Is Modern Art Pushing Boundaries Or Just Trying To Shock Us?

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In summary, the conversation discusses the current state of modern art and the use of shock value in artistic expression. Some argue that art should provoke strong emotions, while others believe it should have a deeper meaning. There is also a debate about whether anyone can create and call something "modern art" without any artistic skill or meaning behind it. Additionally, the definition of art is brought up and how it has become a broad and often misunderstood term.
  • #1
ermina_h
even in this time, when nothing really shocks us, we see more and more artists, who give the name "art" to abstract pieces, in which i (personally) can t see any meaning. i attended an exhibition and for example, there was a video, that showed a man throwing up. i don t know.. i am not conservative and i like innovation in art (even if artists provoke, like gilbert and george), but doesn t art have any limits?! i mean, is everyone who doesn t have any idea about art, able to create something easy and draft and at last give it the name "modern art"?!

in former years, where anti-art was really innovative, provokative and meaningful, this special kind of art was reaching its goal.

but what is the meaning of "trying" to shock now, when no one is really shocked?
 
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  • #2
I know what you mean when, you go to a modern art exhibit and up on the wall is a big red dot with a white background, and the picture's title is "Big Red Dot with White Background Number 1" and everyone is supposed to consider it artistic in some way. Last time I checked, I could recreate that picture using microsoft paint and about 5 seconds of my life.

I think the problem occurs when an artist sees some symbolic meaning in what he is creating, but fails to communicate that meaning to his audience. If you've ever read Breakfast of Champions, I think that about sums it up.

As far as trying to shock people now...I've been thinking about that for awhile. It seems like artists are going to greater and greater lengths to get a rise out of people. Does that mean they're running out of ideas?
 
  • #3
good art provokes emotions
be they good or bad , that matters less then the strength of the reaction
so love it or hate it it is good art
bad art gets no reaction or far less anyway
 
  • #4
i would agree with ray_b.. the matter in art is to feel it as deep as you can.. even to see a part of yourself in it.. because we all consist of too many souls, even if we don t notice and cultivate them. we can realize these more souls through cultivating ourselves(and one way is art). this can happen only by the deep feelings, that art can create.. no matter if these feelings are melancholy, hate, love, shock etc..
what i wanted to say is, that maybe in this period of time, when nothing really shocks us (because "odd" things happen every day next to us and not only in modern art museums), it would be wiser for an artist not to do something just to provoke, but something meaningful. (for him and for the audience.. )
(because it s hard for a west human being to feel provoked, we just ignore what we don t like..)
some say, if something touches even one person,this can be called art... but i still can t help but wonder.. doesn t art have any limits?!
and if it is so important, that we can live in the painting s world for a while, then where do the impressive techniques of realism belong to?! this realistic kind of art can impress rather than be felt i think...
 
  • #5
Starting back 120 years ago, part of Art was all about breaking existing limits.
Even the Preraphaelites were trying to break the mold set by Victorian times.

I think what you are seeing is the result of a continued attempt at breaking limits. The boundaries have been pushed so far that "art" is a now a panchreston - a word that is often used but has so many definitions that it has lost meaning.
 
  • #6
ray b said:
good art provokes emotions
be they good or bad , that matters less then the strength of the reaction
so love it or hate it it is good art
bad art gets no reaction or far less anyway
Bad art provokes bad emotions. It's really upsetting that so much garbage is allowed to be called art. So many people completely void of talent consider themselves artists, con artists is more like it.
 
  • #7
yes, but what dali did for example in SOME of his paintings (not all of them), was the creation of feelings of "shock".. these are not the most positiv feeling. we can t lower dali though...
 
  • #8
furthermore, my opinion is that i kinda "like" it when something really provokes me. i may not admire the artist or the piece, but even there, i find a part of me.. i see my own limits somehow, even if i don t like the work of art.. in such an occasion, i catch myself with civil-conservative, even arrogant thoughts towards the piece, that lives in contrast with the artistic, that excuses almost everything and believes in the freedom of art without limits, ONLY when the artist really feels something about his work. (i may critisize a piece according to MY feelings and MY point of view, but i try to remain in a personal level. i really, don t feel right to judge the expression of an artist, just because it doesn t express me..)
 
  • #9
It's best to define first, then discuss:


Main Entry:
2art
Pronunciation:
\ˈärt\
Function:
noun
Etymology:
Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin art-, ars — more at arm
Date:
13th century

1: skill acquired by experience, study, or observation <the art of making friends>2 a: a branch of learning: (1): one of the humanities (2)plural : liberal arts barchaic : learning, scholarship3: an occupation requiring knowledge or skill <the art of organ building>4 a: the conscious use of skill and creative imagination especially in the production of aesthetic objects; also : works so produced b (1): fine arts (2): one of the fine arts (3): a graphic art5 aarchaic : a skillful plan b: the quality or state of being artful 6: decorative or illustrative elements in printed matter

Most people are referring to 4 a when they speak of "art":

the conscious use of skill and creative imagination especially in the production of aesthetic objects; also : works so produced

Art, by this definition, is about aesthetics rather than functionality. A nice looking car, for example, is aesthetically pleasing but isn't considered art because it has a function beyond, and clearly more important than, it's aesthetics.

