originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
What about tarted up art?
Not sure, actually, I can fall in line with your thoughts.
Let's get talking intentionality!
Let's get all syllogistic and compare Damien Hirst to Harlan!
Gauntlet's in the air, but it looks to be heading groundwards.
Nb. I have read no other post in this thread but Jonathan's. FWIW YMMV WFT FOS GMO.
"Tarted up" makes sense as a judgment about an artwork that say has more ornamentation than its form or its embodiment or its significance (choose your poison) merits. It doesn't make sense as a judgment about some form of tarting up that art as art can't do.
There are two forms of intentionality but at the moment I don't see how they apply. One is what might be called the intentionality of an artwork as artwork. In other words, just as one can say about chairs that they are things made to be sat on (regardless of what a particular carpenter might have thought he or she was doing in addition to that when making the chair)and that would be their intentionality, if we could say that art could be defined in a like way--say that artworks are made to be beautiful--then that would be their intentionality, regardless of any other intentions of the artist. Just as for the thing the carpenter makes to be a chair, the chair would have to fulfill the end of being something you can sit on, to be an artwork, the artwork would have to fulfill the end of being beautiful (if that is what the end of art is; I'm just stipulating here, not claiming).
The second form is something like the meaning intention of artists. This applies more to literary works because in order for marks or sounds to be language, the emitter has to intend them to be so taken and literature is comprised of language. It's not clear that paintings have to have the same kinds of meanings, though some of them do, and thus the same kinds of intentions behind them. In any case, this is an intention about the meaning of sentences or signs, even an intention about the meaning of a literary work. Although this kind of meaningis part of its being as an artwork, it's not identifiable with it.
As far as I can tell, both these forms of intention don't change that art is spoof.
I can't sufficiently construe the intention behind the next sentence well enough to respond.