I swear to God, I thought I was done with this but apparently I'm too small a person to just let it go.
Jayz wrote:Based on your post and the few definitions given earlier in the post I'd have to say that food is better than art.

If it can't be labeled as art...label it as 'better than art' because it can be eaten too.
ps: to Buddy...I recently graduated from Kendall College and on my way to pursuing the field.
Well played Jay! I still don't understand why one thing needs to be "better" than another when they both exist within their own arenas and each has its own merits and its own criteria by which it should be judged. But if believing that food is better than art is going to make you a better chef, then go and be well and I hope you will invite me to the opening of your first restaurant. My sincerest best wishes to you for great success in the food world.
Binko wrote:The design/look of the '57 Caddy and Taj Mahal are largely, if not completely, non-utilitarian. The Taj Mahal could just well have been built as a giant box, without any sort of ornamentation or sculpturing. The ornamentation serves no utilitarian purpose. The only reason for the design's being is to look pretty, to look grand, to elevate the structure from ordinary to extraordinary.
Okay, at the risk of sounding contradictory I'm going to backtrack a bit here.
Architecture falls under a different set of rules. When the aforementioned Mr. Bouras was delivering his lecture on this topic some thirty years ago, he was bombarded with many of the same questions and arguments presented here. He conceded that architecture lives in a gray area somewhere between the art and utile worlds. We could start another very lengthy thread on this issue alone and I'm just not up to it. I love great architecture but my knowledge of it only slightly surpasses that of the average "man on the street".
I will say however, that the ornamentation of the Taj Mahal is not what determines its artistic worth. Modern Art has included many stark black or white canvasses with no ornamentation on them at all. Performance artists have presented pieces where they will lie motionless for hours at a time, John Cage (or was it Philip Glass?) "wrote" a musical composition that was complete silence for its entire duration; the ensemble sitting there on the stage with their instruments in their laps as they faced the audience blankly. All of these examples, and there are many more, represent pieces with the absolute bare minimum of ornamentation.
In fact, to bring the argument around to the field of architecture, if you're going to use the ornateness of the Taj Mahal as its measure of artistic value, doesn't that negate the importance of the works of Miis van der Rohe and Frank Lloyd Wright? How fancy a work of art or architecture is does not determine a.) whether or not it is a work of art, or b.) its intrinsic value as a work of art once it is determined to be so. I've seen lots of very plain, even downright ugly works of art that still achieved a level of greatness.
Binko wrote:Same with the Cadillac. Much of the beauty is non-utilitarian. The design itself is art.
"Design" is an element of art, it is not art in and of itself. The fact that the designers took the basic concept of a machine which we define as an automobile and added fins and fancy chrome to it, although in an eye pleasing manner, does not make it art.
If the Cadillac sits in a place, existing only for the purpose of being appreciated as an object, then it is art. Once you drive it off the lot it ceases to be art. Not only that but, it loses half its street value.
Of course, just because it meets the definition of art doesn't necessarily make it good art. As stated in earlier posts, what makes a great work of art is when we learn something about its creator. Since that Cadillac was created by a committee of designers working in a corporate climate with the sole intent of making a vehicle that would be so appealing to so many people that the corporation would make a boatload of money, it hardly tells us anything about its creator and therefore would fall into the "pretty, but ultimately empty experience" category. Or would it? Maybe that bleak, cynical worldview was the commentary of some anonymous designer who worked on that model. Don't really know, do we?
Binko wrote:If Picasso painted a jug, and somebody used the jug for water, it wouldn't diminish the art on the jug. Under your definition, you can still consider the painting itself art, if not the jug its painted on.
Well here we fall into that murky, horrifying world of semantics. Yes, I will maintain that once you put flowers and water into the vase, the vase ceases to be art (more on that later. Oooh, I can hardly wait!). However that does not take away the "art
istic" qualities of the vase as further defended here:
Dmnkly wrote:I Buddy's defense, though I find the definition he's working with a little odd, putting water in the jug doesn't diminish its beauty or the skill that went into creating it in any way, nor is it any less valuable or honorable of a jug. It's just no longer "art".
Thank you Dmnkly for getting it, even if you don't agree with it. The same statement can be used as a rebuttal to this argument:
wak wrote:The black and red vases of ancinet Greece are among the most prized pieces of ancient artwork, but in reality they were meant for holding water or wine.
