The Great Art Debate
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Re: The Great Art Debate
It's definitely cool.
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
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Re: The Great Art Debate
I almost believe you. Why?Prufrock wrote:It's definitely cool.
Re: The Great Art Debate
Given the shite fountain-y bollocks you see in nondescript urban 'landscapes' - to see something with so much movement, which makes me think of Guinness, strikes me as pretty cool.
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
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Re: The Great Art Debate
I think that's great.thebish wrote:I think this is pretty cool..

Re: The Great Art Debate
William the White wrote: Why?
Seriously...
there are lots of statues of horses around London... this one arrests my attention because it cleverly - and yet at the same time very simply - captures movement and "wild freedom" in what is quite a closed/shut-in/rigid urban landscape - it's what you might call a "visceral" response.
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Re: The Great Art Debate
It's a clever, eye-catching and pleasing alternative to yellow bananas and "sculptures" that nobody knows anything about (usually including the artists). 

Si Deus pro nobis, quis contra nos?
Re: The Great Art Debate
I can hear the horses thundering through the water when I see that. Like.
"Young people, nowadays, imagine money is everything."
"Yes, and when they grow older they know it."
"Yes, and when they grow older they know it."
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Touche...thebish wrote:William the White wrote: Why?
Seriously...
there are lots of statues of horses around London... this one arrests my attention because it cleverly - and yet at the same time very simply - captures movement and "wild freedom" in what is quite a closed/shut-in/rigid urban landscape - it's what you might call a "visceral" response.

I didn't like it myself - but might if I saw it in real life...
Re: The Great Art Debate
why not?William the White wrote:Touche...thebish wrote:William the White wrote: Why?
Seriously...
there are lots of statues of horses around London... this one arrests my attention because it cleverly - and yet at the same time very simply - captures movement and "wild freedom" in what is quite a closed/shut-in/rigid urban landscape - it's what you might call a "visceral" response.![]()
I didn't like it myself - but might if I saw it in real life...
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Not much emotional depth to plumb in four inches of water?thebish wrote:why not?William the White wrote:Touche...thebish wrote:William the White wrote: Why?
Seriously...
there are lots of statues of horses around London... this one arrests my attention because it cleverly - and yet at the same time very simply - captures movement and "wild freedom" in what is quite a closed/shut-in/rigid urban landscape - it's what you might call a "visceral" response.![]()
I didn't like it myself - but might if I saw it in real life...

