One does not have to be a moderator in order to ask for a cease-and-desist of petty snarkiness that has nothing to do with the OP's topic.
Never heard that from any of my art instuctors. The value/definition of art is what ever the veiwer gets out of it. If a painting of Elvis on velvet moves you or if it's Van Gough's sunflowers it's art.A beaker full of death said:Appreciation of art is subjective - in evaluating its success, that is. Interpretation must be informed by both individual experience (subjective) and shared knowledge (objective). But first and foremost, there must be some substance there. Some statement. Some meat. Something.
One of my teachers in art school once defined art as "anything man-made revealing a human plan." That has always stuck with me.
I'm talking about man made things here. Painting, sculpture,poetry, music, plays, film and TV. People will view these things and find an individual meaning in them. Often not what the creators intent was. Sometimes its just pretty.Never heard that from any of my art instuctors. The value/definition of art is what ever the veiwer gets out of it. If a painting of Elvis on velvet moves you or if it's Van Gough's sunflowers it's art.A beaker full of death said:Appreciation of art is subjective - in evaluating its success, that is. Interpretation must be informed by both individual experience (subjective) and shared knowledge (objective). But first and foremost, there must be some substance there. Some statement. Some meat. Something.
One of my teachers in art school once defined art as "anything man-made revealing a human plan." That has always stuck with me.
One might find inspiration in a rolling tumbleweed or a pile of dog crap. One might be moved by the filtering of the sun through a particular cloud formation. That doesn't make them art. A pile of human crap isn't art either just because someone gets out of it more than its creator put into it.
I'm talking about man made things here. Painting, sculpture,poetry, music, plays, film and TV. People will view these things and find an individual meaning in them. Often not what the creators intent was. Sometimes its just pretty.
No offense to you or your instructor but that definition soulds like gobbledygook to me.
But what do I know? Even with six years of art school and a degree.![]()
interesting 5 pages.
I agree that if you cannot tell or create a signficant story within the Prime Universe, than IMO create something new or move to another franchise.
Making a lot of money on an endevour is no indication of quality or artistic worth.
Ignoring the monetary reason, why reboot the Trek franchise and why (mess) with TOS?
I'm talking about man made things here. Painting, sculpture,poetry, music, plays, film and TV. People will view these things and find an individual meaning in them. Often not what the creators intent was. Sometimes its just pretty.
No offense to you or your instructor but that definition soulds like gobbledygook to me.
But what do I know? Even with six years of art school and a degree.![]()
I've only got four formal years art school (aside from various other classes), so if we're playing "mine's bigger than yours", you win. Mazel tov.
The distinction you make between man-made or not is fallacious if your only criterion is the effect it has on the viewer.
Here's an example: I seem to recall your agreement about the shortcomings of Rob Liefeld as an artist. Now, if it's all objective, how can any artist have a shortcoming? Liefeld is an untrained hack and he is incapable of putting on bristol that which he is attempting to put on bristol. That makes his art a failure, no matter how many people like it.
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