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Poll: Why, Modern Art? Why?


Modern Art qualifies as art. Do you agree?
Yes - strongly.
20.3% (25)
20.3% (25)
Yes - slightly.
8.1% (10)
8.1% (10)
It depends (please post your opinion).
18.7% (23)
18.7% (23)
No - slightly.
22% (27)
22% (27)
No - strongly.
30.9% (38)
30.9% (38)
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Eggo
PROBATION
Posts: 2821
Joined: 21 Aug 2008

killerap85:
"Guitar solos are not "who can hit the fret board the fastest" guitarolypmics freak shows"

Easy for you to say, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ATub40Npxik vs http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-aeSbPbyJO8

"Painting isn't about "cool pictures".."

No, sometimes its about pretending to paint well while dribling paint on a canvas in a drunken stupor http://www.abstract-art.com/abstraction/l2_grnfthrs_fldr/g004_pllck4.html vs http://lh3.ggpht.com/the.forechecker/R6olgPfkVHI/AAAAAAAAAZM/O2pbR-gF-Ec/Norman+Rockwell+-+Save+Freedom+of+Speech.JPG

I could go on but I think you get the point.

And the video games thing? Im AGAINST taking the games out of my video games.

image

User was put on probation for: Poll: CoD: WaW. Its got major issues.. (3 days)
Sexual Harassment Panda
Beat Writer
Posts: 156
Joined: 24 Apr 2008

Art doesn't need to have a point. People who try to find meaning in a page of randomly arranged shapes are in fact twats and give modern art a bad image. The question you have to ask yourself is "is it pleasing to look at?" If the answer is yes, then it was probably more worthwhile than another portrait.

Imitation Saccharin
Gone Gonzo
Posts: 1011
Joined: 1 Dec 2007

The Iron Ninja:

image

I have... no words... they should have... sent... a poet...

killerap85
Paperboy
Posts: 50
Joined: 7 Oct 2008

"That is because it is a "vague concept that defies expression"."

i give you that today it is and seems to be created for soul purpose of trying desperatly to prove it, but I think norman rockwell had a great many non-vague concepts that he expressed very well. The four freedoms fly in the face of it with vivid color.

"Your point of view is trying to force all that anyone see in art into one small confined box."

No Im not. Im not forcing anyone to do anything or see anything. Im simply saying what I think good art is. Some people like peanut butter and mayo on bread. I dont. I think its silly and dumb.

"I am an artist and to make any sort of art takes the exact opposite state of mind"

Minbd if we see some of your stuff?

"Art is free and unconfined." free only to define itself within boundries.

"What is art to some is not art to others, and that is ok."

We agree here

killerap85
Paperboy
Posts: 50
Joined: 7 Oct 2008

eggo, is that a 10k piece of art or something?

killerap85
Paperboy
Posts: 50
Joined: 7 Oct 2008

BTW, Im using Norman Rockwell as an example for a reason. He was probably, imo, onetof the greatest artists of his time and was ignored by the artistic elites for being nothing more than a commercial artist. I think any one of his works is worth the entire modern art movement.

Maybe if he sucked up to gertrude stein like picasso did he would have been rich too.

Eggo
PROBATION
Posts: 2821
Joined: 21 Aug 2008

killerap85:
eggo, is that a 10k piece of art or something?

No, it's the point which I made flying right over your head.

User was put on probation for: Poll: CoD: WaW. Its got major issues.. (3 days)
killerap85
Paperboy
Posts: 50
Joined: 7 Oct 2008

Maybe your points should have points?

one-shot-finch
Paperboy
Posts: 44
Joined: 12 Jun 2008

I once saw a plane made entirely out of knives that wouldnt make it anywhere near a real plane a great commentary on plane security. in the same room there was also a blank canvas. underneath it said the "artist" only painted in white

killerap85
Paperboy
Posts: 50
Joined: 7 Oct 2008

"I once saw a plane made entirely out of knives that wouldnt make it anywhere near a real plane a great commentary on plane security. in the same room there was also a blank canvas. underneath it said the "artist" only painted in white"

Thats it though. I think a point on airplane security is better served being created with words. Unless of course there is some kind of skill being demonstrated.

