if art is just supposed to simply produce feelings, and the more feelings the better, why do we even need it? what if i can get the same feeling from gardening or trimming my toe nails?spike wrote:there is something to be said about art with widespread appeal, as opposed to not. if it affects more people.
Catch All PTA's Licorice Pizza Thread (Nov. 26, 2021)
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
Jorge wrote:I remember I was in Miami when it happened. I was posting from the balcony of my apartment overlooking the beach. And I was having an argument with Adamdude.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
does trimming your toe nails help you understand yourself more?Malloy wrote:if art is just supposed to simply produce feelings, and the more feelings the better, why do we even need it? what if i can get the same feeling from gardening or trimming my toe nails?spike wrote:there is something to be said about art with widespread appeal, as opposed to not. if it affects more people.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
it doesn't. but "helps you understand yourself more" isn't the same as what you were gesturing at before, when you wrote "affects more people".spike wrote:does trimming your toe nails help you understand yourself more?Malloy wrote:if art is just supposed to simply produce feelings, and the more feelings the better, why do we even need it? what if i can get the same feeling from gardening or trimming my toe nails?spike wrote:there is something to be said about art with widespread appeal, as opposed to not. if it affects more people.
i think my general point remains -- why do we need art to understand ourselves more, when sociology, therapy, meditation, history, anthropology, psychology, religion, etc. are available to us?
i just think it's a mistake to prioritize the effects -- feelings, self-understanding -- art has on a viewer, because we end up losing sight of the things that make art discrete from other modes of representation/expression/etc. and because those same effects can be got from other places. in this view, art is itself arbitrary or incidental
Jorge wrote:I remember I was in Miami when it happened. I was posting from the balcony of my apartment overlooking the beach. And I was having an argument with Adamdude.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
Then what's the priority?
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
I thought you were making a different point. I was more thinking about the tenancy to compare, like when someone says such and such is bad because it didn't do what the other similar movie that I like did. That's something that I resist. The piece should be judged by what it is not what it isn't. Especially if the "isn't" was never part of the intention.Malloy wrote:i don't know how we could come to understand a piece without some broader context in which we can place it. that is, how do you know a painting is a painting, if you've never seen one. our preferences and ideas -- our ability to make descriptive statements or normative judgements -- are always being shaped in part by what we've seen before, on some kind of standard.epilogue wrote:This is something that I initially wanted to push back on. Not insofar as I disagree with anyone doing it, but just that it didn't resonate with my experience. This isn't something I do. But the more I think about it, the more I wonder if that's true.and then what is the relation of the work in question to others in its tradition?
Now I'm left wondering, not whether or not I do it, but whether or not I should. I think maybe it depends on exactly what the intent is, ironically.
I see the point you're actually making. But bringing this all back to subjectivity I'm not sure the above point totally jibes with what you said about subjectivity earlier that started this great discussion.
Maybe I don't fully understand what you mean.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
claims i'm making re: a work of artepilogue wrote:I thought you were making a different point. I was more thinking about the tenancy to compare, like when someone says such and such is bad because it didn't do what the other similar movie that I like did. That's something that I resist. The piece should be judged by what it is not what it isn't. Especially if the "isn't" was never part of the intention.Malloy wrote:i don't know how we could come to understand a piece without some broader context in which we can place it. that is, how do you know a painting is a painting, if you've never seen one. our preferences and ideas -- our ability to make descriptive statements or normative judgements -- are always being shaped in part by what we've seen before, on some kind of standard.epilogue wrote:This is something that I initially wanted to push back on. Not insofar as I disagree with anyone doing it, but just that it didn't resonate with my experience. This isn't something I do. But the more I think about it, the more I wonder if that's true.and then what is the relation of the work in question to others in its tradition?
Now I'm left wondering, not whether or not I do it, but whether or not I should. I think maybe it depends on exactly what the intent is, ironically.
I see the point you're actually making. But bringing this all back to subjectivity I'm not sure the above point totally jibes with what you said about subjectivity earlier that started this great discussion.
Maybe I don't fully understand what you mean.
