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- #46
Minor issue for this particular example, but why are the subtitles of the piece not an "intrinsic" part of the piece????I don't consider them art. I believe they are not simply aided or enhanced by the subtitles, but are completely dependent on them for meaning and value, and I feel that something that gets to be called 'art' should have more of an intrinsic value.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/b/b9/MagrittePipe.jpg
^
If you paint the words onto the canvas, they get to be counted but if you type them below or on a plaque next to it (and KNOW ahead of time that that will always be there) it doesn't count? Come on, that's a trivial and inconsequential distinction.
More generally and importantly than the above section, These are two very different and non-equal claims.Everyone is going to have a different line that separates what is considered 'art' and what isn't 'art.' If there is no line, then is EVERYTHING art? And doesn't that render the term useless, effectively making NOTHING art?
"Everyone has a different line" and
"There has to be some line"
The latter could be true without the former being true, which would be the most useful scenario. I.e. an agreed upon line, that is the same for everybody. Indeed, the degree to which we approach a universally agreed line is the degree to which the term is useful, and the degree to which everybody disagrees is the degree to which the term is pointless.
Which is why the line I'm suggesting is actually not actually particularly subjective, if people were to use it it would be pretty easy to agree (assuming some tiny knowledge of the photographer): were they attempting ANY expression of ANY meaning? Or was it 100% purely technical testing or accident? Pretty easy to objectively answer with any knowledge or comment from the creator at all, and often just from decisions made in how it is distributed, etc. even if you don't have a comment. And it doesn't include all images, so it has some utility still.
There are lots of other possible criteria that are objective, and some may be more useful. You might even want more than one (Art type 1, art type 2, etc.) for more than a binary distinction, while still being objective.
Why not? That seems like precisely the point of such threads, yes? Trying to agree on a line to draw together so as to make the term useful. Not talking about it just because one doesn't exist fully universally yet is merely a self-fulfilling prophecy.There's no definitive answer; it's not something that is logically and quantitatively determined
I said I was tired of the art threads HERE because the discussions HERE descend too quickly into people trying to convince others that their opinion is the correct one and others are wrong. I enjoy the discussion in general because it helps me to define where my line is, and that helps me further clarify my own position. But once things turn into a shouting match, then it's a useless endeavor and I tire of it very quickly.
Sure, an objective line of what is art and what isn't would be handy, wouldn't it? I think it's a myth. Would the pipe painting be art without the subtitles? I would argue that the text on that painting is not a subtitle and instead part of the painting itself. It's not extra explanation that needs to be added next to it to help someone 'get it.'
And let's say that it IS a subtitle, and I say that it's not art because of the subtitles that explain the picture. Why is my criteria inconsequential? What difference does it make to anyone else's experience of the piece? What makes yours better? You suggest the line is, "Did the person intend to evoke or convey or express something?"
If someone pees on the ground with the intention of expressing a dislike for the tile choice of the floor, does that make the puddle of urine art? Or is your criteria overly broad?
I don't see why we have to agree on a line for that line to exist. Can't there be as many lines as there are people? Or at least for people who give this a thought?
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