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Picasso Masterpieces Beaten by a Toilet -Poll
 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 13:12 [#01412012]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker




Picasso Masterpieces Beaten by a Toilet -Poll

LONDON (Reuters) - They are two of the most recognized works
of art in the world, and they have lost out to an
autographed toilet.

Pablo Picasso's "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon" and "Guernica"
came second and fourth respectively in a poll of what 500
leading art world figures regarded as the five most
influential works of modern art in the world.

They were beaten to the top spot by Marcel Duchamp's
"Fountain," a tilted and signed white urinal which he
offered to a shocked art world in 1917.

Third place in the survey by Turner Prize sponsor and gin
manufacturer Gordon's went to Andy Warhol's "Marilyn
Diptych," with Henri Matisse's "The Red Studio" in fifth
place.



 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 13:27 [#01412031]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker



so there, its official


 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 13:55 [#01412060]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker



leading world art figures know nothing of art


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2004-12-01 13:58 [#01412061]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



well.. art is not about the artist, but the person who
experiences the art.. says something about "leading world
art figures," eh?

I think my next song will be called that.


 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 13:59 [#01412064]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01412061



:)


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 14:01 [#01412068]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular



five most influential works of modern art

that doesn't say the best, most beautiful or most
innovative, it says "most influential". and for that
matter, "modern art".


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 14:02 [#01412070]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular



maybe the fountain is the most influential. how would you
or i know? i haven't researched data to find out what
modern art has had the most influence on other artists, have
you?


 

offline virginpusher from County Clare on 2004-12-01 14:04 [#01412074]
Points: 27325 Status: Lurker



Art is cool because it is nice to look and and pee in!


 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 14:13 [#01412088]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker | Followup to r40f: #01412068



ok, whatever dude, i still think that a tiltled toilet is
not as influencial as some of the works mentioned, who cares
what i think though right?


 

offline uzim on 2004-12-01 14:14 [#01412090]
Points: 17716 Status: Lurker



if you think about it, it's easy to see why the Fountain was
chosen, and i think it's fair enough... after all, it
"destroyed"/changed the definition/concept of "art" more
than Picasso.


 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 14:16 [#01412095]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker



not really, it is still a toilet 'fountain', its just a
toilet, its art ok, but it really is just a toilet


 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 14:17 [#01412098]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker



art is now everything, i get it, but i really dont agree
with it in the sense that everything is art.


 

offline brokephones from Londontario on 2004-12-01 14:18 [#01412100]
Points: 6113 Status: Lurker



I love modern art. Its much more stimulating than
traditional art.


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 14:19 [#01412103]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular | Followup to mrgypsum: #01412088



oh, please don't take it personally. you can make whatever
point you like - i was merely challenging it. perhaps i
said it the wrong way.


 

offline deepspace9mm from filth on 2004-12-01 14:20 [#01412105]
Points: 6846 Status: Addict



It's not just a fucking toilet, it was a defining piece in
breaking down what art is and could be about.


 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 14:25 [#01412112]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker



maybe its easy for me to look back on this and say "ok, why
would they vote for a toilet" and it is now 2004, and this
happened int 1917, but this was recently voted on so that is
why its outrageous to me, i guess, and btw not to worry we
are just shooting the shit here :)


 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 14:27 [#01412114]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker | Followup to deepspace9mm: #01412105



i know this, but come on its just a toilet, the actual art,
now the concept it cool, but art is not a concept, at least
for me, its not about concepts, its about feeling and
basically what d mastah said


 

offline deepspace9mm from filth on 2004-12-01 14:34 [#01412121]
Points: 6846 Status: Addict | Followup to mrgypsum: #01412112



Arrrrgh, sorry if that came off a bit rude, it's generally a
bad idea for me to mix a couple of bottles of wine with
interweb art threads. Mind you, the other pieces in the top
5 are all 1930s or before (warhol excepted), so i dunno how
it seems "outrageous" that fountain was number 1.

