I'm always interested in how people encounter and interact with ideas an ideals. On this forum and others, I see people struggling and wrestling with the idea of art.
I've certainly spent my fair share of time throwing my hat in the debate and trying to articulate a value system with art at its center. I've come to see art not as something to be possessed or necessarily even defined (which in many ways is an attempt to claim ownership). The beauty of art, I think, lies in its ability, unique among human endeavours, to occupy that space between our dreams and our nightmares, and, in doing so, bring the unconscious and the abstract into a concrete world of consciousness.
I find myself drawn to art whose greatest power is its ambiguity, art that draws beauty from destruction, a new order from chaos. It's easy to get lost within great art, to marvel at its power to create new worlds and old visions through its own, self-referrential language.
But the more time I spend lost within art, the less certain I find myself of my ability to possess or define it from without. Art must be approached on its own terms, in its own language, and this, I suspect, is the reason it is so difficult for discussions of art to find any common ground on most forums.
Your thoughts would be most welcome.
I've certainly spent my fair share of time throwing my hat in the debate and trying to articulate a value system with art at its center. I've come to see art not as something to be possessed or necessarily even defined (which in many ways is an attempt to claim ownership). The beauty of art, I think, lies in its ability, unique among human endeavours, to occupy that space between our dreams and our nightmares, and, in doing so, bring the unconscious and the abstract into a concrete world of consciousness.
I find myself drawn to art whose greatest power is its ambiguity, art that draws beauty from destruction, a new order from chaos. It's easy to get lost within great art, to marvel at its power to create new worlds and old visions through its own, self-referrential language.
But the more time I spend lost within art, the less certain I find myself of my ability to possess or define it from without. Art must be approached on its own terms, in its own language, and this, I suspect, is the reason it is so difficult for discussions of art to find any common ground on most forums.
Your thoughts would be most welcome.