by Debaser » Wed Sep 08, 2004 5:50 pm
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:Most modern day software gives me the exact same reaction as most modern day art: "I could have done that; I'd never buy that."
Yeah, I'm sure you couldn't have possibly programmed Mr. Do!, Robb... oh wait!
Art's basically become a catchall word, much like irony , that doesn't really mean anything anymore. My favorite piece of "art" in the last ten years or so was when the guy dropped the exploding cow out of the helocopter.
I remember in London in some museum or another they had these tiny little wood carvings of these tiny little people in such absolute minute detail it almost seemed more than human hands should be capable of. No one really does shit like that anymore in the visual arts, presumably because people aren't learning those skills (and really, why the hell should they?).
Or rather, most people aren't. At the Chicago botanical gardens, there is (or at least was last year, I don't know about now) a display of glasswork by some filthy foreigner whose name was I think like Rem Cooley or something. I don't know, but I guess he's pretty famous as glassblowers go, so someone probably knows what the hell I'm talking about better than I do. But, in any event, it was pretty neat both in and of itself and because glass-blowing, as I understand it, leads to all sorts of eventually fatal lung nastiness and contracting black lung disease for your art is totally punk rock.
To the popular culture modern art is sort of a self-defining joke about squiggly lines and meaningless abstraction. And I kind of understand that opinion, but I think the critics are far more to blame than the artists if self-indulgent wankery is the order of the day. I can look at a modern piece that's just like a bunch of squiggly lines or colors (and sure enough pieces like this do exist and are getting displayed) and kind of "get" it. At the very least I get that the guy wasn't just slacking off and was really trying to communicate something. But it operates on a base, sort of pre-linguistic level, so attempting to talk about it leads to all sorts of self-important sounding nonsense (like pre-linguistic).
But I don't really know enough about the subject to do anything more than wax dillentante, which I've done, so I guess I'm done.
[quote="Ice Cream Jonsey"]Most modern day software gives me the exact same reaction as most modern day art: "I could have done that; I'd never buy that."[/quote]
Yeah, I'm sure you couldn't have possibly programmed Mr. Do!, Robb... oh wait!
Art's basically become a catchall word, much like irony , that doesn't really mean anything anymore. My favorite piece of "art" in the last ten years or so was when the guy dropped the exploding cow out of the helocopter.
I remember in London in some museum or another they had these tiny little wood carvings of these tiny little people in such absolute minute detail it almost seemed more than human hands should be capable of. No one really does shit like that anymore in the visual arts, presumably because people aren't learning those skills (and really, why the hell should they?).
Or rather, most people aren't. At the Chicago botanical gardens, there is (or at least was last year, I don't know about now) a display of glasswork by some filthy foreigner whose name was I think like Rem Cooley or something. I don't know, but I guess he's pretty famous as glassblowers go, so someone probably knows what the hell I'm talking about better than I do. But, in any event, it was pretty neat both in and of itself and because glass-blowing, as I understand it, leads to all sorts of eventually fatal lung nastiness and contracting black lung disease for your art is totally punk rock.
To the popular culture modern art is sort of a self-defining joke about squiggly lines and meaningless abstraction. And I kind of understand that opinion, but I think the critics are far more to blame than the artists if self-indulgent wankery is the order of the day. I can look at a modern piece that's just like a bunch of squiggly lines or colors (and sure enough pieces like this do exist and are getting displayed) and kind of "get" it. At the very least I get that the guy wasn't just slacking off and was really trying to communicate something. But it operates on a base, sort of pre-linguistic level, so attempting to talk about it leads to all sorts of self-important sounding nonsense (like pre-linguistic).
But I don't really know enough about the subject to do anything more than wax dillentante, which I've done, so I guess I'm done.