The whole readymade thing opened up whole new avenues in art
theory, but whether or not those "avenues" are a bullshit
waste of time and effort is up to you i guess. For the
record i'm a bit of a duchamp fanboy, but i suppose you'd
gathered that.


 

offline deepspace9mm from filth on 2004-12-01 14:38 [#01412133]
Points: 6846 Status: Addict | Followup to mrgypsum: #01412114



Art is not a concept... for you. It can be about
feeling and expressing emotion and all that, sure (1950s
macho angsty posturing here we come), but to invalidate
somebody else's work but saying "come on it's just a toilet"
is a bit ignorant if you ask me.

If it's "i don't like it", fine, but the implication that
using a urinal as art is a pisstake is a bit much to bear.


 

offline deepspace9mm from filth on 2004-12-01 14:39 [#01412137]
Points: 6846 Status: Addict | Followup to deepspace9mm: #01412133



Fucking italics.

Also, i despise these sort of shitty polls anyway.


 

offline Dannn_ from United Kingdom on 2004-12-01 14:41 [#01412144]
Points: 7877 Status: Lurker



That toilet invented all the people who say 'that's not art,
it's just a fucking _________'.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2004-12-01 14:42 [#01412147]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to mrgypsum: #01412114 | Show recordbag



wel.. some of the artists seem to have gotten an impression
that art is about themselfes and itself.. that art should
challenge the boundaries of art, and no longer comment
society. The purpose of modern art is to expand "art" as a
concept, which just is very stupid... art isn't more or less
if you do it with more stuff or more "meaning".. the meaning
will never be concieved correctly by the people experiencing
the art.. everyone experience things differently, and if an
artist connects "love" to the color yellow with poo and
ducks on it, he is probably pretty alone in the world, and
everyone else will have their own opinion of it. "when the
work leaves the artist, the work is not the artists."


 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 14:46 [#01412156]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker



i'm not trying to be ignorant, but i am trying to reason out
the artist value of a toilet, now the concept, i totally
agree with it, but to give you an example, warhol would put
say a washer machine on a platform and call it art, hes
rehashing duchamps concept, but the actual physical art of a
washer machine is lost on me, frankly it is not artistic,
just the concept is artistic


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2004-12-01 14:50 [#01412160]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to mrgypsum: #01412156 | Show recordbag



concept art?


 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 15:07 [#01412205]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01412160



doesnt masterbate my mind like actual physical art, ie the
art itself


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 15:09 [#01412209]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular | Followup to mrgypsum: #01412156



so you believe that the effort of the artist describes the
quality of the art? for instance, you think that found art
isn't true art?


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2004-12-01 15:11 [#01412222]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to mrgypsum: #01412205 | Show recordbag



well.. there are people who agree with you, and then there
are people who don't.. I don't think much of putting a piece
of poop on a toaster and calling it art, because it's the
"expand 'art' as a concept" school...

I'm all for art that is enjoyable as visual candy. I'd like
to have my own emotions when looking at something.. no
thoughts.


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 15:16 [#01412236]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01412222



"...that art should challenge the boundaries of art, and no
longer comment society."

but haven't works such as Fountain commented on, and perhaps
shaped, the way society percieves art?

"I'm all for art that is enjoyable as visual candy. I'd like

to have my own emotions when looking at something.. no
thoughts. "

this is your mistake, i think. you're saying that
superficial art with no substance is more desirable than
more cerebral art that may be ugly or simplistic? why?


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2004-12-01 15:19 [#01412245]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to r40f: #01412236 | Show recordbag



because the way we work, meaning wouldn't be percieved as it
was meant. no-one can understand how I experience an apple,
they can only have their own experience. If Duchamp once had
sexx on that toilet, he could have put it there to symbolise
sex, but no-one saw that.


 

offline 010101 from Vancouver (Canada) on 2004-12-01 15:24 [#01412255]
Points: 7669 Status: Regular



I think what you have to do is devide what is "Craft" and
what is "Concept".

Guernica and Les Demoiselles d'Avignon are increadably
"Crafted" peices of art more so than Fountain

Fountain is a "Conceptual" piece that changed what was
acceptable in the world of art and to compound what he was
doing, we are still pondering the question of wheater or not
it is "Art".

