Q.G.
Member
Surely you don't deny that a complete abstract can have emotional impact?
I don't, no.
On the contrary.
It then too is a matter of relevance. And who knows why some abstract blob of colours grabs you, while other leave you cold (which also is an emotion).
"On the contrary", because that was my point: faces are not easier to relate to. It is not easier to coax emotion from a portrait subject.
There are many things, including abstract blobs, that do it with much greater ease.
But ultimately John is right of course, and what is great to the goose may not be so great to the gander. (and no I do not mean to imply anything gender specific with that comment!)
Which is why i really do think that it is a good idea to 'latch on' to the word i used before: relevance.
We have to be able to relate to the thingies. We have to find or recognize a meaning, what it means to us, what it reminds us of, what its value is in our lives, what its contribution to our greater exploit of trying to understand our individual worlds.
Abstracts allow us a lot of leeway. They don't force us to try and make sense of a given something, force us to fit what we see (i.e. things that already have an identity) in what we know, but rather leave us (to a much greater degree at least) free to interpret 'it' as something we can place, something we can identify as whatever we want it to be ourselves.
I guess my first recollection of seeing a photograph and thinking that it was great was probably Weston's shells or peppers or his excusado toilet. All of those are fairly common subjects to which I have no specific affinity, yet... the way he represented them... and somehow drew in all manner of other associations... Weston's body of work pretty well defines greatness to me, at least in the genre of b&w still life. Highly original, full of je ne sais quoi / "can't put my finger on it" emotional impact. Which to me is far more valuable than most other forms of emotional impact.
There is a 'branch' of human endeavour that tries to understand the "can't put my finger on it" bits.
That's the sport called philosophy, and that's what is written above the door leading to this part of APUG.
So it would be fun if you could try to explain why for you the "can't put my finger on it" impact is more valuable than 'the rest'.
And perhaps also try to put a finger on it?

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