Junk might become art, some artists might be junkies, but art to become junk?
I would add another variable: connotation vs. denotation. The first is specific to art, to any artistic work, maybe the essential of what we understand by art. Denotation is too simplistic, too clear, too direct, and sometime too objective, that it ruins any artistic character or expectation. I believe that a connoted expression always needs some skill, while denoting communication does not. Thus, skill appears to be a necessary part of any artistic act.
... Though the craftsmen of the Bauhaus would of course have us believe that, Ralph, craft (being skilled) is not the aim of the game, and only needed if and when it is needed. ...
That's not what Bauhaus taught. Gropius did not say that craft was needed to make art. Bauhaus taught art as the highest degree of craft. That's different. At Bauhaus there was no essential difference between art and craft. Craft leads to art in a promotional sense.
Art and craft do not coexist. They are essential the same at different degrees of perfection! The only difference between the two is probably the word 'create' in art. Create means making new, which is different from copying. Pure craft may copy, art cannot.
There is no essential difference between the artist and the craftsman.
The artist is an exalted craftsman.
Walter Gropius, Founder of Bauhaus
The most creative thought, without craft, will be nothing but an unheard attempt of self-expression.
Skill is needed to a degree that allows to produce something that does what it is supposed to do.
If it requires no skill at all, that's perfectly fine.
But how much craft, Ralph? How much? ...
... craft is only needed as far as it is needed.
And that may not be much.
Take human emotion and imagination, add craft, and you've got art.
Take human emotion and imagination, add craft, and you've got human emotion, imagination and craft.
Take human human emotion, imagination, craft, add marketing and you have art.
You answered your own question in a previous post, but went too far by including 'no skill at all'. No skill, no art.
However, I agree with your revised statement:
I don't care how much, as long as we agree that they are inseparable.
... And is that then still anywhere near what you meant?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?