Supr49er
2011 Thunderfall Cup
Perfection,
I prefer this Rothko:
I prefer this Rothko:

why arent we allowed to pick the mona lisa ? that was the first thing that i thought of when i saw this thread. i honestly just dont see what so special about it.
^ I think this was about the horrors of war or something of the sort.
THEY DON'T USE IT LIKE IN VOICE OF FIRE! VOICE OF FIRE USES COMPLEMENTARY COLORS TO EXPLOIT THE AFTERIMAGE EFFECT A PERCEPTUAL EFFECT I'VE NEVER SEEN USED IN A PAINTING BEFORE.
SO PLEASE, CAN I HAVE THAT APOLOGY NOW?
The idea of using the afterimage effect to intensify an image and to optimize it in the way he did is rather inspired in my view.No. Complimentary colors and the manipulation thereof are as basic as basic can get. Now it's not even a matter of "a child could do that," it's a matter of "the very concept is lame and uninspired.
The idea of using the afterimage effect to intensify an image and to optimize it in the way he did is rather inspired in my view.
The piece seems designed exquisitely to produce such an effect.
Of course, I haven't seen it in real life, but from all available evidence it seems like it would be pretty cool to see.
Interesting! Can you provide an example were the afterimage effect is used? Preferably pre-Voice Of Fire.The concept is not foreign to any artist that knows anything about color, artists use this sort of trick all the time, as a supplement to a large variety of other techniques and tricks, all within the same painting. It may have been novel to the person that painted that piece and to you, but to the rest of us it's just basic stuff.
Interesting! Can you provide an example were the afterimage effect is used? Preferably pre-Voice Of Fire.
Word of warning though, I don't accept complementary colors and afterimages as the same phenomena, though related.
Just because there is a lot of pretense about abstract art doesn't mean abstract art itself is nothing but pretense! The reason abstract art breeds pretense is because it is about the subjective experience one has when viewing it not how well it represents something (a much more objective criterion). That experience of course can be influenced by expectation and what others think.
This is not at all unique to abstract art, there are plenty of other subjective fields where this goes on, music, wine, literature, and food all have these same sorts of problems. Music, wine, literature, and food are all obviously good things that enrich our life despite the enormous amount pretense about them. I say the same thing is true about abstract art!
OH, okay. I will now read "stupid" as "mandatory" every time I see it in one of your posts.![]()
No, you should read "stupid pants" as "pants that shouldn't be mandatory".
The soup can picture is deliberately so lifeless and talentless - the capitalist consumption it represents is equally talentless, lifeless and disgusting.
Ugh! Seeing those pieces of old art makes me so grateful for our modern artists!Spoiler :![]()
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That's the exact opposite of how I view old art and old houses compared to new ones.Ugh! Seeing those pieces of old art makes me so grateful for our modern artists!
Have you ever been to an old house? They're disgusting. A McDonald's, though not the best place to be, is much more refreshing and lively in terms of ambiance.
That's how I feel about art old and new.