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  3. [OC] Personal opinion on Jackson Pollock's drip art

[OC] Personal opinion on Jackson Pollock's drip art

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  • nebula@fedia.ioN [email protected]

    Me? Probably Neanderthal. 😅

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    wrote last edited by
    #31

    A Neanoerthal that knows Kandinsky, tho.

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    2
    • nebula@fedia.ioN [email protected]

      Sure, but if I were to do that, I'd at least buy something nice.

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      wrote last edited by
      #32

      Why pay more when banana taped to wall do?

      nebula@fedia.ioN 1 Reply Last reply
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      • P This user is from outside of this forum
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        wrote last edited by
        #33

        Wait - you're respecting other people's tastest that don't coincide with yours on the internet? Is that legal? /j

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        • V [email protected]

          Why pay more when banana taped to wall do?

          nebula@fedia.ioN This user is from outside of this forum
          nebula@fedia.ioN This user is from outside of this forum
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          wrote last edited by
          #34

          Someone eat banan 😨

          V 1 Reply Last reply
          1
          • nebula@fedia.ioN [email protected]

            This definitely gave me a new perspective. Thank you. I disagree with some things and the finished product is what is seen by most and "does not do anything for me" / I don't feel anything, which I value the most. You are more versed on the technical side of art than I am for sure. I hope people see this as a light hearted meme and nothing deeper, how I intended it.

            Edit: Also, the fact that a vast amount of people dislike it, no matter how versed they are in art, still means something IMO, as on the subjective side everyone's opinion is equally valid.

            flux@lemmy.worldF This user is from outside of this forum
            flux@lemmy.worldF This user is from outside of this forum
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            wrote last edited by
            #35

            Absolutely. It's funny for sure. Your preference which I share is totally valid as any art critics. One more thing I forgot is the scale of these. Seeing in a book is one thing but like the Raft of the Medusa or Mona Lisa (very tiny) scale produces a very different idea and reaction in person. People often don't consider how things actually were/should be seen. Pollock could be considered a bit of a "troll" of the time I find it amazing he still gets a reaction good or bad. In a post post moden art world Warhol has just sort of been accepted as art across the board. Pollock, Rothko and Duchamp still making people question why they are in a museum.

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            • D [email protected]

              Tax dodges for the rich don't need to look good, they just need hype.

              almacca@aussie.zoneA This user is from outside of this forum
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              wrote last edited by [email protected]
              #36

              Not just tax dodges. Also money laundering. 😉

              Edit: I'm not slamming Pollock. He's cool with me.

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              1
              • nebula@fedia.ioN [email protected]
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                southsamurai@sh.itjust.worksS This user is from outside of this forum
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                wrote last edited by
                #37

                Pollock hits harder in person tbh.

                Prints and photos don't really work; it ends up looking flat and empty. But in person, there's more "depth" in both a literal and figurative sense. You can see more of the intent put into the methodology.

                Mind you, I agree with the idea that he's over hyped. He wasn't exactly breaking new ground, and there's plenty of other artists that explored abstract painting with more satisfying and effective results.

                But I don't think it's accurate to call it shit either. As much as people love to say it, no a kindergartener couldn't do it. Even high schoolers have trouble making something that looks similar enough to carry the same visual effect. Some art students at a collegiate level can't.

                Turns out you do have to have some degree of development in your techniques at the very least to get the same results, no matter how much raw talent you have.

                Now, don't ask me if I really like his stuff. I mean, I'm going to say it anyway, but still. My take on his body of work is that he fully explored the "drip" technique way before he quit doing it, and likely could have stopped after the first one because the only real differences between them amount to nothing more than the difference between most hotel and doctors' office wall hangings. You see one, you've seen them all.

                Don't get me wrong, I don't doubt that he got something more than money out of the process. I make bland and basic art myself, and IDGAF about the results as much as the enjoyment of making. Every art student I've ever known gets super into the process of creating and that's a wonderful thing; dissecting what they're doing as they do it.

                But that value isn't something that carries on beyond the process itself.

                E H 2 Replies Last reply
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                • flux@lemmy.worldF [email protected]

                  Pollock is popular because of this exact thing. He "challenged" the idea of art as the Dada movement had done. You can absolutely hate it but like Warhol it made conversations and questions about process and astetics. By making a meme about it you have in fact thought about what art is and aesthetics you prefer. A Pollock painting made you do that.

                  People saying he do not select colors or use technique is just false. He would use a pulley system for large scale canvases and spread the colors quite purposefully. Remember this is the time of "happenings" like applying body paint and rolling on canvases, cutting up the canvas and applying newsprint, burning things, etc.

