Without knowing about Van Gogh nobody would stop for one second in front of those sunflowers today...Best,
Sebastian
I would.
Many of the greats are great because of their innovations and the boundaries they pushed at and broke beyond. And here we sit, safely within those new established boundaries, saying "What was so great about that?"
i think you are right vaughn ...
i sometimes have this conversation with my kids about music, tv, movies and animated-stuff.
these days, everything is over produced its hard to know when the greatness is due to the
post processing, or the actual starting point.
There's a reaction against that in some circles too, of course. "Dogme" filmmaking is an example from the film world that might have some philosophical resonance with the APUG crowd.
Also, as Vaughn suggested, groundbreaking art can sort of cannibalize itself. I remember hearing the first Nine Inch Nails album back in 1990 and being dumbfounded; it was in this weird space between dance-floor music, industrial noise, and self-indulgent capital-A-Art, and I'd never heard anything like it and found it almost physically difficult to wrap my head around. And about ten minutes later, it had been assimilated into the cultural mainstream and started to spawn imitators, and now that same album sounds rather conservative and milquetoast ("wow, we used to think *this* was disturbing?").
Really successful groundbreaking art often renders itself obsolete, and that's a good thing, but it means that as a viewer or listener you can't really go back and bathe in the same river twice.
-NT
There's a reaction against that in some circles too, of course. "Dogme" filmmaking is an example from the film world that might have some philosophical resonance with the APUG crowd.
Also, as Vaughn suggested, groundbreaking art can sort of cannibalize itself. I remember hearing the first Nine Inch Nails album back in 1990 and being dumbfounded; it was in this weird space between dance-floor music, industrial noise, and self-indulgent capital-A-Art, and I'd never heard anything like it and found it almost physically difficult to wrap my head around. And about ten minutes later, it had been assimilated into the cultural mainstream and started to spawn imitators, and now that same album sounds rather conservative and milquetoast ("wow, we used to think *this* was disturbing?").
Really successful groundbreaking art often renders itself obsolete, and that's a good thing, but it means that as a viewer or listener you can't really go back and bathe in the same river twice.
-NT
I believe there are "great artists" all around us. Most of them we will never know. A few of those become famous, either through their own drive and self-promotion, or through fortunate discovery by others. But in any case their art catches someone's eye. Lots of someones. If enough someones find their art to be great then their personal stories become important.
But even with all of this very few become recognized over time as "great." Those who become recognized as masters have survived the test of time. Their art and their stories have remained important to others across generations. This is true for music and painting as well as for other art forms.
The survival of any artist today depends on this generation. Do you recognize their work as art? Do you like what you see? Are you going to tell their stories to those generations that come after you? Will you curate their art, their stories and their portfolios?
I am a little afraid that the new Sony A7R, or Nikon 800E, or Instagram, or Flikr, has become the new focus of our generation. The stories of the masters are no longer important.
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