I'd have to agree with this. The amount of skill that goes into a piece of art can be measured, but a person's overall appreciation of the work is subjective.BobDobolina said:It is possibly to objectively tell what type of skill, and what level of skill, has gone into a certain aspect of a performance or a work of art. It is possible to objectively tell which works of art tend to garner the most acclaim and admiration, though it's often much harder to isolate why they do so or to identify whether the claimed reasons for admiring them are the "real" reasons. There are almost always a mixture of social factors, groupthink, perceived status enhancement and ideology mixing in with the personal psychology inherent in "pure" appreciation of the art.
What a person will like is the aspect that is most purely subjective. You can't tell someone what their tastes are. This doesn't necessarily render social judgments of "good" or "bad" taste irrelevant, however... and it's this that is very often what people who defensively proclaim "art is subjective!" are really attempting, because they don't want to hear that their Velvet Elvis or their taste for Michael Bay movies marks them out as a rube. Standards in artistic appreciation, visuals or dramatic or literary, are partially subjective but not entirely so.
Well. Thing is, you're describing his as a painter, so you'd be wrong. He most certainly was not a terrible painter, in that he mastered certain techniques.Radeonx said:Me saying that Van Gogh is a terrible painter doesn't make me wrong.
Popular doesn't equal good.
I wouldn't call it shit, just sorta unimpressive up close. What you never see in all those pictures of it is the gorgeous wall sized painting directly across from it. Comparing the two to each other, yeah; the Mona Lisa looks like a second year college student's project.The Wykydtron said:I'll just say that i think the Mona Lisa is shit
Does that answer your question?
Even science is subjective, there's very few actual laws in science that everyone can universally agree on and its how you interpret phenomena and then provide evidence of that as to what makes a theory accepted by some but not all.Outright Villainy said:Mother fucking everything that isn't maths or science is subjective.
it DOES make you wrong. saying you don't like his paintings doesn't.Radeonx said:Yes, because the quality of art is based on opinions, making it subjective.
Me saying that Van Gogh is a terrible painter doesn't make me wrong.
Popular doesn't equal good.
well i guess what im saying is that its given so much more attention than i believe it deserves. so many great artists go unnoticed because of just a few choice pieces from hundreds of years ago. artists now are creating much more beautiful paintings and sculptures, etc. many of them using the same techniques that artists way back then were using. its just kinda sad :/BobDobolina said:The Mona Lisa's fame has mostly to do with its historical importance (an example of sfumato from the brush of the technique's inventor) and the questions surrounding it. I know of very few people who would proclaim it inherently, strictly on its aesthetic merits, the best painting in the world.Vykrel said:yes it is... because the Mona Lisa is still the most popular and famous piece of art in the world, for some reason, even though there is CLEARLY so much more incredibly amazing art out there.