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But is it art?
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Re: But is it art?
A double bed! What luxury...
Seriously, I find it quite disturbing, really. I don't know if it's art, but it's certainly though-provoking.
IanFounder/editor
Digital Photography Now (DPNow.com)
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Re: But is it art?
Well ..... if that's art I'm living in an exclusive Art Gallery and my ex-art teacher should be thoroughly ashamed of herself for kicking me out of her classes.
As for thought-provoking - concentrate on suggestions as to how much I should charge to allow peeps in to have a look at my efforts?
I look forward to seeing the spliced sardine.
Pol
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Re: But is it art?
Originally posted by DTD View PostI've just been told that I was in fact thinking of Tracey Emin's tent. Her bed was called 'My Bed'.
Personally, my own take on art was always that it was first and foremost an honest expression of emotion or experience, conveyed via any medium necessary but with degrees of skill, vision and originality. Obviously when pretentious and contrived nonsense such as Tracey Emin's bed and even simple piles of bricks became "art" in the eyes of the establishment, I felt it necessary to revise my views and simply learn to accept that literally anyone can be a "great artist" and that consequently today's "great art" was no longer something to celebrate or admire...
Originally posted by DTD View PostI do (seriously) think Marcel Duchamp's urinal was one of the great icons of 20th Century art though.
BTW, the real jewel which shone through Duchamp's pretentiousness was his idea not only to challenge what art stood for by featuring a urinal, but also to turn it upside down and write on it.......................oh dear, how bold
Just my views of course. I'm probably completely wrong
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Re: But is it art?
I'm posting this with the understanding that art is in the eye of the beholder and that not everything appeals to everyone, but this is my view...
We tend to lump everything that comes in an artistic medium such as photography as "art", but in my view, art is intended to appeal to the emotions, whereas strictly "making a statement" about something is an intellectual exercise that doesn't really belong in the realm of art.
An artful photograph produces an immediate emotional response in me without my having to stop and analyze it. I don't have to know why it affects me in order to for it to affect me. A unartful picture of an unmade bed, or a "sculpture" of a urinal, might be trying to make a valid statement, but if I don't respond to it emotionally, it's like a bad joke that has to be explained to get it. (That's also why I don't agree with experimental artists who say the interpretation of a work is up to me, that I can make anything I want of it. Art is about communication, and if it doesn't communicate anything to me, then it doesn't work for me.)
I don't dispute that there's a place and a purpose for making a statement. There are insightful historical examples, but they are just that: intelligent commentaries about art, not art itself.
Originally posted by DTD View PostI do (seriously) think Marcel Duchamp's urinal was one of the great icons of 20th Century art though.
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Re: But is it art?
I'm not sure what I thought about it the first time I saw it. I was probably quite young. It would be hard to imagine what it was like to see it when it was first exhibited. When I first saw it, it had been an icon for decades.
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Re: But is it art?
Sorry if I'm sounding heavy-handed about this (as I can at times), but it seems that it's considered iconic just because it was a urinal, not because it was in itself an artfully pleasing or otherwise telling subject that appealed to us on some emotional level. If it was, every men's room in the world would be an art museum.
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Re: But is it art?
I imagine it's status as an icon is because of its context.
As I understand it when it was exhibited in 1917, it was a shocking concept. And Duchamp meant it to be ironic rather than iconic. I think he was to some extent taking the p***. He was questioning what art is.
If we look at say the impressionists today, because we have 100+ years of art history we see their pictures in a different way than when they were first painted.
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Re: But is it art?
Originally posted by Blank Page View PostSorry if I'm sounding heavy-handed about this (as I can at times), but it seems that it's considered iconic just because it was a urinal, not because it was in itself an artfully pleasing or otherwise telling subject that appealed to us on some emotional level. If it was, every men's room in the world would be an art museum.
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Re: But is it art?
Originally posted by Archangel View PostI would say that this is just a photo, a scene. I don't see how this photo can be related to art, when there are no artistic elements involved or any kind of form of art.
Regards
George
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Re: But is it art?
Originally posted by Bearface View PostThe OP made the link between the photo and the work of Tracy Emin, which then led to the subsequent discussion. It's interesting that you see nothing artistic in the actual photo though, so it might be a good time to express what art means to you personally, as well as how you define it?
I do not see anything artistic in that specific photo, because there is nothing included that is artistic.
A photograph in its original form (unaltered, untreated and uproccessed) remains just a photograph, even if it is a photograph of a painting. In order for an original photo to be considered artistic it needs to show imaginative skill in arrangement or execution and fulfill all or a partial number of criteria.
So this photo doesn't fulfill the main criteria that define the term "art" which are:
1. Human effort to imitate, supplement, alter, or counteract the work of nature.
2. Conscious production or arrangement colors, forms, or other elements in a manner that affects the sense of beauty, regardless of the theme it records/presents.
Additionally it doesn't involve any of the following (other subcategories of them exist):
1. Imagination
2. Aesthetics
3. Movement
4. Perspective
5. Emotions (those that the photo reflects and not what those the user understands)
5. Documentary/Historic
6. Lighting effects
7. Nature themes and phenomena
and most of all
8. Lacks the main theme (the human) it refers to. It can stand like that as a photo, but technically (apart from DTD's knowledge and the information supplied to us that it belongs to a human) it cannot be related to anything and considered artistic.
Regards
George
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Re: But is it art?
I was merely encouraging you to elaborate on some points you'd made, but given that you dedicated some time to providing me with some third-party "definitions", I've taken the time to respond accordingly. These are my frank but nevertheless considered opinions and in asking for clarity on certain points, I'm merely trying to understand your position, rather than trying to challenge or antagonise you. Please respond with that in mind
Originally posted by Archangel View PostI do not see anything artistic in that specific photo, because there is nothing included that is artistic.
