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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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  • O [email protected]

    Tbf lots of stuff in that style, including some of his, is trash.

    Edit: and if context is beauty: a lot of people making it didn't understand, and it was overpromoted by the fucking cia to contrast the literal style pushed by the ussr. So it's literally an anti-communist plot by yhe cia. Show me some other 'anti communist' things.

    whaleross@lemmy.worldW This user is from outside of this forum
    whaleross@lemmy.worldW This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote last edited by
    #85

    Yep. If you look into history there are plenty of examples of political powers promoting arts of all tradition for their own purposes.

    But you know who were on the fronts of practically banning modern art in the first place? Check out Entartete Kunst, https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degenerate_art. So does that make all traditional and figurative art problematic now?

    And you know what other art was "not understood" by it's creators until later? Oh, boy. Fucking most of it, because a lot of art is expression and exploration, and theory is the understanding after, despite academics and theorists in fine arts have been trying to center the entire scene around themselves rather than the artists for the better part of the 1900s until today.

    O 1 Reply Last reply
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    • whaleross@lemmy.worldW [email protected]

      Yeah, yeah op. You have no idea of the what's and why's or any context for why plenty of modern art looks like it does and why it is important in art history. You know what you like. And you like what you understand. And if you don't understand it, you feel intellectually lesser and have a knee jerk reaction to protect yourself - by taking a meme format that says you have all the smarts and people that understand it are below yourself.

      You can keep doing that, or you can get curious and ask the what's and the why's and see if you can appreciate things from it that aren't immediately obvious. That is how people grow.

      M This user is from outside of this forum
      M This user is from outside of this forum
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      wrote last edited by
      #86

      Third year art major?

      whaleross@lemmy.worldW 1 Reply Last reply
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      • whaleross@lemmy.worldW [email protected]

        Yep. If you look into history there are plenty of examples of political powers promoting arts of all tradition for their own purposes.

        But you know who were on the fronts of practically banning modern art in the first place? Check out Entartete Kunst, https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degenerate_art. So does that make all traditional and figurative art problematic now?

        And you know what other art was "not understood" by it's creators until later? Oh, boy. Fucking most of it, because a lot of art is expression and exploration, and theory is the understanding after, despite academics and theorists in fine arts have been trying to center the entire scene around themselves rather than the artists for the better part of the 1900s until today.

        O This user is from outside of this forum
        O This user is from outside of this forum
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        wrote last edited by
        #87

        Im saying if, as is pretty strongly stated upthread, beauty comes entirely from the context, and the piece does not factor, by that metric, this genre is ugly, disgusting, vile.

        I did not say that it is the case. I am responding to someone who defended this genre by saying people who dont like it do not understand the history.

        Please read before replying.

        whaleross@lemmy.worldW 1 Reply Last reply
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        • M [email protected]

          Third year art major?

          whaleross@lemmy.worldW This user is from outside of this forum
          whaleross@lemmy.worldW This user is from outside of this forum
          [email protected]
          wrote last edited by
          #88

          I have a MA in Fine Arts many many years ago actually, so I'd consider I have some actual weight in the field and not only shallow opinions confused as equal to knowledge and facts.

          But I should know better than to vent because every time this sort of post is a living illustration of the Dunning–Kruger effect on a bandwagon.

          M 1 Reply Last reply
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          • T [email protected]

            I don't like AI slop. But this kind of "art" is not much better. This is human slop.

            icastfist@programming.devI This user is from outside of this forum
            icastfist@programming.devI This user is from outside of this forum
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            wrote last edited by
            #89

            Low effort bullshit to impress art "connoisseurs" (people with money)

            When the end goal is (in)fame and money, we can't argue with the results

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • D [email protected]

              Those art pieces are literally poison to a young aspiring artist's mind. It condemns them to a life in poverty, chasing dreams of becoming high profile abstract-postmodernist-whatever artist selling shits in jars, instead of focusing on making what the world really needs the most:

              ::: spoiler spoiler
              gay furry porn
              :::

              icastfist@programming.devI This user is from outside of this forum
              icastfist@programming.devI This user is from outside of this forum
              [email protected]
              wrote last edited by
              #90

              Well, I'll let you know that big dragon mommy milkers are superior

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • O [email protected]

                Im saying if, as is pretty strongly stated upthread, beauty comes entirely from the context, and the piece does not factor, by that metric, this genre is ugly, disgusting, vile.

                I did not say that it is the case. I am responding to someone who defended this genre by saying people who dont like it do not understand the history.

