The best example in Eugene Smith's photo of the Japanese mother bathing her daughter who had been horribly deformed by industrial mercury poisoning. One could easily show just the deformities of such people and shock us, but Smith demonstrated the tragedy while also providing a scene of love and hope. I challenge you to find a a work of contemporary art that is as poignant and powerful as that single image.
bjorke said:One of the greatest dangers for an artist is to become to involved in theory and to get caught up in reactionary attitudes toward what they DON'T like. One can't make art that way. One can write about art as a reaction, but not create it.
Directing energy toward work that is personally meaningful is a far more productive use of your time than worrying about whether other people's art sucks.
Robert Kennedy said:To move away from giving the Turner prize for someone who simply knows how hire a good electrician... would mean that you actually would need SKILL to be considered GOOD. I mean imagine what would happen if people were required to LEARN PRINTING SKILLS! Oh, the humanity! Or worse yet, learn COMPOSITION! It would be chaos! People would actually have to MAKE the art instead of just buying it or digging it out of the trash! ...
I mean if people started MAKING their own art, when would they have time to do things like attend openings and have fondue parties?
, and I don't really agree with that.One thing sort of troubles me ... there is an assumption that, if someone does not USE the principles of composition, or the "skills" of printing, that it necessarily follows that they do not KNOW what they are. Possibly they don't, but this is one enormous leap to a conclusion.
Aurore said:Those indescribable feelings/emotions that are stirred up every now and again that remind you of something, not a time or place or person or object but a feeling you once felt long ago but haven't felt since. Am I nuts?"
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