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Modern art??
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wrightysonFree Member
I’m just catching a few minutes (whilst the rest of the clan is moaning) of this programme about Rembrandt. I know nothing really of art but having seen some of the portraits he painted they are truly phenomenal! Do we have people with the ability to recreate on canvas or whatever they use these days, pictures that look like photographs??
IanMunroFree MemberYes.
Though it could be argued that producing photograph like quality is a technical skill, rather than an artistic one.MrWoppitFree MemberIf you think Rembrandt’s paintings look like photographs, I’d get yourself down to Specsavers, pronto.
CaptainFlashheartFree MemberAt a time when most artists were churning out bucolic chocolate box scenes, I would say that Whistlejacket by Stubbs was truly a work of “Modern Art”
wrightysonFree MemberAs I said I know nothing of art! I think I may have to indulge somewhat, but where to start?? I thought Rembrandt however was considered one of the best artists of the 17 th Century?
beanieripperFree Memberwhat.. a sh1tfaced loon making blankets to call art, you cant compare her to rembrandt…seriously
Three_FishFree MemberWould it not just be easier to meet in a car park and throw food at each other?
King-ocelotFree MemberI’m a photoreal artist. I use graphite though not paint. It’s not the kind of art that I had visions of my career going into but I’m very happy being paid to do something I love. I’ve worked for some very famous people too!
CountZeroFull MemberThere are artists who can paint photorealistically on canvas, but Rembrandt and other great portrait artists painted from life, so you get more character into the painting. Whether there are artists of Rembrandt’s ability these days is another thing entirely. I’ve seen the collection in the National Gallery, and dammit, the bloke could certainly paint!
ElfinsafetyFree MemberStart with our Trace and work backwards.
Tracey Emin is not an artist.
A charlatan, a fraud, a con-artist perhaps.
She’s not an artist though. Mainly cos she don’t actually produce any art.
But she is adept at exploiting the Emperor’s New Clothes syndrome.
Anyone who mentions Tracey Emin in the context of Art clearly hazzunt got a clue about what art actually is.
BezFull Member“Anyone who mentions Tracey Emin in the context of Art clearly hazzunt got a clue about what art actually is. “
Pfft: Anyone who dismisses people like Tracey Emin in the context of art clearly hazzunt got an open mind about what art actually is.
Modern art is about the idea, not the canvas. It’s not about making things that look “nice”, or about making things that necessarily take a lifetime’s acquired skill to produce. It’s about making people think, getting a reaction, making a point.
But she is adept at exploiting the Emperor’s New Clothes syndrome.
But then one of the most iconic and witty pieces of modern art is all about that.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountain_%28Duchamp%29King-ocelotFree Member“There are artists who can paint photorealistically on canvas, but Rembrandt and other great portrait artists painted from life, so you get more character into the painting”
Not all photorealists work from photographs, infact myself included the contemporaries I know work from life. Photos are merley a back up, another tool in the bin a reference point. If quality photographs had been invented sooner many artists would have used them. Try asking a busy person to sit still for 5 days?
bikebouyFree MemberAre we talking ’bout Modern Art Circa 1860’s thro’1970’s or are we talking ’bout Contemporary Art and/or Postmodern Art Cira > 1945?? I ask as there are distint differences occuring over this period.
VV Gogh was an early protaganist of the emergance of “Modern Art” in it’s traditional sence, but by no means was he at the forefront of the movement, Cezanne, Gaugain all evolving from the Landscape era into real life observation’ist medium. But it’s people like Chagill that take the movement forward (take apeek at “I and the Villiage”) and into what is termed “Modern Art”. For he starts the trend for block angled, sharp interpretation’ist so beloved of Picasso et all.But to bring in someone like Tracy into the same conversation theme as “Modern Art” is really like saying a 29erSS rides harder downhill than an Orange 5.. Completely different visions on a theme. Love her/loathe her she brought a the question of “what is Modern Art?” to the lips of the masses. FOr that you can not deny the girls done good if it provokes an argument of what Art really is. Yet there are som many more prolific Artists around that rearly get the publicity that she does, but she does have a story, a life story to tell that backs up her views and translates well into this medium of Postmodern Art.
And you can not simply dismiss Pollock and take the pee out of him. That guy was at the forefront of the Postmodern movement. Pre him you still get these impressionista view of life, but Pollock brought a different dimention to the realism, check out his works No(1.2.3 etc.) and Lavendar Mist, take a few mins to absorb his interpretation, quite stunning.
And if this is making some impression on you then I would welcome you to the world of Sculpture and David Nash.. for he, in My view, is totally inspirational, or more controversially Gormley and his Men in the Sea stuff..But please, do make the distinction that simply what you see as Art, Mordern or not, is really only subjective and has to be taken in context of your own view of what is Art in the first instance.
binnersFull Member+1 What Elfin said. Also see Damion Hirst and any of those other talentless numpties.
I’d say that ‘modern’ art was an inevitable development of the fact what Rembrandt et al had achieved. They had probably taken figurative art/portraiture to its logical conclusion. There was little point in trying to better it or merely reproduce it. Hence the development of ‘art’ through the seascapes of Turner, then cubism and on to Abstract Expressionism etc
A lot of people look at say Picasso or Hockney and say “Pah, a five year old could have done that!”
