Originally posted by MrGongGong
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Gallery removes naked nymphs painting to 'prompt conversation'
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Last edited by Lat-Literal; 07-02-18, 21:51.
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostFair enough then. They did say In January that the removal was a part of the art itself. I don't recall it being mentioned when they spoke with Martha Kearney. I do apologise, though, for being unintentionally misleading. But I really don't buy it for all the reasons I have outlined and now I have read the article in full I have a lot of other issues. The figures are not necessarily pubescent. It isn't a Victorian fantasy. "In Pursuit of Beauty" is undeniably here about the female form but the emphasis is on the beauty of art. The crassness about overt sexuality and gender depiction is in the heads of these 20th/21st Century people who either don't have the inclination or the intellect to appreciate the conceptual subtleties involved. Whatever are we going to hear next? That Michelangelo's David is a CEO at a charity fundraiser and proof of what the hostesses there had to put up with when they all got drunk?Last edited by Barbirollians; 08-02-18, 09:30.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostWould it be a work of art I wonder if a composer granted a commission to compose a work for the proms said as part of his or her commission decided removing all the works of a particular composer from the season would be treated as justifying that act ?
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostWould it be a work of art I wonder if a composer granted a commission to compose a work for the proms said as part of his or her commission decided removing all the works of a particular composer from the season would be treated as justifying that act ?
To my mind, it would be more of a political act, perhaps especially if she gave detailed reasons. Let us say that it was to be no Wagner because of notions of anti-semitism. Presumably as with the gallery, discussion would purportedly be welcomed. Some would say "it's about time". Others would immediately be speaking about censorship. To expect otherwise is to be extremely naïve and what it would all amount to is a political discourse. Mr GG cites the humourist of the KLF.* I would argue that he has always provided a strong steer towards the absurd. There is an implication of a darker angle but he's pretty harmless. In contrast, the KKK burns books that are not Christian and some who claim to be Islamists ban all music. On the surface, it's the ultimate shutting up of everyone else. Deeper down, each stance is based on awareness that there could hardly not be opinion against it. I doubt there is much difference between them and the example in your question which, like the gallery, is the provocative game of authoritarians parading as listeners while steadfastly refusing to hear.
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_DrummondLast edited by Lat-Literal; 07-02-18, 23:52.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIt could be considered (IMV) to be a varation on this Artwork
What are the criteria?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostWhat are the criteria?
I wonder why so many people find it necessary to attempt to apply stringent definitions as to what is and isn't an artwork, when such attempts must always fail? People were having these exact same arguments over Marcel Duchamp a hundred years ago! Has there been no evolution or broadening of people's thinking in the meantime?
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Originally posted by greenilex View PostTo go back to the painting, if I may...would we feel differently about it if it was a photograph? There were plenty of soft porn late Victorian examples. I have no idea what H and the Ns was painted from.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThat old chestnut!
I wonder why so many people find it necessary to attempt to apply stringent definitions as to what is and isn't an artwork, when such attempts must always fail? People were having these exact same arguments over Marcel Duchamp a hundred years ago! Has there been no evolution or broadening of people's thinking in the meantime?
Btw, who asked for 'stringency'?
Add: Also, the criteria I asked for referred to whether an artwork was 'any good or not' - an idea introduced by your confrère, Mr GongGong.Last edited by french frank; 08-02-18, 10:12.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostWhy should there be any 'evolution'?
It isn't a matter of "dismissing the question, if they have no answer". There is no universally applicable answer. That much should be obvious in the 21st century.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThat old chestnut!
I wonder why so many people find it necessary to attempt to apply stringent definitions as to what is and isn't an artwork, when such attempts must always fail? People were having these exact same arguments over Marcel Duchamp a hundred years ago! Has there been no evolution or broadening of people's thinking in the meantime?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI wonder why so many people find it necessary to attempt to apply stringent definitions as to what is and isn't an artwork, when such attempts must always fail?
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Well, once you've cherry-picked the issue for the demolition job, what about the question I was asking - about Mr GongGong's comment about 'whether it is any good or not', referring specifically (I thought) to this particular contemporary artwork?
Do we, individually, consider the work and think, instinctively: That's good or, I don't think that's any good? In which case, isn't that the same, for most people, as the somewhat disparaged: "I don't know much about art but I know what I like?" Or, are there, as you appear to be denying, criteria, of some sort, since criticism is usually considered to involve more than subjective individual reaction (except for press critics). As long as I understand why I feel as I do, that's what defines whether a work 'is any good or not': i.e. it's axiomatic that the words 'I think/feel' are included before my judgement is pronounced. Because that wasn't how I read what Mr GongGong was saying.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBecause, as I said, these arguments have been had a hundred years ago, art and society of course have continued to evolve in the meantime, and at some point surely it might be thought appropriate to move on and concentrate on more important questions... as in Gilbert's (and/or George's) "You want them to stand in front of a picture and say, 'What the sh*tting hell does this mean to me?"
It isn't a matter of "dismissing the question, if they have no answer". There is no universally applicable answer. That much should be obvious in the 21st century.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBecause, as I said, these arguments have been had a hundred years ago, art and society of course have continued to evolve in the meantime, and at some point surely it might be thought appropriate to move on and concentrate on more important questions... as in Gilbert's (and/or George's) "You want them to stand in front of a picture and say, 'What the sh*tting hell does this mean to me?"
It isn't a matter of "dismissing the question, if they have no answer". There is no universally applicable answer. That much should be obvious in the 21st century.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostPeople were having these exact same arguments over Marcel Duchamp a hundred years ago!
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