                Please read before replying.

                whaleross@lemmy.worldW This user is from outside of this forum
                whaleross@lemmy.worldW This user is from outside of this forum
                [email protected]
                wrote last edited by
                #91

                Damn, my dude. You sure have impressive reading skills to find all of that in "this is shit".

                Not to mention the truly phenomenal, remarkably exceptional, astonishingly outstanding writing skills required to wield, utilize, employ, and make strategic use of a dictionary, thesaurus, lexicon, and vocabulary compendium in order to lend, bestow, confer, and imbue an exaggerated, inflated, and artificially magnified impression, illusion, and semblance of substance, gravitas, and argumentative weight.

                O 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • nebula@fedia.ioN [email protected]
                  This post did not contain any content.
                  B This user is from outside of this forum
                  B This user is from outside of this forum
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                  wrote last edited by
                  #92

                  I just like the way it looks.

                  U 1 Reply Last reply
                  20
                  • D [email protected]

                    Those art pieces are literally poison to a young aspiring artist's mind. It condemns them to a life in poverty, chasing dreams of becoming high profile abstract-postmodernist-whatever artist selling shits in jars, instead of focusing on making what the world really needs the most:

                    ::: spoiler spoiler
                    gay furry porn
                    :::

                    T This user is from outside of this forum
                    T This user is from outside of this forum
                    [email protected]
                    wrote last edited by
                    #93

                    You either die dignified and impoverished, unrecognized in your own lifetime, or you live long enough to afford a custom alpaca fursuit.

                    M 1 Reply Last reply
                    4
                    • whaleross@lemmy.worldW [email protected]

                      Damn, my dude. You sure have impressive reading skills to find all of that in "this is shit".

                      Not to mention the truly phenomenal, remarkably exceptional, astonishingly outstanding writing skills required to wield, utilize, employ, and make strategic use of a dictionary, thesaurus, lexicon, and vocabulary compendium in order to lend, bestow, confer, and imbue an exaggerated, inflated, and artificially magnified impression, illusion, and semblance of substance, gravitas, and argumentative weight.

                      O This user is from outside of this forum
                      O This user is from outside of this forum
                      [email protected]
                      wrote last edited by
                      #94

                      +! im a fucker whos fucking good at fucking writing.

                      whaleross@lemmy.worldW 1 Reply Last reply
                      1
                      • flux@lemmy.worldF [email protected]

                        First thanks to everyone engaging! Having a great time with some real cool people here.

                        |"However, I think you invite chaos if you consider things other than the painting hanging in the museum."

                        Not true. A huge amount of art is the preservation of an artifact from something previous and not about the "thing" hanging on the wall. Also "conceptual art" is just that the art is the "concept" not result. Ice, kinetic sculptures, happenings, change over time. You can see different art at different points in time. They invite you to consider what it was before and after. Sand mandalas are created in art spaces and then destroyed. When is it "art"? When they pore the sand into shapes or sweep it up? The answer can be "all" because it happened and "none" because it doesn't exist or even when I think it looks like art.

                        |"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."

                        Maybe I'm not explaining well here. Have you ever seen a movie you sort of disliked but you couldn't stop thinking about it? It sort of continues to impact your thoughts, I'm talking a month later you are thinking about it and still debating if it was good or bad or keep remembering the way it made you feel. That is what I mean. Maybe that was the point of the movie/art. Haneke is my favorite filmaker who creates almost movies that "haunt" you. I would say Hilters paintings didn't engaged us. They didn't expand our understanding of art through his paintings. He is famous for being the fascist Nazi leader but his paintings are a result of his fame as a figure. Jim Carrey's art will likely never be in famous museums, most likely never push or be part of an important art movement, etc. but It gets lots of press because a famous person is making paintings. I'm speaking more of the impact of the art not awareness it exists.

                        Dali would absolutely be famous as an artist. His brush work is comparable to that to the old masters. His ideas , compositions, colors are incredible. He was a figurehead in the surrealist movement. Maybe not the pop icon without the branding of the mustache and "look". but that came later.

                        merc@sh.itjust.worksM This user is from outside of this forum
                        merc@sh.itjust.worksM This user is from outside of this forum
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                        wrote last edited by
                        #95

                        Sand mandalas are created in art spaces and then destroyed. When is it "art"?

                        When it's done, before it's destroyed.

                        Have you ever seen a movie you sort of disliked but you couldn't stop thinking about it?