And I do agree that Duchamp's contribution to the art world
is more important than Picasso's although they are both
essential foundations to our concepts of art today.


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 15:26 [#01412258]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01412245



of course we all experience art different ways. that goes
for all art, even when it is spelled out for you. even in
realism, when the meaning is on the surface, we will still
percieve the art in different ways and to different degrees.
so why is it important that meaning be transparent? to me,
the idea that you have to be able to "get it" defeats the
whole experience of the art, because it forces you to
embrace the context the art is presented in, which is a
distraction from the work itself.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2004-12-01 15:29 [#01412261]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to r40f: #01412258 | Show recordbag



therefore, art should be beautiful, and appealing, not made
with the purpose of conveying a message.


 

offline 010101 from Vancouver (Canada) on 2004-12-01 15:30 [#01412263]
Points: 7669 Status: Regular



You have to get it, that is what art is all about. Your
personal connection to imagery.


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 15:33 [#01412265]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01412261



what??? no, no and no.

you said yourself that art should comment on society. how
can it do that if there is no message? that doesn't make
any sense.

and where is the panel of experts that decides what is
beautiful and appealing?


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 15:36 [#01412267]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular | Followup to 010101: #01412263



why do i have to understand a hidden meaning or obscure,
secret reference in art to have a personal connection to it?
i don't think i do...


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2004-12-01 15:37 [#01412268]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



consider this: I like food that tastes good. Everyones
tastebuds are different, but most people would agree that
for instance ketchup, poo, fish, rocks and garbage tastes
bad when mixed (not important point, and example, so don't
argue that you like poo or whatever...). If someone made a
dish containing these things he'd defintaly expand the
concept of "food," but it just wouldn't be good, and it
would most likely be an unwelcome expansion of "food."


 

offline deepspace9mm from filth on 2004-12-01 15:38 [#01412269]
Points: 6846 Status: Addict



The idea of art "belonging" to either the creator or the
viewer is quite a puzzler, regardless of what it means to
either of them. I tend fluctuate between both camps, so i'm
not going to launch into any kind of diatribe. Although i'd
say that the relationship created between artist and
viewer is more important than any kind of
conceptual/emotional "ownership".

Dividing art from idea is something i've never held with
though, it smacks too strongly of ikea prints designed to go
with your furniture. If a piece is designed with that in
mind then fair enough, i'm not going to condemn someone's
work just because it doens't conform to my idea of what art
is or should related to (if it relates to anything at all,
but that's a whole other wanky discussion.) I can appreciate
aesthetic beauty as well as the next fella, but art lacking
ideas, no matter how pretty, seems a bit (deep breath)
shallow.

This is so much like the CONFIELD IS GRATE / NO IT'S NOT
fiasco it's untrue.


 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 15:38 [#01412270]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01412261



d mastah, i think we are on the same wave length here, this
is how i enjoy art. "I'd like to have my own emotions when
looking at something.. no thoughts. " totally agree with
this, i would just add that my emotion is what drives the
artistic effect that the art has on me, my emotion however
is mine and i cannot think that others will have my same
emotion, which you kind of touched on.
so maybe, the fountain didnt have emotional effect on me,
but what else can it do for me? i see the concept but, now
we are on the intellectual (read non-artistic) level here,
not purely non-artistic put there is a scientific objective
level involved with this piece.



 

offline mrgypsum on 2004-12-01 15:41 [#01412273]
Points: 5103 Status: Lurker | Followup to deepspace9mm: #01412269



its not that it lacks idea, just connection to the viewer,
therefore idea from the viewer, now not all viewers are
created equal...


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2004-12-01 15:44 [#01412276]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to r40f: #01412265 | Show recordbag



erh.. I said that some people believe that art should
comment on society, and that that was the main purpose of
art before a certain period.. I didn't say I agreed with it,
but I like it MUCH better than the concept of expanding art.
I'm 40% towards that theory and 60% towards candy.

the expert panels are nowhere and everywhere.. they most
often consist of people who other people think know what
they're on about... like.. if you'd have a panel on pop,
you'd include madonna no matter what...


