PICASSO'S work is very identifiableb&b&
B IsB  that enough to consider all
his work as art?

AB


________________________________
 From: William Conger
<[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Saturday,
March 17, 2012 6:29 PM
Subject: Re: descriptive / empirical aesthetics?
 
It's
not certain that all works of art are works of art because there is the
reality of time and change.B  Some works of art, once kown to exist no longer
exist, no longer exist in the original form, no longer exist as originals, may
have never existed, do exist but are no longer 'generally agreed' to be art,
and 
so on.

If there is the so-called a.e. then it must be shown
independently of any 
socially construed category of objects that presumably
produce the a.e.B  It 
might be evoked by bird's nest or a statue of Venus or
anything at all -- or 
nothing at all? -- and thus can't be limited to what
has already been called 
art.

WC


----- Original Message ----
From:
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent:
Sat, March 17, 2012 12:18:52 PM
Subject: Re: descriptive / empirical
aesthetics?

> John, you write:
> "I am not saying ANY works of art are good
or bad, because I don't believe
> it can be done without ending up with a
prescription of what art should 
> be."B   Agreed. 
> 
>B  "what I AM saying:
"Look, the fact is that ALL works
> of art ARE works of art, and your opinion
of them is irrelevant.""
> 
Irrelevant to what? My opinion of a work is very
relevant to me, the 
contemplator. 

Incidentally, am I right in assuming you
no longer hold that every object 
intentionally produced by any person is a
"work of art"?B  
>B  
> 
>B  "we can cut the nonsense and quite literally
>
start DEALING with art (and no I don't mean the art market by that, 
> hehe!)"
> 
I'm not being ornery when I ask what you have in mind with "Deal with
it."B  
Try to uncover the artist's "intention"? That has its anecdotal
interest, 
but if the work leaves me feeling cold, flat, weary and unprofited,
I have 
very little interest in what effect he was aiming to achieve. His
intention 
will not save the play for me.B  B  
> 
> "The reason Nabokov
despised Faulkner, Mann and Camus is located inB  
> their (according to him,
bad) choices. The original
> source of the aesthetic displeasure is not
located in the TEXT (it's only 
> a carrier), but in the bad choices - bad
artistry - of the writer."
> 
But where are a writer's "choices" manifested if
not in the text? His "ACT 
of choosing" -- selecting this word instead of that
one, this scene, this 
display of character -- are invisible to us. When
Faulkner wrote that the old 
and overweight Delsey came down the stairs with
"terrific slowness", that 
struck me as marvelously effective "choice of
phrase". For me, Faulkner's 
choice is the phrase. His ACT of choosing, the
activity in his mind before 
putting pen to paper, is forever hidden from me.
Tell me what kind of "choice" 
Nabokov abhorred if not text.B  
> 
> "(The
formalism I mean is the Russian brand - Sklovski, Tynyanov etc. - 
> the
>
idea that aesthetic experience is derived from HOW a work is made, and 
> that
> all ideological etc. content is entirely secondary." 
> 
> I confess the
notion behind that "HOW" is a mystery to me. I know that when 
I write a play
all kinds of consideration lie behind every line -- 
revelation of character,
impact on other characters onstage, etc. And I also try 
to 

imagine how it
will "land" in the audience. I may judge that a line that 
would certainly be
understood by the listening character onstage will be opaque 
to the audience.
What to do? I choose a solution. My choices may be 
regularly drab or
unconvincing, or boring -- but that would be because I'm a 
poor 

playwright.
Is that the sort of "HOW" you and Sklovski have in mind? Are you 
addressing
my invisible ACT, or the product of the act: the text?
> 
> 17. maaliskuuta
2012 17.40 <[email protected]> kirjoitti:
> 
> > John -- I'm not altogether
sure what you have in mind when you say
> > "formalism".
> >
> > But, to me,
your following line suggests something important about your
> > position (The
issues are "personal" preferences -- Jones always loves 
> the
> > flute,
Smith always hates it, etc.): "What I AM saying is that these 
> issues
> >
should not
> > enter the artistic appreciation of a work."
> >
> > Your line
seems to reveal a belief in an objective fact-of-the-matter 
> about
> >
"art", almost as though you're saying, "Look, the fact is that some 
> works
>
> of art are good and others simply aren't. Deal with it!"
> >
> > I don't
agree with that. As a scholar of Nabokov, you must know that he
> > despised
Faulkner, Thomas Mann and Camus. Did Nabokov lack "artistic
> > appreciation"
of written works? You can't think so if you've read his
> > appreciations of
>
> Austen, Dickens, and Tolstoi. Once we're convinced of a reader's sincere

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