What makes something of aesthetic interest are: line, form, rhythm, color, and texture. If we add "meaning" as a vital component we're no longer talking about art per se, but about a sub-category of art called "illustration". When the story told takes on importance then the aesthetic considerations are pushed down the list in importance. That doesn't mean they don't have to be just as good, only that they are less important in the overall experience, now sharing the spotlight with "meaning". The artwork is now more a functional thing, the function it performs being to convey the information comprising a "meaning".

Is it still art? Well, it's aesthetic elements are still art, just as the purely aesthetic aspects of a car can be considered art, apart from it's function as a transportation machine.

The reason I laid all that out is to point out that the opposite of video-vomit art isn't art with "meaning"; it's any art that demonstrates sensitive command of aesthetic considerations: line form, rhythm, color, and texture.
 
  • #10
i don t think i understood this.. do u mean that the video-vomit art has line, form etc and IS AESTHETIC?!??
 
  • #11
ermina_h said:
yes, but what dali did for example in SOME of his paintings (not all of them), was the creation of feelings of "shock".. these are not the most positiv feeling. we can t lower dali though...
I love Dali, "Child eating a rat" is one of my favorites. I consider his paintings humorous, not shocking. Dali has TALENT, he's an excellent artist.

If you want to talk about shocking, how about Hieronymus Bosch' The Garden of Earthly Delights"? Again, he has talent.
 
  • #12
ermina_h said:
i don t think i understood this..
I believe this statement is correct. Try reading my previous post over a few times.
 
  • #13
Let me try one more time, too.

When anyone who particpates in a discipline gets to create his very own definition of what the discipline is, that means that person redefines the limits of it. Inherent in a definition of art is what art means: see Zooby's very clear post. Not connotations of art, which is what it seems to me to be more of what you folks are talking about.

'What art means to me' vs throwing human body parts off a bridge as art are distinct things. Throwing stuff into the brink is clearly a definition by action. Simply saying 'I feel that...' is more in the realm of connotation.

Bottom line:

The real point is that to get 'noticed', (IMO), art practitioners have to define a niche for themselves. And if every practitioner roars off at the speed of thought past separate "brinks" of art and throws stuff over the edge, thereby creating an obscure niche, what you have left is not suitable for reasonable discourse. Why? Because lobbing body parts, painting with colored mayonnaise, and creating videos of ballistic vomiting have nothing in common, except that somebody chose to define them as art by action. ie., calling it 'art'

That is a panchreston. It is a word that has lost meaning. It lost meaning because it was applied to very different things. I view the discipline as sort of in a state of 'deteriorata', a parking lot for misguided efforts designed to increase entropy in the world by decreasing meaning.

One reason why slang terms die is because of this same phenomenon. My daughter used the word 'heavy' in so many ways it went beyond the point of having meaning. In her usage it meant anything from profound to large mass to confusing to insirational. It is not used that way anymore; it mostly refers to mass or thickness. It lost its usefulness.

IMO the meaning of art has died a death similar to the one for the word heavy, but the practitioners don't know it. It has little meaning among artists anymore. It is no longer a useful term. Except as Zooby found it in the dictionary.

Maybe that's why these guys can't sell their stuff... now there's a thought.
Kinda like why you can't find many recordings of John Cage's music. "music" had a similar problem back in the 40's. IMO.
 
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  • #14
Throwing body parts off a bridge as art, and vomit videos may well be conscious or instinctive imitations of the strange but powerful "art" movement known as Conceptual Art.

Conceptual Art is art in which the concept(s) or idea(s) involved in the work take precedence over traditional aesthetic and material concerns. Many of the works of the artist Sol LeWitt may be constructed by anyone simply by following a set of written instructions.[1] This method was fundamental to LeWitt's definition of Conceptual art, one of the first to appear in print:

"In conceptual art the idea or concept is the most important aspect of the work. When an artist uses a conceptual form of art, it means that all of the planning and decisions are made beforehand and the execution is a perfunctory affair. The idea becomes a machine that makes the art. – Sol LeWitt, "Paragraphs on Conceptual Art", Artforum, June 1967. ”

For the layperson, this quotation highlights a key difference between a conceptualist installation and a traditional work of art - that the conceptualist's work may require little or no physical craftsmanship in its execution, whereas traditional art is distinguished by requiring physical skill and the making of aesthetic choices. As Tony Godfrey has put it, after Joseph Kosuth's definition of art, conceptual art is an art which questions the very nature of what is understood as art.

more at:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conceptual_art

Some examples of conceptual art I recall from my college days are Chris Burden's "Breathing Water", which was a sort of bit of theater in which he plunged his head into a sink full of water, in front of onlookers at a museum, breathed in as much as he could, then coughed it out. It was about the concept of breathing water. In another piece he crawled for some distance over a path of broken glass (cutting himself quite a bit). In another he had himself literally crucified on the back of a Volkswagon Bug: nails pounded right through his hands.

