This post can be immediately attributed to procrastination. A reluctance to return to the disenclutteringnesses of one burdened with more possessions than sense.
(And why not with the cat away at the beach for a week?)
I've been doing some portraits in my free time and encountered a hmmmm situation. Should I, shouldn't I?
In art classes you often have to do still lifes. Boring. (Not nearly as much fun as nudes, but good for developing skills.) One woman's still lifes were...childish? incompetent? undeveloped? But, she would bring in various works that were stunning and accomplished. Near photographic renderings of faces and landscapes. She was using a camera obscura ap with an Ipad. The instructor finally said: no more of this for this class. It's not conducive to developing your ability and skill. And does it really meet the definition of art?
In the movie Tim's Vermeer, Jenison wanted to see if he could replicate the artist's work reinventing technology that would have been available to the artist. He achieved similar results to the master's work.
Which begs the question of mastery. Have you really mastered something if you're using technology rather than you own independent ability? Like someone winning the Tour de France having somehow managed to incorporate electric assistance in the bike frame.
Anyway, I downloaded the softeware, and knocked off a quick portrait last night that turned out better than anything I've ever done. It's like tracing with paint by numbers. You can be a clumsy oaf and still produce remarkable work. Usually a picture takes days. The camera obscura ap produced it in less than 2 hours. And I say the ap produced it because it felt like being a worker in a factory producing someone else's stuff.
Been involved in soooooooo many discussions about whether using technological assistance is really art or not. And under what circumstances. I suppose part of the equation is whether the "artist" is being honest.
But, fat chance of honesty in a world filled with fragile egos and fraud.
Ran across one of the games of asdf (?) who was running a program and getting perfect scores. Was surprised any of them still existed. But, it made me wonder: why? Really, why? What does any of that accomplish?
Sometimes reaching outside a community provides unique views that haven't been steeped in whatever catechisms have been internalized by members. Maybe someone here has a unique view.
Anyone have an opinion?
Guess I'm just going to offer up 2 portraits for the price (free) of one. The software assisted stuff makes me look masterfully skilled, but the unassisted stuff just has more meaning.
and now
back...
to...
drudgery...
(And why not with the cat away at the beach for a week?)
I've been doing some portraits in my free time and encountered a hmmmm situation. Should I, shouldn't I?
In art classes you often have to do still lifes. Boring. (Not nearly as much fun as nudes, but good for developing skills.) One woman's still lifes were...childish? incompetent? undeveloped? But, she would bring in various works that were stunning and accomplished. Near photographic renderings of faces and landscapes. She was using a camera obscura ap with an Ipad. The instructor finally said: no more of this for this class. It's not conducive to developing your ability and skill. And does it really meet the definition of art?
In the movie Tim's Vermeer, Jenison wanted to see if he could replicate the artist's work reinventing technology that would have been available to the artist. He achieved similar results to the master's work.
Which begs the question of mastery. Have you really mastered something if you're using technology rather than you own independent ability? Like someone winning the Tour de France having somehow managed to incorporate electric assistance in the bike frame.
Anyway, I downloaded the softeware, and knocked off a quick portrait last night that turned out better than anything I've ever done. It's like tracing with paint by numbers. You can be a clumsy oaf and still produce remarkable work. Usually a picture takes days. The camera obscura ap produced it in less than 2 hours. And I say the ap produced it because it felt like being a worker in a factory producing someone else's stuff.
Been involved in soooooooo many discussions about whether using technological assistance is really art or not. And under what circumstances. I suppose part of the equation is whether the "artist" is being honest.
But, fat chance of honesty in a world filled with fragile egos and fraud.
Ran across one of the games of asdf (?) who was running a program and getting perfect scores. Was surprised any of them still existed. But, it made me wonder: why? Really, why? What does any of that accomplish?
Sometimes reaching outside a community provides unique views that haven't been steeped in whatever catechisms have been internalized by members. Maybe someone here has a unique view.
Anyone have an opinion?
Guess I'm just going to offer up 2 portraits for the price (free) of one. The software assisted stuff makes me look masterfully skilled, but the unassisted stuff just has more meaning.
and now
back...
to...
drudgery...
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