Yes, but they attempt no beauty of visual, but idea. In real modernism of
visual beauty idea is quietly resting in invisibility giving stage to the
significant visual.
Boris Shoshensky

---------- Original Message ----------
From: Saul Ostrow <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: "Again and again experience has proved that the more deeply  vers
e d an  artist is in drawing, the less he is able to paint  portraits ."
(Giovanni  Battista Armenini)
Date: Sun, 13 Jun 2010 20:47:02 -0400

Everyone I referred to makes visual art - not one of them sings or dances or
at least not not in public


On 6/13/10 8:36 PM, "Boris Shoshensky" <[email protected]> wrote:

Let me be more clear. I am talking about visual art.
Boris Shoshensky
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: "Again and again experience has proved that the more deeply
verse d an  artist is in drawing, the less he is able to paint   portraits."
(Giovanni  Battista Armenini)
Date: Mon, 14 Jun 2010 00:28:28 GMT

I an talking about quality of art not a quality of a clever conceptualizing
which I might like.
Boris Shoshensky

---------- Original Message ----------
From: Saul Ostrow <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: "Again and again experience has proved that the more deeply
verse d an  artist is in drawing, the less he is able to paint  portraits."
(Giovanni  Battista Armenini)
Date: Sun, 13 Jun 2010 20:04:05 -0400

Do you know if Joseph Kosuth, Bill Viola, Marina Abramovic, Barbara Kruger,
or
Jeff Wall can draw - does it even matter - and while you may not like their
work is that any sign of its quality


On 6/13/10 7:52 PM, "Boris Shoshensky" <[email protected]> wrote:

Yes, and it is noticeable in the quality.

Boris Shoshensky

---------- Original Message ----------
From: Saul Ostrow <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: "Again and again experience has proved that the more deeply
versed an  artist is in drawing, the less he is able to paint  portraits."
(Giovanni  Battista Armenini)
Date: Sat, 12 Jun 2010 20:58:53 -0400

Many artist today do not draw nor are concerned with this form of notation


On 6/12/10 8:54 PM, "William Conger" <[email protected]> wrote:

Not in my view but I do regard drawing quality as the most obvious indicator
of an artist's overall capabilities because it is the chief mode of making
visual form.  The ability to do portraits well or poorly do depends on the
artist's eyes, brain,  art supplies and the sympathy and magnanimity of the
subject/patron.

Berg should stop coming up with quotations that are supposedly expressing
universal rules of art. Even some games that do have rules, like chess,
enable
more possibilities than can be described in any form at all short of
infinitude. Portraiture has no rules so how can one even begin to say what is
and isn't necessary to it?  Can we get past these dumb issues, please?

wc




----- Original Message ----
From: joseph berg <[email protected]>
To: aesthetics-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, June 12, 2010 5:48:19 PM
Subject: "Again and again experience has proved that the more deeply  versed
an  artist is in drawing, the less he is able to paint  portraits." (Giovanni
Battista Armenini)

Is that true?




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