The joke pieces are just that.

killerap85
Paperboy
Posts: 50
Joined: 7 Oct 2008

Marbas:

killerap85:
So according to that wiki article the whole point of him grabbing a urinal and actin like it was art was to provoke people and that somehow makes it art? wtvr

I like art that takes skill. If any douchbag can do it, it isnt art TO ME. Its some douchebag talking the walk.

But the thing is, not any douchebag can make good modern art. It just looks like it.

somehow missed this.

If it looks like a duck and walks like duck...

Uszi
Muckraker
Posts: 242
Joined: 10 Feb 2008

The Iron Ninja:
...
image
It's not trying to say anything like
"What is the crab? Is it the representation of our sorrow? our anger? Our wasteful ways?"
Instead it's just
"Croaw! I'm a giant crab and I'm gonna eat'cher!"

Actually, it could represent all of those things, and I'm sure if you showed it to an artist or someone with an degree in art, they would find some sort of interpretation for you.

As for us nerds though, whenever we see a picture like that, all we can think is:

"Hey, kid, ATTACK ITS WEAK POINT FOR MASSIVE DAMAGE!"

Archon
CEO & Publisher
Posts: 479
Joined: 12 Nov 2002

Tom, if you'll grant me that aesthetic impact and technical skill are both relevant to a fair definition of art, I'll revise my opinion from "aesthetic beauty" to "purposeful and powerful aesthetic impact" then, to include the (fair) example of a Picasso or similar works of high technique and potent emotional impact, albeit not beautiful...

Agiel7
Paperboy
Posts: 28
Joined: 5 Sep 2008

I consider myself as someone who immensely enjoys art (Renoir especially, but Luis Royo is also on my short list). However, if a man wearing a turtle-neck and a beret just splatters paint on a canvas and tells me I'm not looking into his "painting" deep enough, I still think its an excuse for a lack of actual painting ability.

jdog345
Beat Writer
Posts: 174
Joined: 10 Jul 2008

Pollock threw paint at the canvas thinking, "This *splat* is *splat* so fucking *splat* easy!"

tendo82
Section Editor
Posts: 317
Joined: 30 Nov 2007

Archon:
"purposeful and powerful aesthetic impact"

An eloquent summation of the artistic endeavor.

GothmogII
Pulitzer Laureate
Posts: 754
Joined: 6 Apr 2008

Sexual Harassment Panda:
Art doesn't need to have a point. People who try to find meaning in a page of randomly arranged shapes are in fact twats and give modern art a bad image. The question you have to ask yourself is "is it pleasing to look at?" If the answer is yes, then it was probably more worthwhile than another portrait.

I can agree here. No, it's not a very 'deep' way to approach art. But it's how I like it, I look at a piece, and say, do I like the way this looks? Is it interesting? Pleasing to the eye, that's all I'm looking for personally. I don't think it's a great disservice to the artist to not agonise over something looking for whatever obscure meaning they've attempted to stick on to it, they'll have plenty enough people doing that anyway, don't see why -everyone- has to.

Johnn Johnston
Gone Gonzo
Posts: 2913
Joined: 4 May 2008

Uszi:

The Iron Ninja:
...


It's not trying to say anything like
"What is the crab? Is it the representation of our sorrow? our anger? Our wasteful ways?"
Instead it's just
"Croaw! I'm a giant crab and I'm gonna eat'cher!"

Actually, it could represent all of those things, and I'm sure if you showed it to an artist or someone with an degree in art, they would find some sort of interpretation for you.

It's the same as a piece of poetry. If you read a poem, you might get one view of what it means that entirely differs from that of the poet, and sometimes you put meaning into places where it was never intended to be.

