Sparky Kronkite
Spam Eater Extraordinare'
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2000
- Posts
- 8,921
Had to run yesterday -
Kids and packing for vacation -
No doubt about it, many "artists," great well known ones, have taken money, worked on consignment and many have actually been contracted by patrons.
Here's the thing - maybe "some kind" of art "happens" during those instances - but pure, unadulterated, wholly meaningful art - only comes from the heart, mind and sole of a particular artist. Without any other interference.
If an artist is remunerated after the fact - this is preferred - but when an artist is contracted - like for instance the Sistine Chapel - then his or her vision is compromised "by keeping the client happy." We see this all the time - lately working with architects I see it daily.
My mother and father are both artists - she a painter, sculptor and he a writer. I've seen my mother (secretively) reproduce high demand work that she originated - even the first piece (a painting) was not really art because it was created for a specific audience - to win a competition and sell. The copies were pure craft (crap?) - like Dixon says - from an artisan.
Many of the great Symphonies were contracted - certain composers were banished, some imprisoned for "failed to meet the vision of the contractor." Virtually all movies are contracted. Books, paintings, sculpture - you name it. There's always somebody with money, a vision - and a wall.
Real art (albeit by degree) is totally from one's experience and therefore can be created by anyone - anyone can be an artist. Whether or not "it is eventually accepted by some kind of audience," whether or not "they are eventually offered and accept remuneration," changes the situation (again by degree) as whether the art was is pure, the art is real.
In the end money (some might say survival - one has to eat) does always - taint/alter artistic vision. Fact is - most of today's artists are not that at all. Too much money. And that is the ultimate in self-absorption, me/know thinking.
And look around, of course it's not just art - it's everything - sports etc.. Everything/anything that can turn a dollar eventually falls into the same trap.
Money "is" mediocrity - the great equalizer - look at the Rap artists(?) hanging with the painters and sculptors and cloths designers. They're all merging, because of mo-money. There's even an Eddie Bauer Ford Truck. Rolling art - or a bill board?
In the end maybe the real art is the art of making money - sad.
Kids and packing for vacation -
No doubt about it, many "artists," great well known ones, have taken money, worked on consignment and many have actually been contracted by patrons.
Here's the thing - maybe "some kind" of art "happens" during those instances - but pure, unadulterated, wholly meaningful art - only comes from the heart, mind and sole of a particular artist. Without any other interference.
If an artist is remunerated after the fact - this is preferred - but when an artist is contracted - like for instance the Sistine Chapel - then his or her vision is compromised "by keeping the client happy." We see this all the time - lately working with architects I see it daily.
My mother and father are both artists - she a painter, sculptor and he a writer. I've seen my mother (secretively) reproduce high demand work that she originated - even the first piece (a painting) was not really art because it was created for a specific audience - to win a competition and sell. The copies were pure craft (crap?) - like Dixon says - from an artisan.
Many of the great Symphonies were contracted - certain composers were banished, some imprisoned for "failed to meet the vision of the contractor." Virtually all movies are contracted. Books, paintings, sculpture - you name it. There's always somebody with money, a vision - and a wall.
Real art (albeit by degree) is totally from one's experience and therefore can be created by anyone - anyone can be an artist. Whether or not "it is eventually accepted by some kind of audience," whether or not "they are eventually offered and accept remuneration," changes the situation (again by degree) as whether the art was is pure, the art is real.
In the end money (some might say survival - one has to eat) does always - taint/alter artistic vision. Fact is - most of today's artists are not that at all. Too much money. And that is the ultimate in self-absorption, me/know thinking.
And look around, of course it's not just art - it's everything - sports etc.. Everything/anything that can turn a dollar eventually falls into the same trap.
Money "is" mediocrity - the great equalizer - look at the Rap artists(?) hanging with the painters and sculptors and cloths designers. They're all merging, because of mo-money. There's even an Eddie Bauer Ford Truck. Rolling art - or a bill board?
In the end maybe the real art is the art of making money - sad.