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Picture of BobHale
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This is the latest post from my blog.

Please limit subsequent posts to the topic of the language being used. If you have seen the exhibition and wish to discuss it privately with me then PMs are the way to go. If you haven't seen the exhibition then a dignified silence would be better.

quote:
It's that time of year again, the point where I have had my annual visit to one of the London Galleries followed by a nice meal and then followed by an evening at the theatre. This year the theatre was Simon Callow doing for Shakespeare what he has previously done for Dickens, the meal was Lebanese and the gallery was, as last year, the Saatchi where the current exhibition is "The Shape of Things To Come: New Sculpture".
The exhibition is varied and interesting, though often pornographic (and vaguely disturbing) without being erotic. As with last year though it isn't the exhibition that's prompting my post - it's the exhibition guide.
I have reached the conclusion that the reason people don't like modern art has nothing to do with the art itself and everything to do with the specious claptrap of the critics.
Here then are some of the phrases from this years guide. Interpretation notes are provided.


"these identifiers change the viewers perspective and turn the room's vaguely prehistoric ambience into less numinous territory"
(the little paper crosses on top of the rocks stop them looking like rocks and make them less spiritual - that's what the words mean but surely the intent must have been the opposite)


"explore the boundaries of traditional figuration by embedding his subjects with otherworldly elements and recocneptualising how to represent the human figure in all its spatial, spiritual and psychological mmultiplicity"
(he makes stautues that look a bit like people but not really by using lots of things that people aren't actually made of)


"the crashed car is recycled from a subject of horror into a kind of metaphysical art"
(he bends cars into shapes that they couldn't ever have actually crashed into)


"sculptures which occupy a space between abstraction and representation"
(stylised sculptures)


"abstract deformation is turned into beauty"
(things that should be beautiful are made to look ugly)


"(the) large fuzzy masses look like rubble found at a building site"
( (the) large fuzzy masses look like rubble found at a building site)


"have a lifelike quality which makes their dirty and broken down facture all the more affecting"
(they are quite realistic but poorly made - again, this is what the words mean but seems to me to express the opposite of the actual intent.)


"create a bold new figure for the female nude"
(not very lifelike female nudes)


"explores the actualisation of pattern and the tension between the exquisite decorativeness ond DIY"
(looks a bit like home decoration but might be art)


"in contrast to pure conceptual forms of minimalism, present a messy aesthetic, both alluring and overtly ugly"
(not really minimalist but looks quite interesting if not very pretty)


"The Milky Way is a sprawling web of wood and neon tubes illustrating its title subject but withot pretending to be to scale, useful or even correct"
(A sculpture made out of neon lights that is called The Milky Way But isn't anything to do with it really.)


"composed of 119 found neon tubes... suggests a madness held in check but disconcertingly on the verge of being out of control"
(pretty but chaotic - possibly bonkers)


""they are charged with an alter-like quasi-shamanistic power"
(they look vaguely religious and are presented on plinths)


As I say, none of this should be taken as criticism of the art itself which, for the most part I found interesting and ocacasionally marvelous, but with descriptions like that is it any wonder that that the general public see it as being just so much pretentious nonsense?


"No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson.
 
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quote:
Originally posted by BobHale:
"have a lifelike quality which makes their dirty and broken down facture all the more affecting"
(they are quite realistic but poorly made - again, this is what the words mean but seems to me to express the opposite of the actual intent.)


How so?
 
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Picture of Kalleh
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quote:
I have reached the conclusion that the reason people don't like modern art has nothing to do with the art itself and everything to do with the specious claptrap of the critics.

That's not why I don't like it. I find modern art just doesn't say anything to me. More traditional art does. Indeed, when I walk into the Art Institute or the National Gallery of Art, I literally get goosebumps. It's not for the modern art section.
 
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quote:
Originally posted by goofy:
quote:
Originally posted by BobHale:
"have a lifelike quality which makes their dirty and broken down facture all the more affecting"
(they are quite realistic but poorly made - again, this is what the words mean but seems to me to express the opposite of the actual intent.)


How so?


Having seen the work the sculptures in question aren't particularly poorly made and don't (to use his words) have a "dirty and broken down facture". In fact some parts of them are colourful and detailed. Incidentally the work is in molded styrofoam.


"No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson.
 
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Call me a cynic, but I think it has little to do with modern art at all. (You find the same sort of low-semantic-content in art criticism, wine and film reviews, pretty much any pursuit where people have been writing or talking about a subject too much.) Come to think of it, real estate agents have developed something similar to describe houses or apartment that they are trying to sell.

I just think of these little nonsensical texts in things like art gallery catalogs as being something like poetry that does not so much describe the artwork they have been associated with in the catalog, but a kind of reaction to it. Of course, there's always the chance that, just as there is good, bad, and mediocre (modern or pre-modern) art, there exists a scale to judge art commentary or meta-commentary by.


Ceci n'est pas un seing.
 
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Certainly I am not an art critic nor an art student. However, I love art and always will visit art museums in any city I visit. While I agree, Bob, that these descriptions are pretentious and could turn people off to modern art, I can't remember seeing such interpretative statements in museums I've visited (lots of them!). My recollection is that they are usually just factual, such as "Monet painted this in 1896 while in Giverny." There might be more about his state of mind or other events going on in France, but not an interpretation.

Perhaps I am misremembering, though. I plan to look more closely at the exhibition guides in the future.
 
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quote:
Originally posted by zmježd:
Call me a cynic, but I think it has little to do with modern art at all. (You find the same sort of low-semantic-content in art criticism, wine and film reviews, pretty much any pursuit where people have been writing or talking about a subject too much.) ...

I just think of these little nonsensical texts in things like art gallery catalogs as being something like poetry that does not so much describe the artwork they have been associated with in the catalog, but a kind of reaction to it. Of course, there's always the chance that, just as there is good, bad, and mediocre (modern or pre-modern) art, there exists a scale to judge art commentary or meta-commentary by.


Maybe one day some will write a commentary on this thread...

thus commenting on the commentary on my commentary on the commentary in the exhibition guide.

Turtles all the way down.


"No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson.
 
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