tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1324184304367023797.post4654324823345234107..comments2023-10-17T05:41:41.681-04:00Comments on Katharine A. Cartwright Studio: Paradigms and PurposesAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11037549177881696434noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1324184304367023797.post-25621271597866563222014-08-10T12:33:23.963-04:002014-08-10T12:33:23.963-04:00I find this topic very interesting and a represent...I find this topic very interesting and a representation of where our society has headed in the world of art. In a society of "anything goes and everything is art" has led the artist down a long, lonely and confusing path. I believe art has formal design just as a car has formal design, not only visual but functional. <br /><br />I also find it interesting that as a society we are suppose to accept everything as art because "i say so" when we are sueing companies for manufacturing and installing unsafe parts into their cars. Why are the industry standards on automobiles more stringent than art?<br /><br />I believe everything of "beauty" has formal design. The content in art of horror isn't so much the focus for me. <br /><br />Artists have been painting battlefield images all throughout history. However, the "masterpiece" had formal design, and in turn, beauty. Throwing anything horrific or pretty on a canvas does not earn the respect, nor should it, of a John Singer Sargent painting. <br /><br />Henri Cartier Bresson has been considered one of the five greatest artist of the 20th century. His combination of intuition, sensitivity, and his expertise in geometry (meaning Dynamic Symmetry) has allowed him to create 100's of masterpieces, where most photographers are lucky to end up with 5-10 in their career. And he used a toy camera.<br /><br />Makes you say "hmmm"....Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02120147429483115209noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1324184304367023797.post-5366578107147239252013-05-18T15:46:54.343-04:002013-05-18T15:46:54.343-04:00Hi Kathy,
My comment here may be a bit esoteric t...Hi Kathy,<br /><br />My comment here may be a bit esoteric to non-surfing readers of yours but as a long time artist and surfer, I found it fascinating - especially after reading your blog entry about Warhol's place in defining Art.<br /><br />An article from Hydrodynamica Blog will take you back in time when a local surfing legend (friend of mine) and progressive surfboard designer Carl Ekstom, actually met Warhol who bought one of his boards because he said it was a piece of art to him and even said he could get Carl into a Museum. This was at the beginning of the march towards the "anything can be art" movement. Warhol ended up using Carl's board in a movie that hypothesized that "all surfers are repressed homosexuals".<br />My thought: Anyone can make a theory about anything. Yes, in context of breakthroughs, I think, beautiful or not, anything can be called art. Still, it all seems a bit like mental word games to me and an excuse to write a book or make a weird movie.<br /> <br />Sorry this comment is so long. Go directly to the link below, scroll down and watch a video of Carl E. talking about his meeting with Warhol and read everything else about Carl's experience there. Classic!<br /><br />Wednesday, March 13, 2013<br /><br />Ekstrom, Warhol, San Diego Surf<br /><br />Notes from Hydrodynamica Blog/San Diego Surf Warhol excursion 2008.<br /><br /> Ekstrom on Warhol 1968<br />http://hydrodynamica.blogspot.com/Ken Goldmanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10370277592064064725noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1324184304367023797.post-23901252521934380322013-04-15T13:45:45.211-04:002013-04-15T13:45:45.211-04:00Nice to hear from you, Dan! I have the same proble...Nice to hear from you, Dan! I have the same problem trying to keep up with blogging and have been absent too often. In any case, I share your sentiments both about the author and aesthetics. Thank you!Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11037549177881696434noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1324184304367023797.post-50395053111052097212013-04-15T12:45:15.591-04:002013-04-15T12:45:15.591-04:00Honestly, I don't understand Freeland's ne...Honestly, I don't understand Freeland's need in each book to justify and support "contemporary artists who create work using blood, urine, maggots.." etc. (Of course I haven't read the books - but have only followed your summaries so my thoughts on the matter may be discounted accordingly.) <br /><br />I certainly understand the idea of prioritizing idea over aesthetics. I've gone to some lengths to try to understand contemporary art so emphasizing, and am still on this journey. At this point I get it intellectually (sometimes), but a piece or installation does not touch my heart when there is a complete and utter absence of a sense of aesthetics. I've tried, really I have..<br /><br />Sorry about my absence. Much happening in the non-virtual world lately that has been disruptive to my art, my blogging and my blog visits.Dan Kenthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13130079803891606515noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1324184304367023797.post-86178703937665487392013-04-14T03:59:04.683-04:002013-04-14T03:59:04.683-04:00Hi Casey, thanks for your comment. I, too, have tr...Hi Casey, thanks for your comment. I, too, have trouble with revisionist timelines for the sake of rationalization. However, I'm always willing to review it through a different lens. My work first stems from concept formulation and the executed work to express that concept is where I gain skills. I do agree with Danto about the importance of the idea.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11037549177881696434noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1324184304367023797.post-83295661441594330652013-04-13T20:21:38.243-04:002013-04-13T20:21:38.243-04:00I always balk at these lists that try to hew a new...I always balk at these lists that try to hew a new path, but treat art history as if the old scheme didn't work. I need Classic(with Romans as well as the Greeks) and Renaissance periods. I need the Modernists.<br /><br />Beauty? I have agreed that art can exist without beauty, but I reject the dialectic treatment where art with beauty is anathema.<br /><br />So done with Post Modernism. So. done. <br /><br />My new thoughts are about exploring the place of skill in art.<br /><br />~KC<br /> Casey Klahnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08020906666248399435noreply@blogger.com