Si Deus pro nobis, quis contra nos?
Re: The Great Art Debate
The leading horse is white
the second horse is red
the third one is a black
the fourth one is a green....................
Anyone old enough to remember those lyrics?
A virtual £5 awaits the first to name song and band
the second horse is red
the third one is a black
the fourth one is a green....................
Anyone old enough to remember those lyrics?
A virtual £5 awaits the first to name song and band
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Re: The Great Art Debate
might think it 'decorative art'...thebish wrote:why not?William the White wrote:Touche...thebish wrote:William the White wrote: Why?
Seriously...
there are lots of statues of horses around London... this one arrests my attention because it cleverly - and yet at the same time very simply - captures movement and "wild freedom" in what is quite a closed/shut-in/rigid urban landscape - it's what you might call a "visceral" response.![]()
I didn't like it myself - but might if I saw it in real life...
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Four Horsemen - AxxisIl Pirate wrote:The leading horse is white
the second horse is red
the third one is a black
the fourth one is a green....................
Anyone old enough to remember those lyrics?
A virtual £5 awaits the first to name song and band
They're dirty, they're filthy, they're never gonna last.
Poor man last, rich man first.
Poor man last, rich man first.
Re: The Great Art Debate
Very close; but no cigar..................or a virtual £5
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Vangelis etc...
Re: The Great Art Debate
you don't like any decorative art? you are saying that the idea it might be "decorative" is adequate reason to dislike it? (fair enough if you are - but it seems a bit rigidly dismissive...)William the White wrote:
might think it 'decorative art'...
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Wouldn't like to generalise... But I'm not saying what you claim I'm saying...thebish wrote:you don't like any decorative art? you are saying that the idea it might be "decorative" is adequate reason to dislike it? (fair enough if you are - but it seems a bit rigidly dismissive...)William the White wrote:
might think it 'decorative art'...
I just don't think the horses are very interesting as art... But they are pretty... and will be great for family outings and the kids will enjoy them, and are a lot of fun... And, by and large, I really approve of their existence... They look like they might be great decoration for an urban environment in need of it... Good job, well done... As art, they don't do it for me, but I'm glad they do for you...
Re: The Great Art Debate
which is all fine! - a much better answer than your first!William the White wrote:Wouldn't like to generalise... But I'm not saying what you claim I'm saying...thebish wrote:you don't like any decorative art? you are saying that the idea it might be "decorative" is adequate reason to dislike it? (fair enough if you are - but it seems a bit rigidly dismissive...)William the White wrote:
might think it 'decorative art'...
I just don't think the horses are very interesting as art... But they are pretty... and will be great for family outings and the kids will enjoy them, and are a lot of fun... And, by and large, I really approve of their existence... They look like they might be great decoration for an urban environment in need of it... Good job, well done... As art, they don't do it for me, but I'm glad they do for you...
your first answer sounded like the REASON you didn't like it (as I had asked why you didn't like it) was that you thought it was "decorative" - hard to read it any other way...) I understood your "visceral" explanation for "liking" art - that makes sense - and is also true for me - but I don't understand "liking" or "not liking" art based on the idea simply that it belongs to an arbitrary category... (in this case - "decorative")
these horse sculptures - for me - though I haven't seen them live - they lift my spirit - which is one (not the only) thing I ask art to do. (they don't "challenge" me, as some other works do, but "challenge" is not the only thing I ask of art...)
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Re: The Great Art Debate
You know, thebish, I was really teasing you back after yours for the reference to 'visceral'... i was remembering 'decorative' as one of your categories for defining art, that's all, in one - or more - of your polemics with Tango on this thread... I wouldn't ever use it as a category myself...thebish wrote:which is all fine! - a much better answer than your first!William the White wrote:Wouldn't like to generalise... But I'm not saying what you claim I'm saying...thebish wrote:you don't like any decorative art? you are saying that the idea it might be "decorative" is adequate reason to dislike it? (fair enough if you are - but it seems a bit rigidly dismissive...)William the White wrote:
might think it 'decorative art'...
I just don't think the horses are very interesting as art... But they are pretty... and will be great for family outings and the kids will enjoy them, and are a lot of fun... And, by and large, I really approve of their existence... They look like they might be great decoration for an urban environment in need of it... Good job, well done... As art, they don't do it for me, but I'm glad they do for you...
your first answer sounded like the REASON you didn't like it (as I had asked why you didn't like it) was that you thought it was "decorative" - hard to read it any other way...) I understood your "visceral" explanation for "liking" art - that makes sense - and is also true for me - but I don't understand "liking" or "not liking" art based on the idea simply that it belongs to an arbitrary category... (in this case - "decorative")
these horse sculptures - for me - though I haven't seen them live - they lift my spirit - which is one (not the only) thing I ask art to do. (they don't "challenge" me, as some other works do, but "challenge" is not the only thing I ask of art...)
Re: The Great Art Debate
hmmm... but I wasn't teasing you about "visceral" - because - more than anything else that has been said on this entire thread - that IS the best description of the response that great art elicits... it cannot be easily explained rationally. I was actually taking you seriously....William the White wrote:
You know, thebish, I was really teasing you back after yours for the reference to 'visceral'... i was remembering 'decorative' as one of your categories for defining art, that's all, in one - or more - of your polemics with Tango on this thread... I wouldn't ever use it as a category myself...
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