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Art
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This was painted by a guy I know0 -
Wow, I'm sure you can tell more when close up but it looks like a photo.1
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bobmunro said:sillav nitram said:bobmunro said:DOUCHER said:shine166 said:DOUCHER said:bobmunro said:DOUCHER said:each to their own - you must see something in these pictures that i don't and must think there is a lot more to producing them than there is - i'm not convinced but if you are, that all that matters - and there's no question at all that that mexican gallery has been opened by somebody with even less talent coz if he appreciates those paintings, he's viewing from a very low skilled perspectiveA good draughtsman produces work, an artist expresses their imagination.
It reminds me of a conversation I had in a pub in Wembley, probably about 25 years ago. There was a two piece band playing, guitarist/vocalist and a drummer. They were pretty good technically and were knocking our mainly Dire Straits stuff. One of the guys I was with said to me that he couldn’t understand why these guys were earning maybe a ton on a Friday night in a pub, while Knopfler was a multi-million selling superstar. I replied ‘Knopfler created it, these guys are just copying it’. He just nodded in acceptance!
Let’s see photos of your ‘original thought’ - maybe you are a star to be discovered!will do - at the moment i'm starting to think that portraits are a true test of an artist - if the true test is being able to exactly replicate something - the other sides to art are a lot more subjective i guessThe ability to exactly replicate something with a paint brush is an incredible skill, but for me that is the skill of a technician, a draughtsman. Portraits - looking like a photograph is draughting, Picasso or van Gogh revealed so much more than their ability to recreate reality. That's not to decry the technicians skills, but for me art has to reveal more than that.Let's take a subject dear to all true Charlton fan's hearts - trains!There's this an an example of draughtsmanship:Technically brilliant but, for me, lacks the exposure of the artist's imagination.Then there's this masterpiece:For me the first is to admire, the second is to look in wonder and awe.But as you say - art appreciation is one of the most subjective of topics.
I wasn't comparing, I was contrasting!0 -
`Sisters Of Mercy' by Peter Howson1 -
DOUCHER said:shine166 said:This Picasso quote sums it up perfectly and was a natural genius.
'It took me four years to paint like Raphael, but a lifetime to paint like a child'1 -
SuedeAdidas said:I’ve never really ‘got’ art. The only thing I’ve seen that has really grabbed me was “That Which I Should Have Done I Did Not Do (The Door)” by Ivan Albright. I saw it in a museum in Chicago. I usually spend about 30 seconds in front of any painting......but I must had stood transfixed by this for about 10 minutes.0
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SuedeAdidas said:SuedeAdidas said:I’ve never really ‘got’ art. The only thing I’ve seen that has really grabbed me was “That Which I Should Have Done I Did Not Do (The Door)” by Ivan Albright. I saw it in a museum in Chicago. I usually spend about 30 seconds in front of any painting......but I must had stood transfixed by this for about 10 minutes.About the best you'll get.Stunning artist.
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bobmunro said:SuedeAdidas said:SuedeAdidas said:I’ve never really ‘got’ art. The only thing I’ve seen that has really grabbed me was “That Which I Should Have Done I Did Not Do (The Door)” by Ivan Albright. I saw it in a museum in Chicago. I usually spend about 30 seconds in front of any painting......but I must had stood transfixed by this for about 10 minutes.About the best you'll get.Stunning artist.0
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bobmunro said:0
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Talal said:bobmunro said:SuedeAdidas said:SuedeAdidas said:I’ve never really ‘got’ art. The only thing I’ve seen that has really grabbed me was “That Which I Should Have Done I Did Not Do (The Door)” by Ivan Albright. I saw it in a museum in Chicago. I usually spend about 30 seconds in front of any painting......but I must had stood transfixed by this for about 10 minutes.About the best you'll get.Stunning artist.Probably one you have to stand in front of (it's 8 ft high) to get the full effect - that's not a great image.Here's a detail which shows the intricacy of the work.
