The Great Art Debate
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- Bruce Rioja
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Re: The Great Art Debate
It was Van Gogh's Starry Night that I was stood gawping at in MoMA when they basically kicked me out on the grounds of some minor timekeeping issue. So for that reason alone - Booooooooooo. He couldn't paint for shit 

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Re: The Great Art Debate
William the White wrote:Made me laugh...malcd1 wrote:I think I may have also described Tracey Emin a chancer. If I haven't then I have now.
I'll avoid picking up the Tracey Emin offering - it will get the clown raving and the dancer foaming and the obdurate bastard grunting, and there's only so much fun i can take on a Tuesday evening.
Haha! I knew Bruce had a crush on her.
...
- TANGODANCER
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Cue: A clown, a dancer and an obdurate bastard walked into a Tracy Emin exhibition...William the White wrote:Made me laugh...malcd1 wrote:I think I may have also described Tracey Emin a chancer. If I haven't then I have now.
I'll avoid picking up the Tracey Emin offering - it will get the clown raving and the dancer foaming and the obdurate bastard grunting, and there's only so much fun i can take on a Tuesday evening.

Si Deus pro nobis, quis contra nos?
Re: The Great Art Debate
Now this is Art with a capital A. Of course people clap and cheer these performances.
And another classic from Yoko.
And another classic from Yoko.
Do not trust atoms. They make up everything.
- Montreal Wanderer
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Re: The Great Art Debate
She and I both looked pretty good when she was in the Queen Elizabeth Hotel, Montreal, giving peace a chance back in 1967. I think she has worn rather better than I did.malcd1 wrote:Now this is Art with a capital A. Of course people clap and cheer these performances.
And another classic from Yoko.

"If you cannot answer a man's argument, all it not lost; you can still call him vile names. " Elbert Hubbard.
- TANGODANCER
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Re: The Great Art Debate
I know it must just be me, but this is why I find calling this "art" so very ridiculous. Currently, the dog's going bananas barking along to Mrs Ono, so he must be attuned to it all.
Si Deus pro nobis, quis contra nos?
Re: The Great Art Debate
I was trying to say that art is such a subjective and personal thing but I did it in a crude way. What some call art others will think it is complete rubbish. Just because it is called art does not mean it is good or worthwhile being displayed.TANGODANCER wrote:I know it must just be me, but this is why I find calling this "art" so very ridiculous. Currently, the dog's going bananas barking along to Mrs Ono, so he must be attuned to it all.
I for one cannot understand why anyone would spend their time watching or listening to Yoko Ono never mind cheer and clap rather than say WTF. Likewise, when I visited the Van Gogh museum I thought 90% of it was awful. Really, really terrible. I realise life would be worse off without the Impressionism and Post-Impressionism art movement and the move away from more conventional work. It doesn't mean that I consider it all great. Perhaps I don't appreciate the composition or the style with the all too visible brush strokes.
Although Claude Monet was a very gifted artist I find some of his subject matter particular boring but I think that was probably his intention. Painting the same scene over and over again with different light and seasons. An interesting subject will probably take your eye away from the style of the painting that is so important.
Anyway I will jump back out of this thread now that I have disrupted things.
Do not trust atoms. They make up everything.
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Don't jump out! You haven't 'disrupted' anything. It's a debate.malcd1 wrote:I was trying to say that art is such a subjective and personal thing but I did it in a crude way. What some call art others will think it is complete rubbish. Just because it is called art does not mean it is good or worthwhile being displayed.TANGODANCER wrote:I know it must just be me, but this is why I find calling this "art" so very ridiculous. Currently, the dog's going bananas barking along to Mrs Ono, so he must be attuned to it all.
I for one cannot understand why anyone would spend their time watching or listening to Yoko Ono never mind cheer and clap rather than say WTF. Likewise, when I visited the Van Gogh museum I thought 90% of it was awful. Really, really terrible. I realise life would be worse off without the Impressionism and Post-Impressionism art movement and the move away from more conventional work. It doesn't mean that I consider it all great. Perhaps I don't appreciate the composition or the style with the all too visible brush strokes.
Although Claude Monet was a very gifted artist I find some of his subject matter particular boring but I think that was probably his intention. Painting the same scene over and over again with different light and seasons. An interesting subject will probably take your eye away from the style of the painting that is so important.
Anyway I will jump back out of this thread now that I have disrupted things.
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Clearly that is the case.LeverEnd wrote:William the White wrote:Made me laugh...malcd1 wrote:I think I may have also described Tracey Emin a chancer. If I haven't then I have now.
I'll avoid picking up the Tracey Emin offering - it will get the clown raving and the dancer foaming and the obdurate bastard grunting, and there's only so much fun i can take on a Tuesday evening.
Haha! I knew Bruce had a crush on her.
However the obdurate bastard I was referring to - and he embraces the label with pride - was W4E.
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Hey, hey, hey .... I will remind you that I had some "deep & insightful observations" about la Emin when I saw Crayon's exhibition (apparently).William the White wrote:Clearly that is the case.LeverEnd wrote:Haha! I knew Bruce had a crush on her.William the White wrote:Made me laugh...malcd1 wrote:I think I may have also described Tracey Emin a chancer. If I haven't then I have now.
I'll avoid picking up the Tracey Emin offering - it will get the clown raving and the dancer foaming and the obdurate bastard grunting, and there's only so much fun i can take on a Tuesday evening.
However the obdurate bastard I was referring to - and he embraces the label with pride - was W4E.
Not advocating mass-murder as an entirely positive experience, of course, but it had its moments.
"I understand you are a very good footballer" ... "I try".
"I understand you are a very good footballer" ... "I try".
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Re: The Great Art Debate
An understandable assumption, of course.LeverEnd wrote:Just assumed it was Bruce.
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Please repeat them...bobo the clown wrote:Hey, hey, hey .... I will remind you that I had some "deep & insightful observations" about la Emin when I saw Crayon's exhibition (apparently).William the White wrote:Clearly that is the case.LeverEnd wrote:Haha! I knew Bruce had a crush on her.William the White wrote:Made me laugh...malcd1 wrote:I think I may have also described Tracey Emin a chancer. If I haven't then I have now.
I'll avoid picking up the Tracey Emin offering - it will get the clown raving and the dancer foaming and the obdurate bastard grunting, and there's only so much fun i can take on a Tuesday evening.
However the obdurate bastard I was referring to - and he embraces the label with pride - was W4E.
- Lost Leopard Spot
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Re: The Great Art Debate
You feeling stronger on a Wednesday then Billy?
That's not a leopard!
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Re: The Great Art Debate
The possibility of the clown making deep and insightful comments on Emin (or, indeed, anything else) was too enticing to resist...Lost Leopard Spot wrote:You feeling stronger on a Wednesday then Billy?