No one is challenging their value or importance in history or the art world. However, in their original incarnation as utile objects they could not be considered art. And now in a seemingly, but not really if you stop to think about it, contradictory statement, the onslaught of time and fragility may have propelled these once utile objects into the realm of art. Because they are now probably to old and unable to hold water (much like this argument, I'm sure many of you are thinking), they are now meant to be appreciated solely for their beauty as objects and not as flower holding devices. Voila, art!
wak wrote:The history of the Europe is filled with religious paintings that were often used to decorate churches for the purpose of enhancing the religious experience. As are the stained glass windows and the churches themselves. I'd challenge you to say that Notre Dame, or any of the great Catholic chruches, or mosques or other religious buildings are not works of art. Not all of them mind you, but there are certainly many places of worship around the world that most would consider works of art and find a prominent place in any History of Art text. And many of the art pieces in those temples had specific purposes - to bring luck, to honor the dead, or uses in religious ceremony.
See above for the answer to your architecture argument.
As for the religious paintings, I think you're over reaching with your definition of "utile". Yes they were used to inspire a sense of spirituality. So does much of art, regardless of whether is based in the religious world or not. Still, those paintings were not utile, as in, you can't do anything with them except look at them and appreciate them. In medieval terms, you can't sit on them, you can't use them to transport crops from your farm to the market, you can't use them as a weapon to beat the crap out of your enemies. Those paintings are completely useless except as objects of beauty and inspiration toward spiritual thoughts. Therefore, art.
wak wrote:Is Antonio Gaudi's Guell Park in Barcelona not considered art because its a park? Is Buckingham Fountain not art becuase it serves as a bench or a play area for children?
Once again, I concede the point on architecture (up to a point) and BTW, I love Gaudi's work; absolutely amazing and awe inspiring. As for Buckingham Fountain, it actually passes the non-utile test. It serves absolutely no purpose other than to pass water through itself for the delight of onlookers (careful with the jokes folks). It
can be considered art. However, for so many reasons, despite its size, its whimsy, the draftsmanship and craftsmanship that went into its creation, it is not
good art. And that of course is my
opinion and has absolutely nothing to do with thoughtful argument that has gone on here otherwise. Don't get me wrong. I like Buckingham Fountain. It's fun to look at and experience, but it ain't good art.
wak wrote:Must art be something that hangs in a musem behind a piece of glass?
Absolutely not. The placement of the object or activity is irrelevant. The only thing that matters is the purpose or lack thereof in relation the thing in question.
wak wrote:I would also argue strongly against the idea that a vase ceases to become art once you put flowers in it. In fact, the flowers may even enhnance the beauty of the vase.
No argument. I'm not arguing whether something is beautiful or not. Beauty (uh-oh, here we go) has nothing to do with whether something qualifies as art. In fact, if it is the artist's intent for a vase which happens to be a work of art to be
completed by the placement of flowers, then that work of art is not finished until such time as the flowers have arrived. Now, before you say anything, realize those could be dead flowers, too. Or an arrangement of lollipops, or gun barrels sticking out the end of that vase. It is my contention that the Picasso vases used in the original example were never meant to hold flowers or anything else. They were meant to be appreciated in and of themselves for their own inherent qualities.
wak wrote:And outside the phusical arts, there is music, film, dance, and other performing arts. Most individual performances are never recorded and only exist for the time they are being sung, danced, played, etc. Is it only the ones that are recorded for posterity that are considered art? If music is made with a utilitaring puropse - to dance to, or to march to, or to accompany a religious ceremony - does that make them less art than a composition meant to be heard in a concert hall? Does the implicit utility of these other kinds of music deny them the label Art?
No. All of those things are considered art. They fall under the category of temporal art; they only exist during the time of their performance. Also, I do not see the "implicit utility" in any of your examples. If anything, you bolster my argument. Bringing together two or more different art forms to create a further work of art does not diminish or make any of the individual elements utile other than to compliment or motivate one or more of the other elements in the greater whole.
Well, that's all I've got. Please can't we all just agree to disagree and move on. For God's sakes, please don't tempt me back to this thread with more discussion. I'm exhausted.
Good times,
Buddy