I've been browsing some great art blogs/sites and gallery sites, checking out the pulse of today's art. Wow. It is striking how diverse it is. It does not matter what your tastes, medium, subject matter, style is...there is something for everyone in the world of contemporary art and you are bound to find something you like.
Donald Judd
In the 1950's, word on the street was, if you wanted to fit in, then you had to paint non-objectively (no objects) in the Abstract-Expressionist style. Those who did not step in line were considered to be artistic dinosaurs with antiquated notions about making art (read about art critic Clement Greenberg to learn more). In the 1960's, Pop Art was popular, and recognizable imagery came back as strong as ever. By the 1970's...painting was considered dead...forbidden to be taught in respectable art schools, shunned by major galleries unless you were ok with being considered a kitch puppet for the masses. Minimalism broke a lot of painter's hearts :-(. Then came Neo-Expressionism of the 1980's and BOOM! Paint exploded passionately across canvasses from Berlin to Los Angeles! Art movements seemed to come and diseappear as they came to be replaced by new dogmas and styles to follow. Freedom seemed to mean rebelling against the old style to become the new artistic tyrant of the day, stuck in their ways and ideologies about art.
Tim Hawkinson
So, what goes today? A little bit of this, a little bit of that. There is so much room to experiment and follow your chosen path that the only problem is figuring out what your path might be. They are all so appealing. That is why many artists are hard to define today. A sculptor may also be an installation/performance/neon/video/Maya artist as well. The arts have not been this multi-media since the Renaissance, when artists would work as architects, furniture makers, painters, sculptors, metalworkers, etc. During these times of cultural growth, much like the Italian Renaissance, it is foolish not to study it all, even if you have a focus. Does not the ceramicist learn from painting about glazing? A painter learn from sculpture about form and shape? Does not Photography benefit them all as well?
Soak up all the artistic processes you can because they are all interconnected and can be relevant for exploring your artistic vision.
There artists that inspire me move in every which direction. The wind is always changing and there is something new and interesting in any place you look. Confusing, but exciting.
P.S. Goodbye Andrew Wyeth, great American Realist Painter who died last week at 91. Thank you for the wonderful paintings.
Andrew Wyeth
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