Based on Kostelanetz’s opinion of modern art, the fashionable, even trendy, popularity of street art falls into the realm of “unusual perception.” Few traditionalists would classify street graffiti as beautiful, definitely not high art; however, if we follow Kostelanetz’s philosophy, modern art thrives on the extraordinary experience of the viewer and his/her ability to perceive a work outside the accepted setting (gallery, museum, etc) and outside the common response to works of art classified as “beautiful.”
Even in our own humble city, a street art experiment exploded in what appeared to be a lurking reminder to look around and perceive the world, and art, a little differently. MCASD’s exhibit entitled Viva La Revolucion: A Dialogue with The Urban Landscape literally brought modern art to the streets and captured its dialectical relationship to the traditional art setting. Massive murals bombarded city streets while taglines (OBEY) and artists’ infamous logos (See Space Invader above) splattered against the sides of buildings.
Kostelanetz continues, “In our time, experiments with insufficiency are more interesting, more sympathetic, and ultimately more heroic than the exploitation of virtuosity” (43). Does this trend force us to actually “experience” modern art? Does this presence of street art alter our perceptions regarding the traditional way we view and consider beauty? See: Banksy.
1 comment:
Great article Lauren! I find your last question to be the most interesting. Do you think it's the presence of street art that changes our perception of beauty, or is it the other way around. Is it possible that a fundamental change in the way "beauty" is defined can also be reflected in modern artists and in what modern street art has become?
If that is true, then the next question to ask is what has transformed their view of "beauty". I think living in an urban environment, and within a modern society, has disconnected modern artists from a natural setting and what is traditionally thought of as "beautiful". It's logical then that modern art is more about separating yourself from the crowd, rather than creating something beautiful.
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