chilloutdancer wrote: ↑April 27th, 2023, 6:08 am
The more I think about/talk to people who are "doing art", the more I realize that for most of such people it's just an easy way to discriminate people with no reason.
Let's say there's a guy who let's say draws. He does it for some time and consider himself to be doing "art".
But why? Isn't that person just do what other people do? Every person has been drawing something at some point, some more, some less, but everybody can draw something, just like every person breathes air. There's no criteria to identify if someone "can draw" and someone "can't".
So the person who claims to be "an artist" is different from other people just by his decision to put himself above other people, and find people who would buy into it.
Or here's another more relevant example.
There's a guy named Don Buchla who kinda invented modular synthesizers back in the 60s and was going around playing it on festivals and such.
Nowadays people BUY synthesizers from the company Don Buchla left, turns knobs, push buttons on them and consider it "modern experimental art" or even compare themselves to Don Buchla.
But there's nothing new in it. Like, why would you call it "doing art" if you just copy what other people do and have been doing for 50+ years? After all, to do what Don Buchla did is not to grab a newest instrument from the shop(which was an electroguitar in the 60s I guess) and play with it. It's to make something new.
And the ambiguity of "art" basically allows people to do nothing and claim you do something, even we ignore what exactly that is.
There are professional artists who make their living from creating and selling their art, and that has under-pinned a conception of what art is or can be. But art is hard to define, to fix its definition depends on a consensus around preferred criteria (historically defined by the preferences of patronage/the market place). But art has progressed by pushing those boundaries. Now it's pretty much whatever someone decides it is for themselves. From sticking your daughter's crayon picture on the wall, to sticking a bit of chewed gum on the wall, to whatever tickles your fancy.
I think this implicitly acknowledges a type of ''death of the author'' approach to art, which treats the appreciation and meaning of art as a two-way process, an act of expression and an act of finding meaning in it. And what can be so special about art is that it can communicate something which is otherwise hard to capture and express in a literal or definitive way. That can range from the Old Masters who imbued their commisions with something which resonates universally, somebody writing ''Fountain'' on a urinal, or your kid's stick picture.
I like that approach to art. It's inclusive and doesn't get to be defined by those with the money or clout. It leaves it to you to dig through the clutter and find the gems which shine to you. Not all of that clutter will become the future art history 'canon' curated and conserved by museums and taught about, and there's still a role for the discrimination necessary for preserving a future canon which contextualises art history and gives public access to particularly significant or admired pieces, but that's not all art has to be.