1. works of art require intentionality
2. an art work's meaning is synonymous with the intention of the artist.
3. works of art are indifferent to their viewers, their meaning is not contingent on the subjective position of those viewers
4. works of art are legible as art because they exist, to greater or lesser degrees, within a set of agreed upon rules. those rules are the historical conventions of a particular art form. those rules & conventions are always being contested & fucked with.
here is an example of the comparison between works of art i'm advocating for: it makes sense to think about Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang as one piece of the detective genre in film. a critic can arrive at certain judgments based on the formal elements of Kiss Kiss and their interrelation, as well as how those formal elements respond to other films in the detective genre, as well as any films in any other traditions that Kiss Kiss invokes.
a side note: when you make a serious work of art, embedded in the work is a kind of self-defense for it's existence. one way to marshal that self-defense is to counterpose the work with all previous works in whatever tradition it occupies. from that vantage, comparison is impossible to avoid.
Last edited by Malloy on Fri October 01, 2021 10:02 pm, edited 5 times in total.
Jorge wrote:I remember I was in Miami when it happened. I was posting from the balcony of my apartment overlooking the beach. And I was having an argument with Adamdude.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
my favorite micahel fried quote is something along the lines of, when you hang two paintings next to each other in a gallery, one kills the other.
Jorge wrote:I remember I was in Miami when it happened. I was posting from the balcony of my apartment overlooking the beach. And I was having an argument with Adamdude.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
Strength and cunning
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
aestheticsepilogue wrote:Then what's the priority?
Jorge wrote:I remember I was in Miami when it happened. I was posting from the balcony of my apartment overlooking the beach. And I was having an argument with Adamdude.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
Ah. Here we profoundly stay disagreeMalloy wrote:aestheticsepilogue wrote:Then what's the priority?
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
I need to think about all of this but I think I disagree. But again I need to time with it.Malloy wrote:claims i'm making re: a work of artepilogue wrote:I thought you were making a different point. I was more thinking about the tenancy to compare, like when someone says such and such is bad because it didn't do what the other similar movie that I like did. That's something that I resist. The piece should be judged by what it is not what it isn't. Especially if the "isn't" was never part of the intention.Malloy wrote:i don't know how we could come to understand a piece without some broader context in which we can place it. that is, how do you know a painting is a painting, if you've never seen one. our preferences and ideas -- our ability to make descriptive statements or normative judgements -- are always being shaped in part by what we've seen before, on some kind of standard.epilogue wrote:This is something that I initially wanted to push back on. Not insofar as I disagree with anyone doing it, but just that it didn't resonate with my experience. This isn't something I do. But the more I think about it, the more I wonder if that's true.and then what is the relation of the work in question to others in its tradition?
Now I'm left wondering, not whether or not I do it, but whether or not I should. I think maybe it depends on exactly what the intent is, ironically.
I see the point you're actually making. But bringing this all back to subjectivity I'm not sure the above point totally jibes with what you said about subjectivity earlier that started this great discussion.
Maybe I don't fully understand what you mean.
1. works of art require intentionality
2. an art work's meaning is synonymous with the intention of the artist.
3. works of art are indifferent to their viewers, their meaning is not contingent on the subjective position of those viewers
4. works of are are legible as art because they exist, to greater or lesser degrees, within a set of agreed upon rules. those rules are the historical conventions of a particular art form. those rules & conventions are always being contested & fucked with.
here is an example of the comparison between works of art i'm advocating for: it makes sense to think about Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang as one piece of the detective genre in film. a critic can arrive at certain judgments based on the formal elements of Kiss Kiss and their interrelation, as well as how those formal elements respond to other films in the detective genre, as well as any films in any other traditions that Kiss Kiss invokes.
