Theo Sulphate
Member
... in fact, people who have spent a lifetime sometimes studying and trying to understand art, provide new insights or a different way of thinking about it are constantly denigrated as "ivory tower academics"
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Even more incomprehensibly, there seems to be some assumption that artists go about their business in some sort of mystical way, that they do their work as a result of some sort of upwelling of transcendent wooziness; whereas the most cursory reading on the history of art reveals movement after movement of artists who write manifestos, books, pamphlets, create extraordinary theories about art...
Thank you for writing that; perhaps it is the one post in this thread that's made me think about how people not only react to art, but react to what others deem worthy in art.
Yes, there is a reverse-snobbery or anti-intellectualism that exists. Part of it is because it's easy for anyone to criticize something. I think it's also partly due to social politics and influential connections that enable some people to become highly regarded while others with equal or superior talent are invisible.
Eggleston's work provokes these attitudes I think. Although I like and see value in some of his photos, I see nothing in his other photos. That's fine - I'm not calling him a charlatan. Apparently even knowledgeable and respected people in the art world have opposing views on his work.
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All the professional artists I know (and I know painters, performance artists, sonic artists, musicians, dancers) have a very clear set of ideas and understandings that they are expressing
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We are in complete agreement here. I know many accomplished, performing, musicians including one who has performed on tour with groups anyone here would recognize. As a mere beginner and amateur, I understand little of the concepts they talk about - but what they do talk about is real and certainly not a vague wooziness, because I can experience and appreciate the results.