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bobmunro said:Talal said:bobmunro said:SuedeAdidas said:SuedeAdidas said:I’ve never really ‘got’ art. The only thing I’ve seen that has really grabbed me was “That Which I Should Have Done I Did Not Do (The Door)” by Ivan Albright. I saw it in a museum in Chicago. I usually spend about 30 seconds in front of any painting......but I must had stood transfixed by this for about 10 minutes.About the best you'll get.Stunning artist.Probably one you have to stand in front of (it's 8 ft high) to get the full effect - that's not a great image.Here's a detail which shows the intricacy of the work.Like I said in the original post.......I know little about art.I just walk past paintings in galleries with barely a glance.This painting was different. I couldn’t take my eyes off it - and I couldn’t (and still can’t) explain why.I think it took him 10 years or something to complete.0
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SuedeAdidas said:bobmunro said:Talal said:bobmunro said:SuedeAdidas said:SuedeAdidas said:I’ve never really ‘got’ art. The only thing I’ve seen that has really grabbed me was “That Which I Should Have Done I Did Not Do (The Door)” by Ivan Albright. I saw it in a museum in Chicago. I usually spend about 30 seconds in front of any painting......but I must had stood transfixed by this for about 10 minutes.About the best you'll get.Stunning artist.Probably one you have to stand in front of (it's 8 ft high) to get the full effect - that's not a great image.Here's a detail which shows the intricacy of the work.Like I said in the original post.......I know little about art.I just walk past paintings in galleries with barely a glance.This painting was different. I couldn’t take my eyes off it - and I couldn’t (and still can’t) explain why.I think it took him 10 years or something to complete.I know probably less about art - I've never studied it and think that most art critics talk bollocks.But I see it as about imagery rather than the image - good art (good in my mind, it may be bad art in another's mind and that's absolutely fine) engages more than your eyes - and it is clear that Albright's 'Door' engaged your senses beyond just the image - you couldn't leave it, it drew you back and in. That's the power.Albright was a genius at doing that.
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sillav nitram said:bobmunro said:sillav nitram said:bobmunro said:DOUCHER said:shine166 said:DOUCHER said:bobmunro said:DOUCHER said:each to their own - you must see something in these pictures that i don't and must think there is a lot more to producing them than there is - i'm not convinced but if you are, that all that matters - and there's no question at all that that mexican gallery has been opened by somebody with even less talent coz if he appreciates those paintings, he's viewing from a very low skilled perspectiveA good draughtsman produces work, an artist expresses their imagination.
It reminds me of a conversation I had in a pub in Wembley, probably about 25 years ago. There was a two piece band playing, guitarist/vocalist and a drummer. They were pretty good technically and were knocking our mainly Dire Straits stuff. One of the guys I was with said to me that he couldn’t understand why these guys were earning maybe a ton on a Friday night in a pub, while Knopfler was a multi-million selling superstar. I replied ‘Knopfler created it, these guys are just copying it’. He just nodded in acceptance!
Let’s see photos of your ‘original thought’ - maybe you are a star to be discovered!will do - at the moment i'm starting to think that portraits are a true test of an artist - if the true test is being able to exactly replicate something - the other sides to art are a lot more subjective i guessThe ability to exactly replicate something with a paint brush is an incredible skill, but for me that is the skill of a technician, a draughtsman. Portraits - looking like a photograph is draughting, Picasso or van Gogh revealed so much more than their ability to recreate reality. That's not to decry the technicians skills, but for me art has to reveal more than that.Let's take a subject dear to all true Charlton fan's hearts - trains!There's this an an example of draughtsmanship:Technically brilliant but, for me, lacks the exposure of the artist's imagination.Then there's this masterpiece:For me the first is to admire, the second is to look in wonder and awe.But as you say - art appreciation is one of the most subjective of topics.
I wasn't comparing, I was contrasting!