But there are two examples of people who were absolute masters technically in ‘traditional’ medium, but saw little point in it and preferred to push the boundaries instead, and ask their audience questions
Evolution, innit?
mastiles_fanylionFree MemberNeither is right. Either could be wrong.
Art isn’t a sum. Art is a feeling, an emotion that is stirred. For any individual to say ‘that isn’t art’ just shows they don’t really understand what art is. Art is a very personal thing – for some it is a photo-realistic Constable, for others a study in colours and lines like a Bridget Riley or a Piet Mondrian. Some like Turner, others Dali.
The thing is, all those styles have been done so the Damian Hirsts and Tracey Emins of this world are experimenting with different ways of expressing themselves. Not right, not wrong, I don’t always get what they do but some people seem to do and they aren’t wrong for doing so, any more than someone is wrong for thinking Jackson Pollock was any more than some bloke throwing paint at a canvas with absolutely no skill.
DrJFull MemberA lot of people look at say Picasso or Hockney and say “Pah, a five year old could have done that!”
bit like this, in fact …
+1 What Elfin said. Also see Damion Hirst and any of those other talentless numpties.
Always easy to say “I could have done that”. But you didn’t. The person who saw his neighbour making the first wheel probably said the same thing.
binnersFull MemberIts just my personal opinion that they both possess no technical ability, and their attitude to ‘art’ is incredibly cynical.
For example: Hirst’s spot paintings were in effect a franchised production line (he had no hands-on involvement int their ‘manufacture’) with no artistic merit whatsoever – Bridget Riley did Op art infinitely better, decades before. They existed purely to service his coke habit and permanent residence in the Groucho club. Fortunately London was awash with sycophantic half-wits with more money than sense. What luck!!
EDIT: Having read that back, perhaps he is indeed the perfect representative of the shallow vacuousness of the Blair years
DrJFull MemberIts just my personal opinion that they both possess no technical ability
Based on what? And what value is “your personal opinion” (or mine)?
This discussion is (like all the times it has been had before) amazingly pointless – it makes no more sense than the Monty Python sketch about contradiction. Unless you’re prepared to analyse why you come to the conclusions you reach, it’s just a load of hot air.
helsFree MemberHirst is pretty much a factory these days. They turned out 1000s of copies of the shiney skull thing. I think you can buy them in Ikea now.
And don’t start me on Rothko. Hate his stuff, but I guess that is a response, rather than indifference. But it’s the lack of emotion I hate.
binnersFull MemberMy opinion is of little or no value, in the grand scheme of things. Same as everyone else’s really. Except possibly Rupert Murdochs.
But, alas…. This is the internet, so I’m compelled to express it. Where would the arguments come from otherwise. Does that help?
bikebouyFree MemberDo you not think these Shock Artists only do what they do to shock the public into some sort of reaction?
For sure we’re chatting about it, for sure we’ll be chatting about it when this era of Postmodernism is over and we move into another phase and/or style’ised trajectory.
In a world full of commercialism and deadlines, factions and immovable objects, it’s reassuring to see some folks take a different view on life than the masses and produce something of limitless value, beauty (whether that be in the eye of the beholder or not)
I realise that some diffuse this era of Postmodernism yet the movement is vibrant and exciting, street Art is prolific in it’s view of the local area viewpoint and where those few Artists chose intimate galleries to show off their wares, others choose open structures to alleviate elitism. But without this era of instant hit, one hit wonders, internet sensationalism/internal’ism we’d be back to depicting Landscapes to ply to the masses of the worlds cities a viewpoint of what “countryside” is and that it does exist outside the limitless streets and smelling sewers of our vibrant capitals of the world. For all our pre “Modern Artists” were actually doing was explaining to the city folks the existence of fields and sunlight, oh and the odd animal wandering around where the landed gentry live, in a “look what I’ve got” bragathon’ism.
Tate B and M are excellent places to start your journey into “Modern Art”, they thankfully take collections around the country, so maybe one day you can catch something splattered or bleeding from the neck or pickled.. It’s worth it, well worth the effort.But stay away from Craft Fairs. There is no Art in them.
joemarshallFree MemberArt isn’t a sum. Art is a feeling, an emotion that is stirred. For any individual to say ‘that isn’t art’ just shows they don’t really understand what art is. Art is a very personal thing –
I think “that isn’t art” is a perfectly valid thing to say – like you say, art is a very personal thing, and some people consider things art that others don’t.
I think what a lot of people consider about some of the primarily conceptual artists like Emin is that they don’t have the combination of great craft skills and an interesting artistic vision that one might argue someone like Rembrandt had. Although having said that, for a lot of the older great artists, in reality their skill was a mixture of their vision, and teams of people helping them – for example there’s some controversy about the sculptor Rodin and his mistress Camille Claudel, as to which bits of some of his famous sculptures he actually did and which she did. Some of the bigger more recent artists also use big teams of people, essentially hiring in much of the craft side of their work, most obviously people like Andy Warhol, Damian Hirst, Takashi Murakami.
