tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3293847345108796302.post8765798698486291028..comments2023-11-05T01:57:38.312-08:00Comments on Matthew Felix Sun <br> <i>- Art · 文化 · Kunst</i>: Contents versus ExpressionMatthew Felix Sunhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03347154808262264374noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3293847345108796302.post-26167246451716678752010-03-10T12:50:35.892-08:002010-03-10T12:50:35.892-08:00I don't believe that I completely agree with w...I don't believe that I completely agree with what Maureen Corrigan's decree. Her speech did make me to look at my writing and painting in the now light.<br /><br />I have stories to tell - writing or painting - won't guarantee that I'll create art works. I could try. I do need to have my craft to pull it off.<br /><br />I don't believe that if the meaning of a piece can be too focused to negative the artistic value of the work. I'm thinking about Kaethe Kollwitz, for example. I was afraid of her work when I was a kid and grew into worshiping her. It was the intense meaning turned me off first, which also called me back. Her incredible draftsmanship enables her works to endure endless scrutiny. Without that, her work can be just a political poster.<br /><br />As for Jeff Koons, I think the meaning is great but the execution was deeply cynical and manipulative therefore robbed the artistic value of his "sculpture" of Michael Jackson and Bubbles.<br /><br />Thomas Kinkade's creations are both badly executed and devoid of real meaning. Koons works have at least sociology value and Kinkade created nothing but kitsch.<br /><br />As for something light - could we deny the artistry of "Eine kleine Nachtmusik" or even a simple folksong? A simple Haiku? Back to artwork, that can mean a whimsical work of Paul Klee. <br /><br />I'm confused now. Does it really mean that sometimes the forms have more weight than contents?<br /><a href="http://www.matthewfelixsun.com" rel="nofollow">Matthew Felix Sun</a>Matthew Felix Sunhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03347154808262264374noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3293847345108796302.post-86082097183490457662010-03-10T04:02:48.898-08:002010-03-10T04:02:48.898-08:00As I was going to bed, I found myself thinking abo...As I was going to bed, I found myself thinking about your post and the properties necessary for something to be called Art. Maybe it's just a question of the degree of assertiveness which which Maureen Corrigan vs. your friend made their case, but it sounds like there's a limit to the role design can play in Art (before it becomes "meaningless virtuoso") but the limits placed on meaning are less definitive. That does seem to be the case in art museums as well-- on a recent trip to the new Modern wing of the Art Institute of Chicago, Andy and I stumbled across this <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/quinnanya/4375200362/" rel="nofollow">immensely outdated one-a-day</a> calendar, and piece that copied out, in writing like the font of the OED, the definition of "value". Suffice it to say, we weren't exactly impressed-- but the arbiters of Art clearly had decided it should be there.<br /><br />Can a work be so focused on meaning that it ceases to be Art? And what's the scope of acceptable meaning? If Jeff Koons didn't deny that there are any hidden meanings in his work, and wrote up a long paragraph detailing what the Michael Jackson statue "means", would that change things? Thomas Kinkade claims his work conveys "the value of simple pleasures and that his intent is to communicate inspirational, life-affirming messages through his work ... he gains his inspiration from his religious beliefs and that his work is intended to contain a larger moral dimension." What makes that not count, the obnoxious over-commercialism aside? On the topic of religiously-inspired things, what about ancient Buddhist statues, or Mayan figurines?<br /><br />Can something light on meaning count as Art on the basis of aesthetics alone? The opposite does seem to be true (e.g. one-a-day calendar).<br /><br />(I don't have any answers, or educational background on the topic-- just some early-morning musings.)quinnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11114459499469170708noreply@blogger.com