                        Yes, but sometimes that's because it was so bad that they couldn't get even basic things right. I don't think you'd argue that an incompetently made movie is a work of art because people can't stop thinking about it. Although, sometimes things can come full circle and something can be such a train wreck that "art" emerges from the public's response to it, see for example The Room.

                        I'm talking a month later you are thinking about it and still debating if it was good or bad

                        No, I don't have that experience. I've seen movies that I can acknowledge were well made that didn't appeal to me. I've seen badly made movies that I still enjoyed. I've seen movies that other people thought were amazing that I thought were crap. But, I'm never conflicted about whether a movie was good or bad.

                        I would say Hilters paintings didn't engaged us.

                        And I would say the same about Jackson Pollock and Barnett Newman.

                        They didn't expand our understanding of art through his paintings.

                        And I would say the same about Jackson Pollock and Barnett Newman.

                        He is famous for being the fascist Nazi leader but his paintings are a result of his fame as a figure.

                        And I would say the same about Jackson Pollock. Would his paintings be as famous if he'd lived to 80 years old instead of dying tragically young? Would his splatter art be as famous if he hadn't made a name for himself (i.e. achieved some degree of fame) doing traditional art first?

                        Imagine if an unknown 20 year old with no background at all in art had created the paintings that Pollock had created. Imagine she'd been painting her house and thought the paint drops on the ground looked interesting, so she put a canvas over the plastic and did some dripping intentionally. Would that art be hanging in a museum? Almost certainly not, because she wouldn't have the fame, story or background necessary to get the art world to take her seriously.

                        As for Dali, I'm sure he'd be well known. I love his stuff. But, you can't separate the art from the artist. Would his art be less famous if he just looked like a short, chubby peasant from Spain, and he'd lived a quiet life? I think it definitely would be less famous.

                        What I'll acknowledge is that there are "artist's arists", artists whose work is considered very important and influential by other artists, but not by the general public. You'll find that in all kinds of fields. There are standup comedians who have never been able to draw a big crowd, but who other standup comedians think are absolute geniuses. That's a situation that's pretty interesting because the whole point of standup comedy is to make people laugh. If a standup comedian can't reliably do that, then are they actually a good standup, even if other comedians think of them as a genius and highly influential?

                        The other issue is how you can't untie art from the reception of that art. Take "Voice of Fire", which is hanging up in Canada's National Art Gallery. Artists may think it was important or influential, but the general public thinks it's absolute crap. But, the controversy of the gallery paying $1.8M for it made it incredibly famous. As a result of that fame, it is now valued at more than $40M. IMO the reason it is valued at $40M today is the result of it being selected for the art gallery, and the controversy around its selection. If there had been no controversy about its acquisition, it would probably be valued considerably lower today.

                        But, does any of that change the "paint on canvas" value of that art? I don't think so. All of that is related to the circumstances related to the art: the fame of the artist, the circumstances around the creation of that art, the price other people have paid for it, any controversies around that, etc.

                        The point I'm making is that although you can't separate the art from the artist, or from the circumstances surrounding the art, including its history, etc. You should still try to do that when evaluating it as "paint on canvas". Talking about the buzz surrounding a piece of art opens the door to all kinds of things that are not relevant to the paint on the canvas. If you argue that a piece of art is important because people are talking about it, then that opens the door to saying that art by Hitler, Ringo Starr and Jim Carrey are important. And then you have to get into an impossible scenario where you dissect why it is that someone is famous, and how much of the fame of their art is the result of their own personal fame. While it may seem obvious with people like Ringo Starr that his art would be completely ignored if it weren't for his fame, it's much less obvious with someone like Dali or Andy Warhol, or some of the people who made huge money with NFTs.

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                        • O [email protected]

                          +! im a fucker whos fucking good at fucking writing.

                          whaleross@lemmy.worldW This user is from outside of this forum
                          whaleross@lemmy.worldW This user is from outside of this forum
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                          wrote last edited by
                          #96

                          Of course you are, dear.

                          O 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • nebula@fedia.ioN [email protected]
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                            wrote last edited by
                            #97

                            Regardless of how people feel about Pollock's work, there was art before expressionism and art after. He and others undeniably changed the conversation about art forever.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • whaleross@lemmy.worldW [email protected]

                              Yeah, yeah op. You have no idea of the what's and why's or any context for why plenty of modern art looks like it does and why it is important in art history. You know what you like. And you like what you understand. And if you don't understand it, you feel intellectually lesser and have a knee jerk reaction to protect yourself - by taking a meme format that says you have all the smarts and people that understand it are below yourself.