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Draizetrain said:
`Sisters Of Mercy' by Peter Howson1 -
bobmunro said:DOUCHER said:agreed - i can appreciate the skill in the train picture but see very little no talent in the bottom pictureYes - JMW Turner was a charlatan of the highest order!There's a lot of 'Emperor's new clothes' in the artworld - 'I have to like it because I'm supposed to like it' - but if you like something it's because you get something from it, not because you are expected to. Nothing to do with being up your own arsey.I love this as a portrait:Most of his other work that he is famous for leaves me cold.1
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bobmunro said:DOUCHER said:imagination is something i' don't believe i have ever lacked, maybe that is why i don't appreciate it as much - sounds a bit up your own arsey but so be it - similarly, i prefer to read factual or analytical type books rather than fiction as i just think that anybody could make a story up and its not that difficult - boring even - who knows, who cares even - each to their own is probably about right.
You must realise that if you make the effort, you could be the first to win both the Turner and Booker prizes.0 -
Redskin said:DOUCHER said:shine166 said:This Picasso quote sums it up perfectly and was a natural genius.
'It took me four years to paint like Raphael, but a lifetime to paint like a child'0 -
bobmunro said:0
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bobmunro said:Talal said:bobmunro said:SuedeAdidas said:SuedeAdidas said:I’ve never really ‘got’ art. The only thing I’ve seen that has really grabbed me was “That Which I Should Have Done I Did Not Do (The Door)” by Ivan Albright. I saw it in a museum in Chicago. I usually spend about 30 seconds in front of any painting......but I must had stood transfixed by this for about 10 minutes.About the best you'll get.Stunning artist.Probably one you have to stand in front of (it's 8 ft high) to get the full effect - that's not a great image.Here's a detail which shows the intricacy of the work.1
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and the hand is way too small compared to the fingers - the rest is whatever he wants it to be although admittedly, would have taken some time to do0
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DOUCHER said:and the hand is way too small compared to the fingers - the rest is whatever he wants it to be although admittedly, would have taken some time to do0
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Stig said:sillav nitram said:bobmunro said:sillav nitram said:bobmunro said:DOUCHER said:shine166 said:DOUCHER said:bobmunro said:DOUCHER said:each to their own - you must see something in these pictures that i don't and must think there is a lot more to producing them than there is - i'm not convinced but if you are, that all that matters - and there's no question at all that that mexican gallery has been opened by somebody with even less talent coz if he appreciates those paintings, he's viewing from a very low skilled perspectiveA good draughtsman produces work, an artist expresses their imagination.
It reminds me of a conversation I had in a pub in Wembley, probably about 25 years ago. There was a two piece band playing, guitarist/vocalist and a drummer. They were pretty good technically and were knocking our mainly Dire Straits stuff. One of the guys I was with said to me that he couldn’t understand why these guys were earning maybe a ton on a Friday night in a pub, while Knopfler was a multi-million selling superstar. I replied ‘Knopfler created it, these guys are just copying it’. He just nodded in acceptance!
Let’s see photos of your ‘original thought’ - maybe you are a star to be discovered!will do - at the moment i'm starting to think that portraits are a true test of an artist - if the true test is being able to exactly replicate something - the other sides to art are a lot more subjective i guessThe ability to exactly replicate something with a paint brush is an incredible skill, but for me that is the skill of a technician, a draughtsman. Portraits - looking like a photograph is draughting, Picasso or van Gogh revealed so much more than their ability to recreate reality. That's not to decry the technicians skills, but for me art has to reveal more than that.Let's take a subject dear to all true Charlton fan's hearts - trains!There's this an an example of draughtsmanship:Technically brilliant but, for me, lacks the exposure of the artist's imagination.Then there's this masterpiece:For me the first is to admire, the second is to look in wonder and awe.But as you say - art appreciation is one of the most subjective of topics.
I wasn't comparing, I was contrasting!0 -
`The Heavy Metal Hero' by Rodney Matthews2 -
sillav nitram said:DOUCHER said:and the hand is way too small compared to the fingers - the rest is whatever he wants it to be although admittedly, would have taken some time to do0
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Draizetrain said:
`The Heavy Metal Hero' by Rodney Matthews0 -
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shine166 said:0