Cubism Represents a Multitude of Viewpoints Yielding a Deeper Understanding

Cubist artwork, some say, is the most influential art movement known. It changed a wide range of ideas as far as art was concerned in the 1910s and 1920s, allowing for the development of abstract modern art movements.

In Cubist artwork, objects are analyzed, broken up, and reassembled in an abstracted form—instead of depicting objects from a single viewpoint, the artist shows the subject from a multitude of perspectives to represent the subject in a greater context.

Cubist art can be described as three-dimensional art consisting of geometric planes and shapes. Works of Pablo Picasso that consist of interlocking shapes and geometric planes are examples.

"The first true Cubist sculpture was Picasso's impressive

Woman's Head

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Pop Art will show those Abstract Expressionists what real art is or isn't, they said?

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Not to be confused with Abstract Art, Pop Art was the art of popular or “material” culture and was a revolt against the status quo and the traditional views of what art should be.

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Pop art was and perhaps still is a style of art based on simple, bold images of everyday items, such as soup cans, painted in bright colors. Some say that the pop art movement started as a rebellion against the, which were considered to be pretentious and over-intense. Is putting soup cans and familiar things on the wall not pretentious?

Pretentiousness is the attempt to impress, rather than the object of the attempt. Does putting a can of soup up instead of abstract art impress folks. Perhaps the audacity of it is really more pretentious?

Andy Warhol is remembered for the artistic presentation of a picture of a Campbell’s Soup Can. Some may feel that he is really remembered for his pretentious audacity. The Pop Art approach, that he is credited with being a early leader , evolved to include pictures of consumer product labels and packaging, photos of celebrities, comic strips, and animals.

Pop Art is a genre of art characterized by an interest in popular culture and imaginative interpretations of commercial products.


Art is About Connections - Real or Implied

Growing up, I did not think I was a good artist, but even so, I took an art class in the 9th grade.  Many in the class were talented, and I wondered if I had made a mistake. Mr. Lampson, the teacher, was passionate about art, and early in the school year, he mentioned a phrase that just drove him crazy. 

Even though this class and teacher did not set me on the path to greatness in art, it did get me thinking, and over the years, many things I learned told me that Mr. Lampson was right. Art does have its role and purpose, but the question of whether art reflects the artist’s feelings or if art created those feelings is still unclear. Maybe it is both?

Oscar Wilde, in his 1889 essay, "The Decay of Lying," said: “Life imitates Art, more than Art imitates Life, and what is found in life and nature is not what is there, but is that which artists taught people to find there, through art.”

Do we see what is there, or what an artist taught us to see? It has been found that people do visit what they are conditioned to see.  When people are hypnotized and asked about what they saw when they walked through a room, they have very different answers than when not hypnotized. People under hypnosis can remember the number of tiles on the ceiling or even the faces on the magazines on the tables, and they can’t remember those things.  Their conscious mind was not interested in them.

Mr. Lampson also showed us how a lump of clay, spinning on a pottery wheel, grasped by an artist's hands, changed into what he imagined the clay to be and said that the clay itself informed the artist through the feelings it brought. He said that the bowls and vases produced were different when finished than the first intended and that the clay could talk to us. He attempted to teach us how to listen.

Writers and artists reveal much about themselves in their work but also find a great deal waiting to be expressed.

Can the painting of a flower ever surpass the original in beauty and impact?

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Did Shakespeare say that The Object of Art is to give Life a Shape but which is greater, the art or the artist’s shape? Perhaps the artist adds to the original with emphasis felt.

Pink flowers represent grace and elegance and are captured in paintings to communicate feelings.

Does the painting of a flower ever equal or surpass the original is not the question but instead, does the image add to what we had before?

Pottery Art brings the spirit of the earth to art

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Clay is modeled, dried, and fired into a vessel or decorative object, usually with a glaze or finish. Clay is a natural product dug from the earth.

The potter’s spirit and the earth come together to inform us of beauty.

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PS: Note to those that love Art. See the review of “Art Before Breakfast” by Danny Gregory Click Here.

Quote by Danny Gregory

“It’s ironic that people speak of artists as dreamers. I think they are the most grounded people around. Conscious and present. As an artist, you really see life, connect with its beauty, and create something that shares those observations with others. You notice things.”

Also see review of “What Is Art” by Leo Tolstoy, click here

If it is art or graffiti, may only be determined in where it is put.

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Does our perception of art communicate reality or just what we think the truth is? Are our emotions telling us what we see, or are they being told what to feel by what we see?

We express ourselves with the tools we have, and words, feelings, and eyes serve us well in that regard, but do our emotions and feelings convey accurate perceptions.

Art can be in various forms, shapes, colors, and textures, but the meaning will differ depending on what the viewer knows. Can the importance of art be the same for two people?

If the meaning isn’t clear or weak, the images may lack the needed complexity. Graffiti qualifies as art, but some disagree, and some feel it is only a cynical attempt at art, saying, “If art were a positive agent of change, the graffiti, being everywhere, would have made a better society for all. Of us.”

Isn’t the question really what is better, not what is art? Graffiti, a form of visual communication, usually illegal, involves an individual or group's unauthorized marking of public space.




Art comes from Knowing When To Listen

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“We don't make mistakes, just happy little accidents” - Bob Ross

“A picture is a poem without words” - Horace

“Every artist was first an amateur” -Ralph Waldo Emerson

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Listening is an art that requires work, focus, insight, self-discipline, and skill. Art springs from knowing when to listen …………………….

  • See prior posts: The Texture of Art, Natural Art, Does Street Art Speak to the Marketplace, Painting is Poetry and More

 

Art is an Instrument of War

“What do you think an artist is? … they are political beings, constantly aware of the heartbreaking, passionate, or delightful things that happen in the world, shaping themselves entirely in their image.

“Painting is not done to decorate apartments. It is an instrument of war.”- Pablo Picasso.

Art is made to defend something or fight against something. It isn't art if it doesn’t do one of these two things.

 

Why Do Artists Present Faceless Art?

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Why do artists present faceless art? The quick answer seems to be that the viewer quickly ignores the absence of the face and looks for beauty elsewhere.

Art can have its voice: an active or a passive voice. The sentence’s subject determines the difference in voice with language. If it acts, it is happening; if it receives the action, it is passive.

Faceless art changes the subject. The energy and focus of the image take from the face and focuses on the body, changing the dialogue. The body, clothes, surroundings, colors, and textures are left alone to project their raw emotion.  

Leonardo da Vinci said, “Art was art,” adding, "We don't inform art, that art informs us.”  The message that art brings may be more exact if the art has a face compared to one that is faceless, leaving us to find what the beginning might be.