Thinking of recentish art that has that kind of combination of craft and conceptually interesting work – of the high profile people I’ve seen I’d have to say:
1)Darron Almond’s films and pictures. He had an exhibition with a film following a worker in an Indonesian sulphur mine, really gave you an insight into the nature of the mining work and a feeling for the guy walking through the mine carrying stuff, but also incredibly well shot, and beautiful in a sort of slightly science fiction otherworldly kind of way. He also had some pictures in the same exhibition of Siberia, that again were pretty intense.
2)The Chapman Brother’s Hell, that freaked me out a bit. It freaked me out and I’m not sure I’d want to see it again, but it certainly was powerful, and there is certainly a lot of craft and skill in making all the detail and arranging it just so.
I quite like Takashi Murakami too, although in quite a different way.
helsFree MemberI love this kind of thing, it’s always interesting and challenging and all that. But there is a wide streak of chancerism running through it, with a lot of contemporary artists seeming to address only each other.
There have been so many new opportunities with media in recent years it is unsurprising that conventions have not yet been established with which we can all translate and communicate.
That said, I found my limits in the Tate Modern a couple of months ago. There was a film of a naked woman standing on a river bank jabbering in Spanish and throwing buckets of blood on herself.
That was my personal line in the Is It Art ? debate.
mastiles_fanylionFree MemberI think “that isn’t art” is a perfectly valid thing to say – like you say, art is a very personal thing, and some people consider things art that others don’t.
I think the distinction has to be something along the lines of ‘okay, I accept that the person who created this considers themselves an artist but I happen not to like their art’. Not liking a particular piece of art doesn’t stop it being art – it is simply art that perhaps you don’t like, understand or appreciate. As it happens I don’t really like the above-mentioned Hirst or Emin, but I do accept they are artists.
yunkiFree Memberyes.. there are definitely people creatingphotorealistic paintings.. more realistic than ever before.. but as mentioned.. the craft of reproducing figurative images could eventually be considered the work of craftsmen rather than artists..
Start with our Trace and work backwards.
y’what..?
when will art appreciation catch up with itself..? emin was 15 years ago.. there has been a wealth of great art produced each and every day since emin last produced anything remotely significant.. and even then it was the only oldest of the oldest hat..All we’ve got to look forward to is regurgitating the graffiti of the 80s for the next century now that we’ve finally dislodged Duchamps persistant gristle from the constipated bowels of the art world..
probably..
uwe-rFree MemberI cant stand Emin (both persoanlly and her ‘art’).
I do like Rothko.
Thats my input to this thread.
Three_FishFree MemberEven without considering the subjective nature of acceptance, most people are too stupid or frightened to understand a lot of artistic expression, foolishly thinking that it was made for them – preferring instead to argue and posture about what they think it is. Like I said, most of you would be better off going outside and throwing food at each other.
bikebouyFree MemberGood thread, good thread.
Are Bikes Art Forms?? or forms of Art????
Hahahaa
helsFree MemberThree_fish
“most people are too stupid or frightened to understand” could also be stated as “most artists are too up their own bums to care that people don’t understand” which is especially salient if said artist is putting up a huge exhibition in a public gallery. There is no entrance exam at the door. Who do they think is going to look at, I mean perceive, their work ?
Some of the best modern stuff (sorry, but Banksy in his early days) works because it has a lesser sniff of the **** about it, is humorous and addresses every day experiences.
Three_FishFree MemberI don’t care. Would you prefer sweet or savoury foodstuff?
thebunkFull MemberFor example: Hirst’s spot paintings were in effect a franchised production line (he had no hands-on involvement int their ‘manufacture’) with no artistic merit whatsoever – Bridget Riley did Op art infinitely better, decades before.
Have you seen how Bridget Riley produces her work? She chooses the colours and the pattern, most of the legwork is done by her assistants.
As someone else says, it’s about having the idea and getting it made, even if the artist isn’t directly involved.
They’re very different artists though – Riley’s is a very pure form, whereas Hurst is obsessed with the external factors that influence culture, and what influence his artwork has, which is very circular and egotistical.
They existed purely to service his coke habit and permanent residence in the Groucho club. Fortunately London was awash with sycophantic half-wits with more money than sense.
Surely try of many artists and art hotspots down the ages? If not coke then absinthe/opium/whatever.
maccruiskeenFull MemberAs someone else says, it’s about having the idea and getting it made, even if the artist isn’t directly involved.
I’m going to be spending the next three months doing just that – making a sculpture for an artist who’ll be 300 miles away throughout its manufacture. But it’ll be entirely his artwork even if it doesn’t have any of his fingerprints on it
trailmonkeyFull Membermy problem with modern art is it’s elitist nature.
i’ve been fortunate enough to be educated to interpret and understand cezanne.
to most people it’s just a really craply drawn bowl of fruit.
binnersFull MemberA useless piece of information for you, that may pop up in a pub quiz:
The person who actually did produce the spot paintings for Damien Hurst was Lauren Childs, who wrote and illustrates Charlie and Lola
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