Fredrick : Architect | Sculptor | Advocate

Is the Act of Creation inherently "Artistic"?

Fredrick said Mar 25, 2006, 2:29 PM:

 

I was recently at a lecture by Arnold Kemp [http://www.worksarnoldjkemp.com], where I posed the simple question, ” Is the Act of Creation inherently ‘Artistic’?”

 

I asked this question, as:

1)       Mr. Kemp is the curator of the Yerba Bunea Center for the Art, and is in a position that has been defining such in an important art market; and

2)       There has been a long standing kitsch-inspired argument about ‘outsider’ art, and the difference between “Art” and “Craft”.

 

Today, I made a sandwich.

I gave it thought.

There was a process involved.

I am a working artist…

But, is it art?

I would argue, “No”.

 

Many would argue that Pollock’s paintings are not art, but just paint dribbles.

I would disagree, as I see the silhouetted space created through their juxtaposition.  Someday, I hope to be able to see the ‘figures’ and ‘text’ he painted in the air like Miró; before gravity took the paint from his tools to the canvas below…

 

Similarly, Duchamp elevated many objects to be “Art”, by their frame of reference…

 

The steel that I am about to grind after this posting, that [hopefully] will be good enough to be considered art.  I say that, within the context of a critical eye, as perhaps the core to something manifesting itself to becoming “Art” is belief in a work being ‘artistic’; which would therefore vary between one viewer and another…

 

Everyday, I am inspired by both the amazing and the drab.

As I know, that even the ‘crap’ was someone’s vision.

They spent time, passion and perseverance to seem it into reality.

I just might not agree with their aesthetic impetus…

 I look forward to your perceptions…

Ciao,
Fredrick
http://www.fhzal.com