07.19.2007, 07:42 PM | #61 | |
children of satan
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 293
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well, most of these "art" people will call anything art to try to show how openminded they are...that bed isnt art. if you went into someones house that was a complete mess cause they are fucking slobs, and took pictures of it, is that art? artists and art lovers (esp on this board) are so eager to be liked by thier ilk they probably wouldnt ever criticize anyones art( ill use people claiming they like the magik markers as an example of art queers going overboard)....christ use your heads...i dont think van gogh or michelangelo would call that bed art..theyd probably laugh at anyone who even suggests it...art in my opinion requires talent, not someone being an utter slob and acting like they created something out of such sloth like behavior
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the nerve, the unmitigated gall of this asshole - atari2600 i consider you dumb, ignorant, and irrelevant perhaps more than a fly, but less than a fart. a joke - !@#$%! Death by a firing squard of ten black gay men would be too good for this shithead. - atari2600 loser retard. pothead - !@#$%! you're a real prick for acting so daft & being so disagreeable on purpose - atari2600 On the contrary, tesla69 is idiota numero uno - atari2600 |
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07.19.2007, 08:38 PM | #62 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: SoKo
Posts: 10,621
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Since the boundaries of what constitutes art is and has always been subjective, I find discussions like these pointless. Anybody saying that anything nowadays isn't art could easily find himself decades ago condemning some piece that is now heralded as a master work. Anyone that says all things can be art waters down art with vapid philosophy that encourages laziness. Both are wrong, both are right. What only matters is what moves you, only that is true art.
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07.19.2007, 09:33 PM | #63 | |
stalker
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: London
Posts: 505
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I actually went to see this piece of "art" Lets examine it for what it is A child like drawing of a chair with a wonky leg Now, lets examine the works off Titian, Tintoretto, or even the works of Hieronymus Bosch All technically superior to the wonky chair and the unmade bed All works of art, just some of them are shit works of art You can be the judge of which is which |
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07.20.2007, 04:27 AM | #64 | |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Plaza de Toros
Posts: 6,731
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Don't get me started! |
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07.20.2007, 04:31 AM | #65 | |
Posts: n/a
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You better don't get ME started, stiletto nose. Did you not end up battered enough on that other thread? Eh? Sniff, you dog, sniff. |
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07.20.2007, 04:35 AM | #66 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Plaza de Toros
Posts: 6,731
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Ok, Sarra. Whatever. <Ring a bell?
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11.16.2007, 01:17 PM | #67 |
little trouble girl
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 65
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Uh, What Art Recession? (Sotheby's/BID)
Michael Learmonth | November 15, 2007 7:45 AM Art moguls shook off recession fears and helped Sotheby's (BID) rebound strongly from its disastrous showing last week by ponying up for contemporary works including $23.6 million for former Wall Street commodities broker Jeff Koons' "Hanging Heart (Magenta/Gold)." In contrast to last week, when 20 of 79 lots went without bidders, most went within or slightly above estimates. Robotic Sotheby's auctioneer Tobias Meyer even added a lighthearted moment to the proceedings. "The dollar is weak," he chided a hesitant bidder for Richard Prince's "Untitled (Cowboy)." The gavel came down at $3.1 million, more than a million above the high estimate. The 71 lots were auctioned off without much drama--in contrast to last week's auction when van Gogh's "Wheat Fields" went unsold, causing BID shares to crater 28% the following day. Last night, Sotheby's kept up the momentum set at Christie's the night before: 16 record prices for Koons, Gerhard Richter and Lucian Freud. The highlight of the bidding were two pieces by Francis Bacon, a tiny self portrait and the magnificent "Second Version of Study for Bullfight No. 1." Rumor on the bidding floor was that Sotheby's had guaranteed the pair for $60 million. They went for $29.5 million and $41 million, respectively, not including commissions. Other highlights: Two Warhols, the tiny "Campbell's Soup Can (Pepper Pot)" ($7.5 million) and "Self Portrait (Green Camouflage)" ($11 million), sold in the mid range of estimates. Jean-Michel Basquiat's "Untitled (Electric Chair)" sold for $10.5 million, above the $10 million high estimate, but a second, less-impressive untitled piece sold for $6.9 million, below the $7 million low estimate. |
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11.16.2007, 01:17 PM | #68 |
little trouble girl
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 65
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Earlier: Night at the Art Market Crash (BID)
http://www.alleyinsider.com/2007/11/...t-art-rec.html Bacon was a sensation and the Van Gogh* didn't go. One speculates it's because it's now become more or less accepted that "Wheat Fields (with Crows)" was not Vincent's last painting, contrary to what's depicted in films such as Lust for Life and Vincent & Theo. (...along with "Wheat Fields" not being exactly one of his better works really either.) *(yeah, correctly it's "Gawck" in case any of you read it that way) Richard Prince, Lucian Freud, and Gerhard Richter had strong showings and Koons prices are soaring right now as the article above alludes. Personally, I feel SY are due some payback from Prince and Richter. According to Koons (concerning "Rabbit"), “Polished objects have often been displayed by the church and by wealthy people to set a stage of both material security and enlightenment of spiritual nature; the stainless steel is a fake reflection of that stage.” His "Rabbit" from '86 is probably gonna go for a hundred mil one day. And oh yeah, Rabbit is gonna be a balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade this year. http://www.mediabistro.com/unbeige/art/jeff_koons_gigantic_shiny_rabbit_to_join_macys_tha nksgiving_parade_70933.asp |
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