originally posted by Joel Stewart:
I'm not Oswaldo, but I don't think he himself was anthropomorphizing nature as much as trying to give a picture of the supposed mindset of a New Guinean spirit-man.....receiving the mangrove root from nature, rather than being the sole source and creator/author of the sculpture. In that sort of mindset paradigm, it is similar to, say, Northwest Coastal tribes thanking the animals they hunted for "giving" their lives/flesh to them (or thanking the various nature spirits that provided them). White man anthropomorphizing nature may be silly sure (Bugs Bunny is silly), but what of indigenous peoples and animism? That's harder to discount as looney.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
On anthropomorphizing nature, I vote with Jeff and Joe: is too.
Or, to put it another way, you fail to give nature full credit when you anthropomorphize, fail to understand it on its own terms.
Misleading, useless, disruptive, wrong, irrational, trite -- is that better?originally posted by Florida Jim:
I took issue with the use of the word silly, not the concept.
Considerably.originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Misleading, useless, disruptive, wrong, irrational, trite -- is that better?originally posted by Florida Jim:
I took issue with the use of the word silly, not the concept.
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):Where's Peter Liem when we need him?
Not here.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Duchamp opened the way for the conceptual possibility of found art, but his readymades were not found art. First, just as a matter of fact, with the possible exception of "Fountain," most of the readymades, including such things as the bottle rack, not to mention more obviously the bicycle wheel on the stool, were artificed and not merely presented objects. Second and more importantly, Duchamp's choices and presentations were artifice whose aesthetic point was calling into question aesthetic concepts that could not explain those artworks as artworks.
Found art is actually much less interesting and problematic. One finds a piece of drift wood one chooses to apprehend as beautiful and then puts it in one's livingroom. One knows just what is going on and one's choice to designate the object as beautiful can be explained, as most artworks can, equally well under any number of theories. The extension, finding works from other cultures whose original purpose one either ignores or is ignorant of and apprehending it in aesthetic terms, may raise questions of ethnocentrism, but they don't raise any particularly interesting aesthetic ones. Of course, both the driftwood and the anthropological object one is presenting as beautiful may actually be beautiful and worth apprehending in that way, but that's another issue.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Duchamp opened the way for the conceptual possibility of found art, but his readymades were not found art. First, just as a matter of fact, with the possible exception of "Fountain," most of the readymades, including such things as the bottle rack, not to mention more obviously the bicycle wheel on the stool, were artificed and not merely presented objects. Second and more importantly, Duchamp's choices and presentations were artifice whose aesthetic point was calling into question aesthetic concepts that could not explain those artworks as artworks.
Found art is actually much less interesting and problematic. One finds a piece of drift wood one chooses to apprehend as beautiful and then puts it in one's livingroom. One knows just what is going on and one's choice to designate the object as beautiful can be explained, as most artworks can, equally well under any number of theories. The extension, finding works from other cultures whose original purpose one either ignores or is ignorant of and apprehending it in aesthetic terms, may raise questions of ethnocentrism, but they don't raise any particularly interesting aesthetic ones. Of course, both the driftwood and the anthropological object one is presenting as beautiful may actually be beautiful and worth apprehending in that way, but that's another issue.
Words are slippery*. I believe there's no such thing as found art, only found objects. It's the finder/chooser who must convince society that it is art (if so inclined).
The bicycle wheel is not technically a readymade but an assemblage, though usually included among the readymades. It is sometimes called (see Francis Naumann) an "assisted readymade" because it is an assemblage of two readymades.
Thank you, Joel, it was certainly not my intent to anthropomorphize nature. I don't have an opinion as to whether doing so is silly or not. It's not an issue for me, and is merely a matter of opinion. But, as a matter of principle, I'd rather not convert my opinions into universal value judgments.
* I've been meaning to ask you this: was it Wittgenstein who said that most of the problems of philosophy are the consequence of tautological use of language, i.e., reducible to misuse of grammar?
