and goes downhill from there. Yet another way the universe sucks. — Bitter Crank
Except Thomas Kinkaid: His gooey, treacly, cloying sentimental village scenes are a criminal aggravation — Bitter Crank
Except Thomas Kinkaid... — Bitter Crank
Oh you mean the former regime "occupying" the grounds of ancient Babylon? Well, the last regime there built a nice palace with great views of the ancient ruins just next to it for it's leader.The occupying allied army in Iraq was probably as nice as the Babylonian occupying army was. — Bitter Crank
Question: If you can't tell where the "art work" ends and the "vandalism" begins, then how much creative value does the work have? — Bitter Crank
These kinda "art" are precisely what art philosophers have been wondering about; the question "what is art?" remains unanswered. — Agent Smith
Is bad music music? — Agent Smith
constantly changing musical landscape. — Noble Dust
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