"...although I do claim that "no other evidence is required to judge a
painting other  than what is presented by the painting itself"...

How about the evidence of a relatively high ability and readiness to judge
presented by 'judger' ?
Boris Shoshensky
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Judging the late Titian
Date: Fri, 3 Apr 2009 15:26:21 GMT

Mr Asthetik asks:  >Could you explain, Mr Miller, why artworks _should_ be
immediately intelligible?


Ideas of 'work' and of 'beauty' are indeed theoretical contrivances -- but
beautiful things can be made and enjoyably experienced  without them.  (just
as birds can  fly without a knowledge of aerodynamics).

My own ideas of 'work' and 'beauty' are rather vaporous as theories go,
since
nothing is theoretically excluded.

BTW -- although I do claim that "no other evidence is required to judge a
painting other  than what is presented by the painting itself" --- I am  not
asserting that "everyone should everyone be able to immediately understand  a
work, be able to immediately feel its beauty"

I would like to substitute the word ' eventually' for 'immediately' in the
above sentence -- although our lives are too  short to understand and feel
the
beauty of more than a limited range of things.

William and I disagree concerning what that project requires --  but I'll
have
to respond to that on another day.




/

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