Does the creator or the audience determine the meaning of a work of art?
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Original question by @[email protected]
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Original question by @[email protected]
There is no single meaning. Viewers of the art can find meaning, but it won't be canonical. I think the meaning the creator intended is important, but that isn't necessarily what the audience will understand from the work.
So I guess I'm saying that the audience determines the meaning.
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Original question by @[email protected]
The creator has a say, but can only influence the audience, not overrule or veto their interpretation.
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Original question by @[email protected]
It is not an either / or question.
Everyone, from the creator to the audience, determines the meaning for themselves.
The subjective nature of art is the only truth about art.
The human tendency to copy others behavior also translates into this; when people lack strong feelings about a piece of art, they are more likely to defer to other’s interpretation. This doesn’t mean they share the interpretation, rather that being agreeable was more important to them in the interaction than sharing an honest opinion.
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Original question by @[email protected]
Before and while its being made its the artist, the second someone else experiences that art its not really the artists anymore
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Original question by @[email protected]
Art is built on metaphor, which is an underlying connection between multiple meanings.
In semantic space, meanings are points while metaphors are vectors.
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Original question by @[email protected]
Everybody is welcome to their own meaning, but I think the creators intent should be the only "official" meaning. Just to keep it consistent for historical sake.
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Original question by @[email protected]
Both imo. The creator can mean something but you can have something mean whatever you want to yourself.
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Original question by @[email protected]
Neither, I personally determine the meaning of art. Please feel welcome to ask about any pieces you are unsure of
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Original question by @[email protected]
I don't remember who said it (so I'm likely butchering the phrase), but I've heard that any creative work exists in three forms: The mind of the author, the physical copy, and the mind of the audience.
For example, a book/story exists as the author intends, as the author writes, and as the reader interprets.
No one of the three is more "correct" than the other.
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Original question by @[email protected]
The audience, obviously. That's the majority of people who are going to experience it. Why would I watch anything if I can't have my own opinions on it?
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Original question by @[email protected]
Only this guy decides https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EpmI7w57MKw
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Original question by @[email protected]
I argue for the audience for two reasons:
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The subjective experience for every individual will be different with any form of art.
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The audience is what determines if something is "art", so without the audience the creator isn't producing "art".
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Original question by @[email protected]
Both, and also neither. The creator can have their own vision, the collective crowd can have their own, but you as an individual can have an interpretation outside of either of those. And none are any more valid than the rest.
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Neither, I personally determine the meaning of art. Please feel welcome to ask about any pieces you are unsure of
I would like to understand the meaning of Goatse.
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I would like to understand the meaning of Goatse.
“It’s worth it to push through the pain!”
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Original question by @[email protected]
The artist can be wrong about their own work.
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Original question by @[email protected]
art as in drawings, or as in cinema? if its in cinema, yea audience has alot of influence over it.
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art as in drawings, or as in cinema? if its in cinema, yea audience has alot of influence over it.
If it's drawn art, yeah, same.
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Original question by @[email protected]
The creator (ideally) knows what they wanted to say, their effectiveness in expressing it is skill-dependent. Those engaged with their content should be able to understand what the creator tried to say, which is also skill-dependent (if you're clever enough you can even understand what the creator wanted to say even if they don't communicate it properly/at all!). You can also 'take it' this or that way, even while knowing that the creator didn't mean it that way.