Splendid.originally posted by Florida Jim:
Considerably.
originally posted by Yule Kim:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Duchamp opened the way for the conceptual possibility of found art, but his readymades were not found art. First, just as a matter of fact, with the possible exception of "Fountain," most of the readymades, including such things as the bottle rack, not to mention more obviously the bicycle wheel on the stool, were artificed and not merely presented objects. Second and more importantly, Duchamp's choices and presentations were artifice whose aesthetic point was calling into question aesthetic concepts that could not explain those artworks as artworks.
Found art is actually much less interesting and problematic. One finds a piece of drift wood one chooses to apprehend as beautiful and then puts it in one's livingroom. One knows just what is going on and one's choice to designate the object as beautiful can be explained, as most artworks can, equally well under any number of theories. The extension, finding works from other cultures whose original purpose one either ignores or is ignorant of and apprehending it in aesthetic terms, may raise questions of ethnocentrism, but they don't raise any particularly interesting aesthetic ones. Of course, both the driftwood and the anthropological object one is presenting as beautiful may actually be beautiful and worth apprehending in that way, but that's another issue.
Words are slippery*. I believe there's no such thing as found art, only found objects. It's the finder/chooser who must convince society that it is art (if so inclined).
The bicycle wheel is not technically a readymade but an assemblage, though usually included among the readymades. It is sometimes called (see Francis Naumann) an "assisted readymade" because it is an assemblage of two readymades.
Thank you, Joel, it was certainly not my intent to anthropomorphize nature. I don't have an opinion as to whether doing so is silly or not. It's not an issue for me, and is merely a matter of opinion. But, as a matter of principle, I'd rather not convert my opinions into universal value judgments.
* I've been meaning to ask you this: was it Wittgenstein who said that most of the problems of philosophy are the consequence of tautological use of language, i.e., reducible to misuse of grammar?
You are probably thinking of Proposition 4.3 of the Tractatus.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
"The bicycle wheel is not technically a readymade but an assemblage, though usually included among the readymades. It is sometimes called (see Francis Naumann) an "assisted readymade" because it is an assemblage of two readymades."
I don't know who creates these distinctions but, following what I take to be this one's point, virtually all the readymades should be relabelled assemblages. Even "Fountain," prior to his sending an actual urinal to the Independent exhibit, existed in his studio as an assemblage (a constructed urinal hanging from a doorframe, if I remember the photo correctly) and was "remounted" as an assemblage in his museum in a valise.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
"The bicycle wheel is not technically a readymade but an assemblage, though usually included among the readymades. It is sometimes called (see Francis Naumann) an "assisted readymade" because it is an assemblage of two readymades."
I don't know who creates these distinctions but, following what I take to be this one's point, virtually all the readymades should be relabelled assemblages. Even "Fountain," prior to his sending an actual urinal to the Independent exhibit, existed in his studio as an assemblage (a constructed urinal hanging from a doorframe, if I remember the photo correctly) and was "remounted" as an assemblage in his museum in a valise.
Not sure I understand you. Hanging Fountain on a doorframe doesn't make it an assemblage, nor does putting it on a base, as it was shown at the Armory. The snow shovel is not an assemblage, neither is the bottlerack, they are found objects that he decreed to be readymades. The only readymade that is a combination of two found objects is the bicycle wheel.
originally posted by Yule Kim:
Sorry. It was proposition 4.003.
"4.003 Most sentences and questions that have been written about philosophical things are not false but rather nonsensical. So we cannot answer questions of this kind at all, but only ascertain their nonsensicality. Most questions and propositions of philosophers are based on our not understanding the logic of our language.
(They are of the same kind as the question whether the good is more or less identical than the beautiful.)
And it is not surprising that the deepest problems are really no problems at all."
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
The bottle rack was crafted and not merely presented. Look closely at the photo of the urinal on the doorframe and you can see that that too has been worked at to some extent. I don't know about the snow shovel. I'd even say that putting the urinal on a base (not to mention signing it R. Mutt)also involves more than straightforward presentation.