</span><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (Aggie @ Jan 21 2003, 12:15 AM)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'>Next question,,,,, think about your responses on the craft verses art and such ....
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Aggie, you are going a tad too fast for me to keep up.
The questions you pose are deep ones, and strike at the very essences of "what we do" and why we do it. There are many hot buttons here -
"What is Art?" - I've studied and struggled with that one for many moons now....
I seriously *don't know*. I've heard a lot of definitions - some significantly better than others (see: "There is NO *bad* Scot's Whisky - It's just that some is better than others). After - ahem - (mumble) years of chasing that question, I think I am farther from the answer than when I started. Additionally, NOW I am not at all sure that I even WANT to know - I feel more comforatble in accepting art as a matter of faith than I would in becoming some holy guru on a mountaintop - those mountaintops are COLD!
Art is- (Choose one from one or more of this extensively - and severely abbreviated list):
" -The lie that leads us to the truth" - Pablo Picasso
" -The encoded widow to the being of the artist on the other side." I really like this one.
" - Communication."
" - That mysterious conduit carrying emotional energy between human beings."
" - That which artists *do*"
I don't know about "is", but anyhow, related:
"But the artist persists because he has the will to create, and this is the magic power which can transform and transfigure and transpose and which will utimately be transmitted to others" - Anais Niin.
Now ... "What inspires me."
The one work of art that has had more of an effect on me that any other is Renoir's "Torse au Soleil" - painted in 1875. There is a phenomenon I call "Rapture of the Work"; that effect is hypnotic, obsessive, haunting -- I close my eyes and I *still* see it... That happens to me many times, but nowhere as intensely as when I first experienced this work.
There are *SO* many others - Edward Weston's "early" work... Robert Farber, Alfred Cheney Johnston, Horst, Zoltan Glass, Irving Penn - I could go on for days.
Now -- "Vision".
This could fill volumes. I agree with the idea that it cannot be "taught" - at least not in any traditional way that I know about. I think that there will be an 'infiltration' into that area, and it will change with experience. Every experince changes my being to some extent - my conditioning, my viewpoint, my conception of the world.
Vision is difficult "stuff". This idea has been beaten to death, but it is true: we all have our individual visions, particular to, and peculiar to, each one of us. We "see" things differently. To an artist (and everyone else, for that matter) our vision - our perception of the world - is THE most important part of our being.
That is the great pitfall in critiquing - When can we be constructive - providing suggestions that may be useful in expanding or enhancing another's vision, or - will we prove to be something negative - diluting and confusing the other person's style?
Try this for thought - it is the philosophy I've followed for some time now -
There are three kinds of art, as far as I am concerned:
1. The well done, finely crafted, technically "good", pleasant works. The stuff you'd hang on the wall of your living room.
2. The works that "Nail my flippers to the floor." The Enrtancers, the Enrapturers.
They usually have a pronounced emotional effect. I have real trouble "getting them out of my mind".
3. The works I don't understand - possibly the most important category. Someone else - a different "Being" found these to be significant - very possibly "enrapturing" in their vision. There is a strong probability that the fault of not understanding is mine - I simply don't know how to decode the window. With more study and contemplation, I might figure it out .... if I do, I've GROWN just a little bit - and that is a wonderful thing to have happen.
Note that in all of this there is no "Good" or "Bad". Certainly there are differences, but to try to 'rank" art is far too dependent on each individual vision, and I cannot with any kind of conscience claim my vision to be "better" than anyone else's.
I'll apologize for the long-windedness here - I'm trying to keep pace.