                              You can keep doing that, or you can get curious and ask the what's and the why's and see if you can appreciate things from it that aren't immediately obvious. That is how people grow.

                              V This user is from outside of this forum
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                              wrote last edited by
                              #98

                              Guy got paid by the CIA, stole the whole idea, but rich people buy it, must be art!!

                              Bet you explain Matisse the same way.

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                              • nebula@fedia.ioN [email protected]
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                                wrote last edited by
                                #99

                                Can't tell which people hate more, the art, the artist, or the admirers of the work.

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                                • H [email protected]

                                  Its paint splatters. Which the artist has no control over.

                                  Only if it is deliberate can you claim it has depth. Otherwise it is nothing more than a happy accident that it looks to have depth.

                                  southsamurai@sh.itjust.worksS This user is from outside of this forum
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                                  wrote last edited by [email protected]
                                  #100

                                  Well, you absolutely have control over splatters once you understand the way they happen. A liquid at a given viscosity moving at a given speed will have predictable, but minutely variable, outcomes.

                                  In other words, every raindrop hits in a predictable way, and the only reason you can't predict exactly how the resulting splash will look is a lack of ability to make the same predictions on a molecular level. But, if you could see and hold in the human brain, the outcome is absolutely predictable even at that level; we just can't pull it off without outside assistance.

                                  Look at airbrushing. It's tightly controlled spatter. You're using air to make the drops so small that we can predict and control the outcome so that it can be used to give a range of end products. But if you get in really tight to what's going on, it's high speed splattering.

                                  I would also disagree that a happy accident can't have depth visually. But I think you likely misread how I was emphasizing, so it isn't really useful to say more than that.

                                  However, Judge for yourself if he was bullshiting about his degree of intent in his efforts. It isn't like there aren't other interviews and information about what he did, on both technical and analytical levels. Him saying he has intent doesn't mean he's speaking truth, nor would it being truth change whether or not one agrees with his intent, or how successful one feels he was in achieving it.

                                  But he at least came up with an explanation of intent, and his movements when working are controlled enough to indicate he at least thought he was working with intent, and isn't that the same thing as intent on a practical level?

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                                  • whaleross@lemmy.worldW [email protected]

                                    What if I told you that art is much more than aesthetics. Clearly this is news to both OP and yourself.

                                    U This user is from outside of this forum
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                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #101

                                    Did you just not read my comment?

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                                    • whaleross@lemmy.worldW [email protected]

                                      Yeah, yeah op. You have no idea of the what's and why's or any context for why plenty of modern art looks like it does and why it is important in art history. You know what you like. And you like what you understand. And if you don't understand it, you feel intellectually lesser and have a knee jerk reaction to protect yourself - by taking a meme format that says you have all the smarts and people that understand it are below yourself.

                                      You can keep doing that, or you can get curious and ask the what's and the why's and see if you can appreciate things from it that aren't immediately obvious. That is how people grow.

                                      P This user is from outside of this forum
                                      P This user is from outside of this forum
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                                      wrote last edited by [email protected]
                                      #102

                                      This is only tangentially related, but it astonishes me (it doesn't) how often people defending AI art wield Pollock as a weapon out of jealousy for his relative success and not because they actually like him. Same with the toilet. And the banana.

                                      [edit] I think I might have meant to respond to a different comment of yours, but ah well.

                                      whaleross@lemmy.worldW 1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • S [email protected]

                                        https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20161004-was-modern-art-a-weapon-of-the-cia

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                                        P This user is from outside of this forum
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                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #103

                                        I feel like this really needs to be asked: So?
                                        There were ulterior motives. Okay. And?

                                        S 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • B [email protected]

                                          I upvoted the OP message. And I upvoted yours too, because both of you are so right.

                                          The OP message you responded is a person in the middle of the curve bell that things they are at the end of the curve, while they are in the middle.

                                          whaleross@lemmy.worldW This user is from outside of this forum
                                          whaleross@lemmy.worldW This user is from outside of this forum
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                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #104

                                          Right. Because any statement about art is equally valid just because anybody can form an opinion.

                                          What's up next in brave culture truths and insights of arts? James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Erik Satie, Arnold Schönberg, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Mark Rothko, Robert Rauchenberg, Jenny Holtzer, Man Ray, Robert Mapplethorpe, David Hockney are all shit and everybody who thinks otherwise are a simpleton because we are so smart hue hue hue.

                                          A circle jerk of ignorance. Enjoy.

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