Conceptual art ? That's so '70s.
Here in the tourist traps of northeast Florida, its over saturated, over sharpened, works which evoke sentimentality.
Or, maybe I'm too harsh.
juan
been increasingly made aware of which is that the only photography worthy to hang in NYC galleries has to be post-modern, conceptual, and ironic or any combination of those. It also helps if it looks rather amateurishly produced (though not always), is stupid large (as if everyone had acres of wall space), and is in blandly desaturated color If you're producing "beautiful" images, you haven't got a chance (except in a couple of rent-a-wall galleries)
But the idea that the kind of work that some of the best photographers on apug produce is just not going to get shown here is really disappointing and unfortunate.
It all reminds me of the absolute rejection of romantic or realistic styles of painting when modernism started creeping in in the beginning of the twentieth century.
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It depends on haw far west you are in the state. Murray State University has a gallery that shows contemporary photography. There are plenty of galleries in Louisville, Indianapolis, Evansville, Memphis, Nashville, and Paducah. Art is an ever changing thing. If you go to a gallery expecting to see work like that made 50-60 years ago, you will probably be disappointed.
Have not notice this trend locally -- but then Humboldt County is a rural area (with more artists per capita than anywhere else in California) and is a bit of a backwater -- no one has 10,000 euros, or dollars, to spend on art, so no reason to show that kind of work around here. I suppose I could find plenty of it by going 300 miles south to San Francisco.
Vaughn
I bet you could spend any amount of money if you hung out around the Morris Graves museum for a while.
The claim that only conceptual work is being shown in New York galleries or that what Jensen calls "the New York galleries' agenda and academia" could be considered a unified entity is just off base. If one goes looking for traditional work in galleries and publications that aren't known for it, it's no surprise that it isn't there. "Academia" is a large mishmash of enterprises that includes scholarship on virtually every period of photography since its origins.
Trends come, trends go.
... the overly intentional hipster irony seen in the "make it pale, make it flat, make it big" photos I saw so many of in the student galleries.
By the time a gallery opens to serve the proletariat, it hasn't really been art for a long time, but is just watered down Pop Culture. Neither the cutting edge or Weston, but something homogenized, safe and wrapped in plastic.
Post Modernism deconstructed itself into comfortable dotage long ago. It was saved from its decadent phase because it lacked vitality in the first place. Now it hangs out in shopping malls.
Conceptual Art has become Lawrence Welk, it's self installation limited only by access ramps and incontinence bags.
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So there's a body of collectors who regard "fine art" as "decorative art", or at least choose to mix the two along with other work. Their dollars are obviously welcome.
I don't think a decorative commercial product like a calendar necessarily precludes good artwork, even artists need to make a living in some way, and if that helps to sustain your art, why not? At least in my opinion, it is not that a photograph is suddenly "bad art", if it is reproduced on a calendar.
Even a photographer like Michael Kenna, who I think is a well regarded photographer here on APUG, has a wall calendar for sale on his website...:
http://www.michaelkenna.net/publications.php
Marco
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