I have always wondered if modern art (music or visual) could be made more accessible: I've wondered if an experience like a brief movie or display, could provide an experiential explanation of what a particualr artist or genre was attempting to do beyond the art itself: what's behind the 3 stripespough wrote: And in a way he's right. And wrong.
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The trouble with so much modern art is that it has become so incredibly insular and myopic that it's audience has become limited to those within its tight little world. That particular painting in no way speaks to the majority of Canadians, regardless of how excellent a piece of work it is.
...Mind you, my own feeling is that if it's not "erotica", it's a waste of money.
But there has got to be some sort of intellectual limit I imagine: Finnegan's Wake seems beyond me at times, and yet there is still something beautiful to me.
As for eroticism, isn't all art erotic? Otherwise it's only engineering
One issue I have with art for the evocative quality is that it runs the risk of becoming ultilitarian: art is only as good as its ability to incite. So while I can't eliminate the evocative quality of art in my definition of it, I do wonder if there is more to it than that, and if the "more" is content? Experimental, in this understanding, seems to be art for arts sake - not for the purpose of evoking response, but as an exploration of meaning and boundaries.
In that sense, I agree with Pough, that the truth lies somewhere between poles of sentimentality and abstract exploration of method and boundary.