                  I don't even like Pollock but not to recognize him in museums within a moment of abstract expression would be a disservice. I've had plenty of students say. "I could paint that!". But there are two points they always misunderstand. 1. Pollock was an established painter who drastically changed styles. Many artists show that they can paint or draw in the traditional style but choose to push what is even art. Some people at this time said the "process" was art not the painting hanging in the museum. 2. Everyone who tries to replicate a Pollock typically just uses some random paints with some bushes and just sort of flings it around. If you actually look at a Pollock in person up close. Yes you can see unevenness is created from not having full control of the paint on the brush but thought seems to go into exactly where the paint will land so that you have even coverage or at angles with different brushes. They is motion in how the paint drips. I can say that many of them I've seen are very much not "random" as you would think it would be.

                  Again I don't care for the work as there are plenty of other abstract expressions to choose from like Hans Hofmann, Helen Frankenthaler who used Pollock as an influence.

                  E This user is from outside of this forum
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                  wrote last edited by
                  #38

                  Some people at this time said the "process" was art not the painting hanging in the museum

                  To expand a bit on the idea that the process itself is as important, or more important, than the resulting work standing in isolation, there are a bunch of examples of people really enjoying the "behind the scenes" or "how it's made" aspects of art.

                  I happen to love OK Go's single-take music videos in large part because they are absurdly complex projects requiring precise planning and tight execution. And you can see that the resulting work (a music video) is aesthetically pleasing, and can simultaneously be impressed at the methods used in actually filming that one take, from their early low budget stuff like Here We Go Again, or stuff like the zero gravity Upside Down and Inside Out, or even this year's releases with technological assistance from programmed phone screens or robot arms holding mirrors.

                  Another example I like is James Cook making paintings out of typed pages in a typewriter.

                  There's a lot of stuff with sculpture and painting that have these aspects where the methods used to make it are inherently interesting, and explain some of the features in the art itself.

                  lime@feddit.nuL tonava@sopuli.xyzT 2 Replies Last reply
                  5
                  • nebula@fedia.ioN [email protected]

                    Someone eat banan 😨

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                    wrote last edited by
                    #39

                    Fun fact: when you buy stuff like that you get a paper explaining how to remake the artwork, here how/what banana & tape and how to replace the old one.

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                    0
                    • T [email protected]

                      Very polite of you to make that comment. I, however, am willing to be a dick.

                      Pollock was a drunk and a hack, Kandinsky is the abstract artist we should be celebrating as a household name.

                      Also I'm p sure I read that Pollock killed a dude while drunk driving and got away with it but I don't care enough about him one way or another to verify that before posting it on lemmy dot com.

                      agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.worksA This user is from outside of this forum
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                      wrote last edited by
                      #40

                      I'm a simple man, I see "Kandinsky", I upvote.

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                      • nebula@fedia.ioN [email protected]
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                        wrote last edited by
                        #41

                        If you can find it, Kurt Vonnegut wrote an essay for Esquire called “Jack the Dripper” which was reprinted in his essay collection Fates Worse than Death. He argues that Pollock was a) absolutely able to produce quality traditional art and b) accessing his sub- and unconscious mind when making drip paintings in a way that anyone interested in the human mind should be fascinated by.

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                        17
                        • nebula@fedia.ioN [email protected]
                          This post did not contain any content.
                          samus12345@sh.itjust.worksS This user is from outside of this forum
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                          wrote last edited by
                          #42

                          At least it's not made by AI.

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                          11
                          • stinerman@midwest.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                            stinerman@midwest.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
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                            wrote last edited by
                            #43

                            I do. My enjoyment is not diminished by how many people like it.

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                            0
                            • E [email protected]

                              Some people at this time said the "process" was art not the painting hanging in the museum

                              To expand a bit on the idea that the process itself is as important, or more important, than the resulting work standing in isolation, there are a bunch of examples of people really enjoying the "behind the scenes" or "how it's made" aspects of art.

                              I happen to love OK Go's single-take music videos in large part because they are absurdly complex projects requiring precise planning and tight execution. And you can see that the resulting work (a music video) is aesthetically pleasing, and can simultaneously be impressed at the methods used in actually filming that one take, from their early low budget stuff like Here We Go Again, or stuff like the zero gravity Upside Down and Inside Out, or even this year's releases with technological assistance from programmed phone screens or robot arms holding mirrors.

                              Another example I like is James Cook making paintings out of typed pages in a typewriter.

                              There's a lot of stuff with sculpture and painting that have these aspects where the methods used to make it are inherently interesting, and explain some of the features in the art itself.

                              lime@feddit.nuL This user is from outside of this forum
                              lime@feddit.nuL This user is from outside of this forum
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                              wrote last edited by
                              #44

                              needing/getting and this too shall pass are perfect examples of this imo. i'm not really into ok go as a band, but the amount of pure work and skill on display is insane. the process is indeed the art.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              2
                              • C [email protected]

                                I find her work strongly vaginal which bothers me.

