Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/02/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]POINT OF CLARIFICATION: My sense of humor has obviously been seriously warped lately...No one is getting what are supposed to be jokes...This is clearly a failure on the part of the "artist," not the audience... The reference to eating a Kevin Bacon, L&T sandwich was meant to be a play on the game Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon, which posits that any movie, actor, etc., can be linked through five other people, movies, etc., to Kevin Bacon - and that is a reference back to Six Degrees of Separation.....oh well.... (And by the way, I Like Kevin Bacon...He's actually done some pretty good work...A lot of crap as well, but that's Hollywood....) B. D. - -----Original Message----- From: owner-leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us [mailto:owner-leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us]On Behalf Of Gary Elshaw Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2000 1:09 AM To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us Subject: [Leica] 6 Degrees and B.D. At 1:38 PM -0800 15/2/2000, B.D. wrote: > >...Calling something inaccessible does NOT say something about the viewer - > >it says the artist has failed if his or her mission was to make a public > >statement. If the work was meant only for the edification of the artist and > >three of his/her best friends, it belongs in a private home, not a public > >venue. > > > >This thread reminds me of a beloved high school English teacher who once > >made the statement that if a poem's meaning is "hidden," the poem is a > >failure. Same thing goes for "inaccessible" works of visual art. > >"Inaccessible" is, in this case, a synonym for "crap." At 7:01 PM -0800 15/2/2000, B.D. wrote: >No, Rob...I did get it...and was amused by it...I guess my Six Degrees joke >just wasn't all that funny..oh well..I guess I'll just quit for the day and >go make a Kevin Bacon, Lettuce and Tomato sandwhich.... :-) Thank goodness for that! Someone finally decided to rid the world of Kevin Bacon. Good move B.D., you've also helped rid me of an 'artist' i never liked. I also admire your courage and fortitude in having the ability to eat him. I'll grin here at the thought of his passing :-) Art's a funny thing ain't it? I've been intrigued by the diversity of opinion the list has illustrated, but so far as i've noticed, no one has really said anything about the fact that there are different types of spectator. Jim made a statement about there being specific galleries he doesn't visit anymore. Fair enough. Art is more and more created with a certain spectator in mind. In part this has to do with the commodification of art, and different schools of artists working with different traditions. No Geddes fan is going to admire very much about the avant-garde, even though Geddes does owe a large percentage of her living to it. Over the last couple of years there has been a big push of Man Ray and Lee Miller photography/film, and the thing that has amazed me the more i look at their images is how their work has been distilled and diluted by contemporary artists. I don't mind that, especially if it makes people explore some history of art in whatever medium. The fact is, there is nothing static as far as artistic reception goes, yesterday's cutting edge is frequently today's commercial for baby wipes. A lot of my post-grad work has involved dissecting Jean-Luc Godard's films--I'm currently dissecting all of Godard's 1968 films for my Masters thesis. Frequently Godard refers to things i just don't 'get', both visually, aurally and textually. I go away, think about it and read a lot taking cues he might have submerged in the text of his film, and eventually find out something i never knew before. Because you don't get it doesn't mean the artist has failed, it often means they're trying to communicate something you haven't experienced yet; or you might have to do some digging to find out what the hell they're on about. What i used to think was obfuscation was frequently my own ignorance of either experience or knowledge. That's why i find art enriches my life, and why i also know that i'll still be finding out all of things i never knew about until the day i die. And for that i sigh, and say a very large-Good. Please excuse the rambling. All the best, Gary - ---------------------------------------------------------------------- - ---------------------- There are, of course, those who would argue that it's unhealthy to read a children's author past the age of, say, 24. Big people are supposed to reserve their enthusiasm for real estate, business plans and zero-sum games played by linguistically-impoverished men with hairy knuckles. This, in my view, is real nonsense. A world in which it's uncool for grownups to care passionately about books -- children's books, any books -- would be infinitely scarier than a world with telepathic avocados or real estate agents from outer space. - ---Paul LaFarge on children's author Daniel Pinkwater Gary Elshaw http://elshaw.tripod.com/ http://elshaw.tripod.com/photointro.html - ---------------------------------------------------------------------- - -----------------------