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2004-12-01 15:45 [#01412281]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to deepspace9mm: #01412269 | Show recordbag



it's not really a problem, since the artist becomes another
spectator/interpreter among with the other interpreters as
soon as he's handed the work over to the public. His opinion
is just as valid as everyone elses, but it's still HIS
opinion.


 

offline deepspace9mm from filth on 2004-12-01 15:47 [#01412283]
Points: 6846 Status: Addict | Followup to mrgypsum: #01412270



If you don't want to take any kind of conceptual thing home
with you after seeing a purely conceptual piece, then you
won't like it, simple as that. It's true nuff that you take
what you want from art, and if you appreciate aesthetics
over idea, then you're naturally going to like a different
kind of work. I'm not saying at all that you're
saying this, but the real thing that pisses me off is the
whole "that's not art! i could do that!" school of thought,
because it generally revolves around seeing something
idea-based in terms of pure aestheticism.

Also: beauty can be conceptual, idea and image can't
always be separated.


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 15:48 [#01412284]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01412268



that example really doesn't work. shit isn't food - you
can't eat it. yet shitty art is still art - it's just
shitty.

what if someone made art that was so ugly and disgusting, no
one in the entire world could possibly say it was beautiful?
what makes you so sure it wouldn't be art? what if someone
says that the mona lisa is nauseating and unbearable to look
at? it isn't art anymore?


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 15:50 [#01412289]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular | Followup to deepspace9mm: #01412283



i agree.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2004-12-01 15:53 [#01412296]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to r40f: #01412284 | Show recordbag



exactly! shit isn't food, but a toilet isn't art either
before someone calls it art... hence the link to
"expanding art" from "expanding food."

as for the other question: i'd say that a general consensus
would be required.. not just the opinion of the few, but the
opinion of the masses. if one person didn't like the mona
lisa, he'd be outnumbered (not wrong, but not democratically
right either...).


 

offline deepspace9mm from filth on 2004-12-01 15:54 [#01412297]
Points: 6846 Status: Addict | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01412281



Now that i can agree with. There's a multitude of ways of
looking at art, and that's exactly how it should be.

And mistergypsum, i can see that too, but it really depends
on what you are looking to take away from a piece. If you
want to take something on an ideas level, then you will. If
you're looking for something that tickles your beauty-bone,
then you'll get something out of that. But i've always
thought that aesthetics can actually spark ideas, and vice
versa. Personally i wouldn't agree with deliberately trying
to separate the two camps, there's way too much grey area,
particularly as we seem to be discussing idea vs aesthetics
as if they were two camps of artists at perpetual war.



 

offline deepspace9mm from filth on 2004-12-01 15:58 [#01412303]
Points: 6846 Status: Addict | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01412296



Bollocks, mate! Art isn't consensus-chosen, and nor should
it be. If you see something as art, then it is, at
least to you. That's at the core of what duchamp was trying
to say. Taken to its logical extreme, it could be argued
that art is anything, and hence we can see art in the
everyday. Which concerns both beauty and idea, negating the
whole separation thing.


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 15:59 [#01412304]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01412296



i don't understand your point. obviously art doesn't exist
before it exists. so what? your analogy is flawed. it
doesn't make sense.

and by making declarations that art is up to the democratic
majority, where does that leave the communists? where does
that leave the fascists and the individuals? i thought the
whole thing is that it is a personal experience? it's the
experience of the individual, not the masses.


 

offline 010101 from Vancouver (Canada) on 2004-12-01 16:01 [#01412307]
Points: 7669 Status: Regular



Duchamp's art is designed to entertain and prevoke this sort
of discussion. Before him, the whole, "Is it art" debate was
rarely even discussed. Because he proved that art was not
100% craft as it has been in the past.


 

offline r40f from qrters tea party on 2004-12-01 16:01 [#01412308]
Points: 14210 Status: Regular | Followup to 010101: #01412307



that makes me think that perhaps he was an influential
artist!


 


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