In a way his pieces strike me as peculiar variations of Dali: the attempt to present inexplicably strange images for their own sake.

To the extent Conceptual Art sets out to "question the very nature of what is understood as art" it produces a lot of stuff that simply baffles or repels people. That appeals to a lot of people who simply enjoy confusing an audience, I think. If they weren't making videos of people vomiting, they might be out making crop circles, or they might have become stage magicians, who knows.
 
  • #15
ermina_h said:
even in this time, when nothing really shocks us, we see more and more artists, who give the name "art" to abstract pieces, in which i (personally) can t see any meaning. i attended an exhibition and for example, there was a video, that showed a man throwing up. i don t know.. i am not conservative and i like innovation in art (even if artists provoke, like gilbert and george), but doesn t art have any limits?! i mean, is everyone who doesn t have any idea about art, able to create something easy and draft and at last give it the name "modern art"?!

in former years, where anti-art was really innovative, provokative and meaningful, this special kind of art was reaching its goal.

but what is the meaning of "trying" to shock now, when no one is really shocked?

From this, I guess that you are saying that art now may have provocative and innovative qualities without meaning, and this is what you would like eliminated.

This raises some questions, firstly what do you mean by meaning? I don’t understand what you have said about souls, maybe you could elaborate. By stating that anti-art was reaching a goal and saying it was meaningful are you saying that having these goals gave the work meaning, and is that the meaning you mean? If so, then, secondly, if the vomit video was to have this sort of meaning, for example, a vomiting video could be consistent with abject art, theoretically related to Kristeva’s abject - would this validate it? However, you may be aware of this and not consider it sufficiently meaningful. (This would be strange, however, because you approve of gilbert and george, and they have also been classified in this way).

A third question arises by what limits you would place upon art. Many different ideas about how this may be done have been put forward, and none have been entirely satisfactory, I believe (and the amount of these different and opposing ideas suggests the same). Or, if you were to attempt to limit art by whatever this particular, or any idea, of meaning, how would you define this meaning and limit art in this way, and on what authority?

This brings more questions, too, such as, why should someone without an education in art not be free to create art? Isn’t that promoting an elitist view that only the specifically educated can understand, appreciate and create art? Indeed, the anti-art of the avant guard, particularly Dada, must not have reached goals of destroying Kantian/bourgeois autonomous art (Berger)(ideas about visual art being exclusive and superior and only really accessed by the specifically educated, talented few) if this belief prevails. And rather, the vomit vid has been more successful in this way by prompting the questions you’ve asked.
 
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  • #16
re previous mentions of function here, too, I think I should have emphasised that included in the Kantian/Bourgeois autonomous ideals of art that the avant guard aimed to destroy, was the idea that art as an end in itself has been considered superior to art with function, expression, meaning and other values.
 
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  • #17
I concentrated on the topic name, and avoiding an issue you mentioned because I need to learn more about it myself, which is further use of the term 'meaning', and your mention of shock, and how that relates to recent art, including abject art.

'ACCORDING TO JULIA KRISTEVA in the Powers of Horror, the abject refers to the human reaction (horror, vomit) to a threatened breakdown in meaning caused by the loss of the distinction between subject and object or between self and other.'

Also, I misspelt 'Burger' 2 posts back (and 'avant-garde'!)
 

1. What is modern art?

Modern art refers to any form of art created from the late 19th century to the present day that breaks away from traditional forms and techniques. It is characterized by a focus on experimentation, innovation, and self-expression.

2. How does modern art push boundaries?

Modern art pushes boundaries by challenging societal norms and expectations, exploring new and unconventional techniques and materials, and addressing controversial or taboo subjects. It often pushes the boundaries of what is considered art and what is not.

3. Is modern art just trying to shock us?

No, modern art is not solely focused on shocking audiences. While some artists may intentionally use shock value in their work, many modern artists are more interested in exploring new ideas and pushing the boundaries of what art can be.

4. How do we determine if modern art is successful in pushing boundaries?

The success of modern art in pushing boundaries can be subjective and vary from person to person. However, one way to determine its success is by looking at the impact it has on the art world and society as a whole. If it sparks conversations and challenges traditional perspectives, it can be considered successful in pushing boundaries.

5. What role does shock play in modern art?

Shock can play a role in modern art as a tool to challenge and provoke audiences. However, shock should not be the sole purpose of modern art. It should be used thoughtfully and purposefully to convey a deeper message or idea.

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