You're right Michael, I should have omitted the word might.  I emphatically
agree that the artist must have an intention, however brief or vague or silly.
wc 


----- Original Message ----
From: Michael Brady
<[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Fri,
October 26, 2012 3:33:39 PM
Subject: Re: "The problem with Hegelbs
aesthetics is the assumption that the 
truth of a work of art emerges
completely via its conceptual

On Oct 26, 2012, at 3:06 PM, William Conger
<[email protected]> wrote:

> I agree fully with Saul on this.  I've said
it here before several times:
The artist may require an intention to do an
artwork but there is no guarantee
that this intention can be elicited by the
resulting artwork in the minds of
its viewers.  It's the Intentional Fallacy.
and as Saul points out many new,
unanticipated 'conditions and circumstances'
affect the work beyond the scope
> of the artist and the execution, and
afterward,  of the work.

"May require"? The artist does require an intention
to "do an artwork," but it
unfolds in several stages of taxonomic clarity. The
artist sets out to make a
WoA, whatever kind. I don't think the artist goes
into a room, stumbles around
for several hours or days, and then say, "I'll be
damned. I made a painting."
I believe that the artist always begins with the
intention to create a work of
art. After that, the artist makes more narrowly
focused decisions about kind
of work, method of making, method of expression,
"subject" matter, etc.



| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Michael Brady

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