Originally posted by Archangel View PostA photograph in its original form (unaltered, untreated and uproccessed) remains just a photograph, even if it is a photograph of a painting.
Originally posted by Archangel View PostIn order for an original photo to be considered artistic it needs to show imaginative skill in arrangement or execution and fulfill all or a partial number of criteria.
Originally posted by Archangel View PostSo this photo doesn't fulfill the main criteria that define the term "art" which are:
1. Human effort to imitate, supplement, alter, or counteract the work of nature.
Originally posted by Archangel View Post2. Conscious production or arrangement colors, forms, or other elements in a manner that affects the sense of beauty, regardless of the theme it records/presents.
Originally posted by Archangel View PostAdditionally it doesn't involve any of the following (other subcategories of them exist):
1. Imagination
2. Aesthetics
3. Movement
4. Perspective
5. Emotions (those that the photo reflects and not what those the user understands)
5. Documentary/Historic
6. Lighting effects
7. Nature themes and phenomena
Aesthetics? Check.......although I'd appreciate your personal definition of this category.
Movement? You're surely not trying to tell me that a work of art requires "movement"? What about still life work..?
Perspective? Check.....
Emotions? Check......This image conjures up plenty of emotions for anyone who has seen and understood the plight of the homeless or poverty-stricken...
Documentary/Historic? Check......This is specifically a documentary photo! Historic..? Is all art historic? Does it need to be..?
Lighting effects? Check.......It's beautifully lit!
Nature themes and phenomena? Works of art don't need to feature either!
Originally posted by Archangel View Postand most of all
8. Lacks the main theme (the human) it refers to. It can stand like that as a photo, but technically (apart from DTD's knowledge and the information supplied to us that it belongs to a human) it cannot be related to anything and considered artistic.
As for "it cannot be related to anything and considered artistic"......well, I'm afraid it can! Firstly, in it's literal guise, the image is clearly representative of street living, or homelessness. Secondly, it is quite transparently an unmade bed in a street - DTD absolutely did not have to inform us that it was put there by human being; it is clearly not the work of a wild animal
I'm sorry, but I feel that you've relied too much on conjecture and then become dogmatic about it. Art can be good, bad or indifferent (and it often is...), but no single individual is qualified to determine what constitutes art and what does not. Art is in the eye of the beholder, rather like beauty...
I'd genuinely like to read about what moves you artistically, rather than having to plough through lists of irrelevant or inappropriate definitions. Here I've been questioning your statements, not your beliefs - I hope you can see that?
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Re: But is it art?
I don't see any conversation as challenge, debate or antagonism.
My writings reflect my thoughts after reading from time to time about specific definitions of what is art and how art is or can be expressed.
I do not see any artistic merit in the photo according to the 8 criteria I provided before. I base my opinion on well known facts and criteria and not on personal thinking of what it might be artistic or not.
Yes, there are thousands of unaltered original photos that constitute art, but they have by origin embedded artistic elements/criteria.
It is you Tim that you need to convince me that this photo has imaginative skill in arrangement/execution. To me it looks like a plain snap of a scene, without any special angle or positioning or any other.
Because "By virtue of the fact that it's a deliberately targeted, composed and processed photograph, it already meets this criteria completely" as you wrote, that makes a photo artistic?
If this is the case, then all photographs of beds can be considered artistic photos?
This photo doesn't have anything special in terms of colors or formation and doesn't really give a sense of beauty, regardless of the theme which records/represents. I don't think that anybody likes to see this situation the photograph shows. I will not mention anything about provocative. I would just say that this situation is terribly sad to see.
Imagination: I don't see any imagination put in that photo. I only see a snap of a street scene.
Aesthetics: It is a Greek word and I know very well what it means like "photography" is too.
Movement: Art can also include movement. A photo of a dancing ballerine can be artistic and also includes movement.
Perspective: Don't see any perspective view that could be considered artistic in this specific photo.
Emotions: Assumptions reflected here in this photo, not emotions. Straight emotions are reflected only by face/body expressions. I wrote specifically here before (not what the viewer thinks, but what the photo reflects) because I new that it would be misunderstood.
Documentary/Historic: This is not a documentary photo. It doesn't document anything. There is no information provided/documented by the photo of who is the person sleeping in this type of bed, where the bed is located, if it is a real or an artificial setup just for snapping. Documentary photos or artistic documentary photos are not abstract snaps.
Lighting Effects: Because the photo is lit, that can make it artistic?
I'm talking about different lighting effects, not just a well lit street photo.
Nature themes and phenomena: Works of art feature these too.
Anyway, for a photo to be artistic needs to have all, or some, or one of all the above things embedded in the photo. If none of the above is included then it cannot be considered artistic, but just a normal photo.
"As for "it cannot be related to anything and considered artistic"......well, I'm afraid it can! Firstly, in it's literal guise, the image is clearly representative of street living, or homelessness. Secondly, it is quite transparently an unmade bed in a street - DTD absolutely did not have to inform us that it was put there by human being; it is clearly not the work of a wild animal"
Yes, but these are not conditions/criteria that artistic judgements can be based on. Besides that you are also expressing personal subjective opinion here since you do not provide specific artistic criteria.
There is a lot of confusion of what it is art and what it is not. Personally I prefer to go by books and definitions and not to conclude my own.
Besides my personal knowledge, study and interpretation of what is art and where are the limits of art lat east in photography that I'm involved with, there are indeed some interesting third party definitions about art, found in "The American Heritage Dictionary" and "Britannica Encyclopedia"
My golden fingers got tired from typing and need to go to rest
Goodnight Tim.
George
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