hahaha. XPIf a tree falls in the forest and nobody hears it, is it art?
Cognitive Gear (post: 1444880) wrote:In general, it seems that people have lost their ability or will to put effort into their artistic experiences, and want any messages to be easily spelled out for them. I really wish that this wasn't the case, and always try to slowly move people into this type of experience when I can.
KhakiBlueSocks wrote:"I'm going to make you a prayer request you can't refuse..." Cue the violins.
Radical Dreamer (post: 1444925) wrote:I interpreted this in a different way than some of you, I guess. By the original post, I took "boring" in this context to mean what much of today's culture might consider slow-moving, or difficult to understand/thematically layered in so many ways that you have to dig for the meaning beyond the surface. That said, I don't think that art (mainly talking about books and film here) has to be entertaining to hold great worth. I think that it can certainly be "boring" by today's standard's and still be rich with interesting or important themes. I will say, I'll be more inclined to consider a movie a favorite that I watch over and over again if it's got both interesting/important themes and and I can consider it entertaining by my own standards. XD
On the definition of boring, I guess the only thing is that "uninteresting" varies for different people. Not that I know of anyone who would willingly watch Andy Warhol's Empire and call it the greatest movie of all time, but I think a lot of our culture today finds a lot of books and movies "uninteresting" that shouldn't be considered as such because of everything else they have to offer.
I have more thoughts on this and how it applies to the visual arts and design, but I think those will come later. XD
Fish and Chips (post: 1444900) wrote:Boring (adj.) - uninteresting and tiresome]be[/I] boring. If it is interesting or engaging, however it is interesting or engaging, it is not boring. Something is boring when it fails to grasp or keep your attention.
Boring is not just another antonym for "Exciting."
I think that (and this is just my own uninformed conclusion) the reason it seems that way is because high art is the art that lasts through the generations. The artwork that we have of long ago is mostly the really good, influential art, and the shallow popular art fell by the wayside and was forgotten, because it did not stand the test of time.Cognitive Gear (post: 1444933) wrote:Maybe it has always been this way, but the impression I often get is that there may have been a time when high art was much more popular. Can any of our resident historians shed some light on this?
While the history of art is somewhere outside my sphere of general knowledge, my gun-to-the-head response would be, "Doubt it."Cognitive Gear (post: 1444933) wrote:Maybe it has always been this way, but the impression I often get is that there may have been a time when high art was much more popular. Can any of our resident historians shed some light on this?
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