Louigi Verona wrote:
I think J. S. Bach and most of the classical composers would disagree
with you about that. As well as most musicians who still enjoy studying
and performing and listening to performances of such music. Similar for
most of the great painters and sculptors. The great classical oil
paintings were pretty much all commissioned pieces of commercial art, as
was "The Lady and the Unicorn" tapestry. But it is still one of the
great examples of tapestry art.
"Commercial art is not art" is a bit of something from the Romantic
movement that I think is completely wrong. "Art for art's sake". That is
often a cover for arrogance, egotism and elitism. "My art is so deep
that if you don't understand it, there's something wrong with you." That
is pure egotism. The Romantic period was a time when many artists
basically said, "I'm special, I'm God, it's all about ME, if you don't
agree with me, you're ignorant/stupid/bourgeois/worthless." Despite the
thousands of years of history worldwide where art was always part of
something (society, etc) rather than standing out in field trying to be
the one important thing.
--
David
gnome@hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community
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