Picasso's imagination seems to have been much wider than Rockwell's, and he worked in several different forms. His "Mask" sculpture in Chicago is an example: — Bitter Crank
Let's say, "personal judgement". How else would anyone decide? — Bitter Crank
It isn't art for the same reason that a seashell isn't art, even if it is mounted in a nice display case. — Bitter Crank
Rockwell is as much an illustrator as a painter. Even his paintings are really illustrations. Illustration is a different art than fine art painting, but it is worthy of respect — T Clark
It's not that he can't paint purty, he chooses not to. I believe there's something there, but I often can't see it. — T Clark
On what basis are you saying it is not art - personal opinion? — Tom Storm
Let's say, "personal judgement". How else would anyone decide? — Bitter Crank
The pause mean.. 'but sentimental pap'. — Tom Storm
I started a thread under Philosophy o Fart about a defaced painting, It won't go anywhere. — Bitter Crank
Yes, but throughout this thread we have been discussing more than personal taste - potential objective criteria (you suggested effort and quality) by which to assess a work. It's even been suggested that bad art isn't worth calling 'art'. — Tom Storm
"it is not surprising that there is a lot of bad art. "What is surprising is that there is so much good art -- everywhere" — Bitter Crank
I don't think I buy this, but that brings us back to what is good and what isn't. There is a tendency for sophisticated people to see sentiment as overly sentimental. That's one of the raps against country music that I don't buy. Most rock and roll is unwilling or afraid to talk about mothers, fathers, children, friendships, families, communities. If I remember correctly, you're not a country fan. I am. Then again, there's good and there's bad. — T Clark
"it is not surprising that there is a lot of bad art. "What is surprising is that there is so much good art -- everywhere" — Bitter Crank
Art is anything that is presented by someone for aesthetic judgement. It's similar to saying that it's art if I say it is, but not exactly. It's a rule that's easy to apply. — T Clark
I do not know why some people think it is an upgrade to put a beautiful seashell in a case and hail it as art. — Bitter Crank
I wasn't saying the art expert was right, merely that there may be distinction between excellent draftsmanship and artistic merit. Quite often people think virtuosic displays of skill imply excellence, just as the converse may also be held as true. — Tom Storm
The point is apart from subjective taste, what do we have? — Tom Storm
I do not know why some people think it is an upgrade to put a beautiful seashell in a case and hail it as art. — Bitter Crank
The entire visible universe is available for one's aesthetic judgement (see Van Gogh, Starry Night). — Bitter Crank
Aesthetic judgement doesn't kick in just because we are in a museum displaying art. It also kicks in when we see an interesting, almost cadmium yellow fungus. Beautiful! What's its name? What is the coloring composed of? Interesting how the yellow fades to brown over a week's time. How many shelf fungi start out as bright yellow? Et cetera. — Bitter Crank
The quality of porn is easy to measure. — Bitter Crank
So, what are you going to do about this deficiency? — Bitter Crank
have often wondered about how skillful technique counts toward making good art. When I think of folk art, I think of people who's technique is not sophisticated, but who have artistic vision. — T Clark
I'm asking you. You're the one making claims about merit that seem to hint at some kind objectivity. — Tom Storm
I agree. Many technically astonishing artists have no depth or emotion in their work. It's all technique. But this starts to get alarmingly speculative. What does it mean to have 'depth' or 'feeling' in your art? I certainly know that in the classical tradition there are pianists and violinists who can hit all the notes with wonderous ability and yet is seems 'empty'. Fuck... are we heading towards qualia again? — Tom Storm
Art is something created by people that has no meaning beyond the experience elicited in the viewer/listener/reader. The only thing of value we can really say about a work of art is a description of our experience of it. — T Clark
Culture, tradition, elites, — baker
That hasn't been my experience. — Bitter Crank
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