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- Jul 14, 2011
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I'll go back once a vaccine is invented for the Warhol pandemic.
That's the spirit!Wow. It shows how out of touch this audience is that they are upset over Warhol. There is a whole new world of really shitty art and artists out there now...get with it!
Nice.I only own a couple prints each of two earlier photographers. Watkins, and perhaps his polar opposite, Wallace Nutting -- who is known for his mass-produced hand-colored photographs (esp new England) in the first half of 20th century (popular as wedding gifts, etc).
I should put the Watkins back up on my walls -- my living room is dark enough. I can hardly appreciate my own work on the walls! I'll have to see about better lighting after I get a new electrical service box...
If you did not benefit, what was the purpose? Was "craft" the only focus of the BFA process?
Don,
The vast majority of employees in the field of 'Medicine' have to a have 'passed' numerous formal courses AFTER high one's school.education
My Going back to an "Institute of Higher Learning" after those many years was a means of preventing "mental stagnation'... or sitting in front of the
television. I also had the opportunity to 'assist' my fellow students interested in the required craft of making good photographs.
If you have not 'tried' it... why not? ou probably have many 'good ideas' and 'skills that you could 'pass on' to fellow students who could benefit from YOUR acquired skills/ experience.
I saw Carleton Watkins at Cantor center a few years back. Really amazing to engage with his photos in person. I remember wishing they hadn’t been so stingy with the room lighting though. They have some sculpture there too.
are you guys going on about the new MoMA in SF? I was a member there for a while. Well worth the price. I must have missed the Warhol stuff....or blocked it from memory. I never met any single women there either...at least none that were interested in men...I did get hit on several times though...but that’s just SF for ya.
Just to nit-pick on your example of Caravaggio - in his day, he caused a huge scandal by A: using known prostitutes as models for the Virgin Mary in his paintings, and B: in The Madonna of Loreto, he showed the soles of the pilgrims dirty feet pointing directly at the viewer. The dirty feet thing was considered especially controversial and unaesthetic - one simply did not point dirty bare feet at the ne-plus-ultra of Roman society in their private commemorative chapel!Some say that the "art is in the idea." I guess that could be applied to Warhol. But I don't see anything aesthetic in his work. For the most part it's just plain ugly. I don't think you could say that about Caravaggio. Indeed, Warhol could mark the transition from art to marketing. Let's not forget that he had made a good living as an advertising illustrator. Those shoes for I. Miller were rather good. But I don't think he ever surpassed those images.
Some say that the "art is in the idea." I guess that could be applied to Warhol.
Now you did it.At least no one's discussing Jeff Koons (until now).
jawarden, I took a university class last semester in Visual Theory and Criticism and the textbook, “Why Is That Art?” by Terry Barrett, featured the Jeff Koons’ PlayDough piece on the cover.
What I learned from the class is that what is art and what is aesthetic is defined by the times, the critics, the philosophers, the artists, the collectors, the museums, the galleries, but rarely by the public. As soon as a piece is celebrated as a great work and defining of a “movement,” something else will come along to disrupt that. Examples of this abound, especially in the 20th-century, such as Dada morphing to Surrealism and paving the way to Abstract Expressionism.
Now, hopefully, somebody on this forum actually admires him, and I truly hope I have BBQ'd their sacred cow.
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