How non-artists behave is not irrelevant to how artists do. — T Clark
Ok, so how is it relevant? — Noble Dust
Artists are the leaders of civilization.
— Thinker
Artists don't lead civilization, they ride on it. Excess wealth generated by centralized economic systems allows expenditures on things that are not directly related to food, shelter, and security. That doesn't say anything bad about art, but there's no doubt it, as an organized institution, is a luxury.
The paintings in the Lascaux cave are some of the most beautiful and moving things I've ever seen. It seems unlikely that whoever painted them had any concept of art or artists. Seems to me that art became a thing when cities came into existence. I have no evidence for that. — T Clark
I'm asking how art receives content or meaning, and as I've stated, I think the audience is 50% of the work, so all of these attempts by artists to define what they've done beforehand are not only unhelpful, but futile. — Noble Dust
I agree with you and stated that in my post - and much more - perhaps I didn't make myself clear. — Thinker
I'm not objecting; follow the thread of our conversation, I'm asking you honest questions. I'm not sure if I agree that broadening the discussion will help, but that's why I'm asking you to explain, maybe I'll end up agreeing. — Noble Dust
Spoken like a true engineer. You see the surface mechanics of things real well. However the voice behind the curtain is that of the artist. Do you realize philosophers are artists? Who thought of the institutions of society first? Who helps steer the ship of state today? When we debate stem cell research in the US – who is talking to the politicians? — Thinker
I have mixed feelings about conceptual art.
Ok, I see what you mean. But I still disagree; art at it's best is it's own form of communication; it's own language. That's why the best art, to me, doesn't require explication. It does in fact speak for itself because it speaks in it's own language. That's actually a main component of the argument I'm making. — Noble Dust
Art is human action. — T Clark
I think you are raising art up on a pedestal it doesn't need or deserve. Art is human action. — T Clark
but and I think it is important, until conceptual art came along art was, and to a large extent still is representational. Du Champs, Warhol et al made art that was overtly metaphorical, giving it a representational facade with a metaphorical referent. — Cavacava
I'm not trying to insult you; if you hadn't said you were an engineer I would still be debating your ideas in the same way. — Noble Dust
I disagree that art is action; what do you mean by that? Creating a work of art is an action, but the art itself isn't action. — Noble Dust
This is when the audience really puts in their 50% share of the work, and many different interpretations of a piece get made; people experience within many different contexts; a piece that transcends generations gets experienced in even wider (historical) contexts. — Noble Dust
I get the same kind of pleasure from writing poetry as I do writing construction specifications, although I can feel myself using different parts of my mind. — T Clark
You have a pretty high falutin vision of the importance of philosophers and artists, especially philosophers. None of us are "the voice behind the curtain." There isn't one. — T Clark
I say 50% because there's just two participants, fundamentally: artist and audience. Or, as mcdoogle pointed out, there's also the middle men of sorts; the record label, the art dealer, the money guy. So maybe 33% is better. — Noble Dust
The main difference to me is that writing construction specifications is utilitarian; it serves a practical purpose. There's a goal, and the specifications get you there. Poetry doesn't have a goal. — Noble Dust
Poetry doesn't have a goal. — Noble Dust
Specifications, drawings, work plans, project plans - everything that goes into a design - are all part of a vision. A model I can feel and see. I can hold it up to the light, a single, undivided whole. That's how poetry feels. That's how the world feels. — T Clark
I think you are way off base here. Please reconsider this statement. — Thinker
But the circumstance of artist/audience/middle man doesn't change. I'm making this point because too often one of those three gets a distorted view of their role in the process. — Noble Dust
What? Sure the artist changes. Look at Radiohead - Pablo Honey vs. Amnesiac. — Noble Dust
Very perceptive of you. Ok, I guess we just got here by accident. Was calculus an accident? Was Newton an artist? — Thinker
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