                                swab148@lemmy.dbzer0.comS This user is from outside of this forum
                                swab148@lemmy.dbzer0.comS This user is from outside of this forum
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                                wrote last edited by
                                #45

                                Yeah, well, y'know, that's just, like, your opinion, man

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                                0
                                • D [email protected]

                                  Tax dodges for the rich don't need to look good, they just need hype.

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                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #46

                                  Looked for this comment before saying the same thing. This is just what emerged at that time as a wonderfully convenient tax avoidance scheme, however organically. Art gatekeepers are tax dodgers’ useful idiots.

                                  It may be aesthetic. It may be beautiful. But applauding while traitors converge upon some artist and their work is a mistake. They will always use this shit to rob society blind.

                                  Luckily the time for highly centralized art opinion is somewhat over with the internet. It is much harder now to ‘force’ opinion to be that so-and-so is just divine and worth ten billion dollars for any art they create.

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                                    wrote last edited by [email protected]
                                    #47

                                    I'm sorry, where are you getting your data for your assertion that "the vast majority of people dislike [Pollock's art]"? Your own meme indicates that people with that opinion are in the minority and that half the people with that opinion wouldn't even know what they're talking about. Obviously the meme isn't a real bell curve, but still.

                                    I'll be honest, it sounds like you made that up based on not much at all. If that were the case, I'm sure I'd have heard many others express a dislike for Pollock, which I don't think I ever have, besides you.

                                    If we're sharing unpopular art opinions, though, I hate Zawadzki and Beksinski (really just dystopian surrealism in general, it tries a little too hard to be spooky/dark/edgy imo and usually has that overly polished digital art look to it). Reminds me of something I'd see on Deviantart or something.

                                    flux@lemmy.worldF 1 Reply Last reply
                                    6
                                    • pelespirit@sh.itjust.worksP [email protected]

                                      I was similar until I saw him actually painting. There is something about the process that makes me love it. It's weird to me too that I feel that way.

                                      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3Uj_HAAvbk

                                      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CrVE-WQBcYQ&list=RDCrVE-WQBcYQ&start_radio=1

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                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #48

                                      The process is the point

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                                      0
                                      • flux@lemmy.worldF [email protected]

                                        Pollock is popular because of this exact thing. He "challenged" the idea of art as the Dada movement had done. You can absolutely hate it but like Warhol it made conversations and questions about process and astetics. By making a meme about it you have in fact thought about what art is and aesthetics you prefer. A Pollock painting made you do that.

                                        People saying he do not select colors or use technique is just false. He would use a pulley system for large scale canvases and spread the colors quite purposefully. Remember this is the time of "happenings" like applying body paint and rolling on canvases, cutting up the canvas and applying newsprint, burning things, etc.

                                        I don't even like Pollock but not to recognize him in museums within a moment of abstract expression would be a disservice. I've had plenty of students say. "I could paint that!". But there are two points they always misunderstand. 1. Pollock was an established painter who drastically changed styles. Many artists show that they can paint or draw in the traditional style but choose to push what is even art. Some people at this time said the "process" was art not the painting hanging in the museum. 2. Everyone who tries to replicate a Pollock typically just uses some random paints with some bushes and just sort of flings it around. If you actually look at a Pollock in person up close. Yes you can see unevenness is created from not having full control of the paint on the brush but thought seems to go into exactly where the paint will land so that you have even coverage or at angles with different brushes. They is motion in how the paint drips. I can say that many of them I've seen are very much not "random" as you would think it would be.

                                        Again I don't care for the work as there are plenty of other abstract expressions to choose from like Hans Hofmann, Helen Frankenthaler who used Pollock as an influence.

                                        merc@sh.itjust.worksM This user is from outside of this forum
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                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #49

                                        Some people at this time said the "process" was art not the painting hanging in the museum.

                                        I would assume that most people who criticize modern forms of art are criticizing the painting hanging in the museum. The more someone likes modern art, the more likely they are to learn about the artist and the process. The less someone likes modern art, the less they're going to learn about that, so the more the focus will just be on the painting itself.

                                        By making a meme about it you have in fact thought about what art is and aesthetics you prefer. A Pollock painting made you do that.

                                        That's "Pollock the influencer". Influencing has always been part of art, I'm sure. Would Dali's paintings have been as influential if Dali hadn't also been a moustache artist? Probably not. However, I think you invite chaos if you consider things other than the painting hanging in the museum.

                                        Why? Because if "you thought about their art" is a major criterion, then Hitler is an important artist. Look how often people have made memes about Hitler and his art. If you go by how often the artist's art is posted, Hitler's probably a more important artist than Picasso.

                                        E flux@lemmy.worldF 2 Replies Last reply
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                                        • nebula@fedia.ioN [email protected]
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                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #50

                                          I'd much rather the CIA spent their money on this.

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