Godysseus
Paperboy
Posts: 14
Joined: 11 Sep 2008

Art can only be art if it has an expression of meaning to it, which is almost ambiguous with beauty, in some form

Recently, humans have learned that there can be a lot of expression in the menial, ordinary, or chaotic.

Where art meets commercialism is where this problem emerges, because people are putting outrageous prices on things which require little effort to make or even envision.

If modern art, say, sold for a few dollars, I doubt this would be a problem or even a moral question to anybody.

Me? I blame the art subculture. People who spend an hour every morning aligning the angle between the spikes in their hair to the golden ratio (exaggeration) know that art and expression is important, but for me, their subject matter is usually a bit too thoughtless to qualify for my time, and the time of a lot of other people, let alone their money.

Banksy, on the other hand, rocks socks

Uncompetative
Muckraker
Posts: 344
Joined: 2 Jul 2008

The Iron Ninja:

Uncompetative:

The Iron Ninja:
As a general rule I have no patience for modern art.
If it's not a picture of something I can recognise, like say... A cow. Then I have no interest in it.

Here is some Modern Art you may like by Jean Debuffet:

image

That is terrible. A truly ugly sight.
I don't like it when art has to be like that. Reminds me of Art in college (High School for all you Americans) when I tried drawing light and colourful pictures, then my coffee fueled art teacher would come in, suggest I cover the entire thing in brown or yellowish brown (or if I was really lucky, reddish brown) so that all of the classes artwork looked exactly the same.
Just a wall of brown that we all got the same marks for.

I much prefer stuff like this.
image

image

It's pretty simple, but at least they look like proper cows, I wouldn't be ashamed to hang it on a wall somewhere.

Actually, both your alternatives are Impressionist paintings as described by the artists responsible for them (who you didn't credit).

Impressionism is Modern Art, although to be doing it now is not exactly avante-garde and is usually described as 'Stuckist'.

I like one by Jan Blencowe best (who is a member of the American Impressionists Society), who did the two cows under a tree.

The third one is by Simon Birtall (see: http://www.birtall.co.uk/freelance-illustrator-artist.htm for how he classifies himself).

The essential point I was trying to make is that there is still representational contempory modern art being made, although it may well not be to your taste as concept is often more important than aesthetics.

Johnn Johnston
Gone Gonzo
Posts: 2913
Joined: 4 May 2008

Ok, here's another point:

If the artists making the 'Modern Art' (e.g. Tracey Emin, who left an unmade bed with some used tampons and was shortlisted for the Turner Prize) are capable of making points using the medium of art, then why do they not just paint a painting or write a poem? Surely that would gain them more respect and a wider audience, allowing them to promote that point with more strength and allowing them to let more people know of the issue they are raising. If the art did not make a point, but still had meaning, there would surely be a more conventional way of actualising that meaning. It would also mean less menstrual blood being left in art galleries.

Shirahime
Beat Writer
Posts: 186
Joined: 8 Sep 2008

I'm not a big lover of modern art.

Infact thinking about it, the Art Nouveau movement is about as modern as I get. I'm a big fan of Steinlen and Mucha.

If anyone says Modern Art to me, I instantly think of chrome and sharp edges.

Johnn Johnston
Gone Gonzo
Posts: 2913
Joined: 4 May 2008

Sexual Harassment Panda:
The question you have to ask yourself is "is it pleasing to look at?" If the answer is yes, then it was probably more worthwhile than another portrait.

That is most certainly correct. However, the number of pieces of modern art that actually look anywhere near pleasing to look at are in the minority.

Jamanticus
Gone Gonzo
Posts: 1503
Joined: 7 Sep 2008

Johnn Johnston:

Sexual Harassment Panda:
The question you have to ask yourself is "is it pleasing to look at?" If the answer is yes, then it was probably more worthwhile than another portrait.

That is most certainly correct. However, the number of pieces of modern art that actually look anywhere near pleasing to look at are in the minority.

Agreed fully. Some of them are just plain revolting (which may be the modern artist's goal), and some of them look like blobs of molten metal....Alright, some of them *are* blobs of molten metal......

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