- Lost Leopard Spot
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Re: The Great Art Debate
trouble is though, that the 'apparently' neatly nestled within the brackets suggests the possibility was greatly hyped, sadlyWilliam the White wrote:The possibility of the clown making deep and insightful comments on Emin (or, indeed, anything else) was too enticing to resist...Lost Leopard Spot wrote:You feeling stronger on a Wednesday then Billy?

On another note though : I've just 'soldout' in two senses. For years I've been collecting stones with natural holes and stringing them up in long clusters on thin wire around my garden, hanging off trees, walls, gutters, spikes, and other interesting places.
A month or so ago an estate agent wanted to buy them because in his words they were the greatest art he'd ever seen. (he was a guest at a party I'd thrown prior to going into hospital, and he asked then "how much", and I said bugger off!)
He came back tonight.
I've got £5,000 in my mitt and I feel grubby.
... My garden's denuded. What have I done?
That's not a leopard!
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Re: The Great Art Debate
You were so right.KeyserSoze wrote:You'll have a blast at the exhibition, Will. Really enjoyed it. Some of the things on display were breathtaking.
A vivid, exhilarating, brilliant show. I still don't get The Snail, but really enjoyed practically everything else.
- Worthy4England
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Indeed - who in their right mind would have me down as remotely obdurate?William the White wrote:An understandable assumption, of course.LeverEnd wrote:Just assumed it was Bruce.

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Re: The Great Art Debate
I expect he's just ashamed of slipping momentarily from brutish ignorance, a default position he has held for so long he probably believes it himself. But ignorance is a delicate flower - once touched by insight, and profundity, it is inevitably lost and gone forever. This is a frightening prospect for the clown. I expect him to fail to respond to my invitation.Lost Leopard Spot wrote:trouble is though, that the 'apparently' neatly nestled within the brackets suggests the possibility was greatly hyped, sadlyWilliam the White wrote:The possibility of the clown making deep and insightful comments on Emin (or, indeed, anything else) was too enticing to resist...Lost Leopard Spot wrote:You feeling stronger on a Wednesday then Billy?![]()
On another note though : I've just 'soldout' in two senses. For years I've been collecting stones with natural holes and stringing them up in long clusters on thin wire around my garden, hanging off trees, walls, gutters, spikes, and other interesting places.
A month or so ago an estate agent wanted to buy them because in his words they were the greatest art he'd ever seen. (he was a guest at a party I'd thrown prior to going into hospital, and he asked then "how much", and I said bugger off!)
He came back tonight.
I've got £5,000 in my mitt and I feel grubby.
... My garden's denuded. What have I done?
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Re: The Great Art Debate
Ask Crayons. Don't take my word for it !William the White wrote:The possibility of the clown making deep and insightful comments on Emin (or, indeed, anything else) was too enticing to resist...Lost Leopard Spot wrote:You feeling stronger on a Wednesday then Billy?
Not advocating mass-murder as an entirely positive experience, of course, but it had its moments.
"I understand you are a very good footballer" ... "I try".
"I understand you are a very good footballer" ... "I try".
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