a side note: when you make a serious work of art, embedded in the work is a kind of self-defense for it's existence. one way to marshal that self-defense is to counterpose the work with all previous works in whatever tradition it occupies. from that vantage, comparison is impossible to avoid.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
no need to agree. i just wanted to clarify my points and resolve any possible contradictions in my previous postsepilogue wrote:I need to think about all of this but I think I disagree. But again I need to time with it.Malloy wrote:claims i'm making re: a work of artepilogue wrote:I thought you were making a different point. I was more thinking about the tenancy to compare, like when someone says such and such is bad because it didn't do what the other similar movie that I like did. That's something that I resist. The piece should be judged by what it is not what it isn't. Especially if the "isn't" was never part of the intention.Malloy wrote:i don't know how we could come to understand a piece without some broader context in which we can place it. that is, how do you know a painting is a painting, if you've never seen one. our preferences and ideas -- our ability to make descriptive statements or normative judgements -- are always being shaped in part by what we've seen before, on some kind of standard.epilogue wrote:This is something that I initially wanted to push back on. Not insofar as I disagree with anyone doing it, but just that it didn't resonate with my experience. This isn't something I do. But the more I think about it, the more I wonder if that's true.and then what is the relation of the work in question to others in its tradition?
Now I'm left wondering, not whether or not I do it, but whether or not I should. I think maybe it depends on exactly what the intent is, ironically.
I see the point you're actually making. But bringing this all back to subjectivity I'm not sure the above point totally jibes with what you said about subjectivity earlier that started this great discussion.
Maybe I don't fully understand what you mean.
1. works of art require intentionality
2. an art work's meaning is synonymous with the intention of the artist.
3. works of art are indifferent to their viewers, their meaning is not contingent on the subjective position of those viewers
4. works of are are legible as art because they exist, to greater or lesser degrees, within a set of agreed upon rules. those rules are the historical conventions of a particular art form. those rules & conventions are always being contested & fucked with.
here is an example of the comparison between works of art i'm advocating for: it makes sense to think about Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang as one piece of the detective genre in film. a critic can arrive at certain judgments based on the formal elements of Kiss Kiss and their interrelation, as well as how those formal elements respond to other films in the detective genre, as well as any films in any other traditions that Kiss Kiss invokes.
a side note: when you make a serious work of art, embedded in the work is a kind of self-defense for it's existence. one way to marshal that self-defense is to counterpose the work with all previous works in whatever tradition it occupies. from that vantage, comparison is impossible to avoid.
Jorge wrote:I remember I was in Miami when it happened. I was posting from the balcony of my apartment overlooking the beach. And I was having an argument with Adamdude.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
1. YesMalloy wrote:claims i'm making re: a work of artepilogue wrote:I thought you were making a different point. I was more thinking about the tenancy to compare, like when someone says such and such is bad because it didn't do what the other similar movie that I like did. That's something that I resist. The piece should be judged by what it is not what it isn't. Especially if the "isn't" was never part of the intention.Malloy wrote:i don't know how we could come to understand a piece without some broader context in which we can place it. that is, how do you know a painting is a painting, if you've never seen one. our preferences and ideas -- our ability to make descriptive statements or normative judgements -- are always being shaped in part by what we've seen before, on some kind of standard.epilogue wrote:This is something that I initially wanted to push back on. Not insofar as I disagree with anyone doing it, but just that it didn't resonate with my experience. This isn't something I do. But the more I think about it, the more I wonder if that's true.and then what is the relation of the work in question to others in its tradition?
Now I'm left wondering, not whether or not I do it, but whether or not I should. I think maybe it depends on exactly what the intent is, ironically.
I see the point you're actually making. But bringing this all back to subjectivity I'm not sure the above point totally jibes with what you said about subjectivity earlier that started this great discussion.
Maybe I don't fully understand what you mean.
1. works of art require intentionality
2. an art work's meaning is synonymous with the intention of the artist.
3. works of art are indifferent to their viewers, their meaning is not contingent on the subjective position of those viewers
4. works of art are legible as art because they exist, to greater or lesser degrees, within a set of agreed upon rules. those rules are the historical conventions of a particular art form. those rules & conventions are always being contested & fucked with.
here is an example of the comparison between works of art i'm advocating for: it makes sense to think about Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang as one piece of the detective genre in film. a critic can arrive at certain judgments based on the formal elements of Kiss Kiss and their interrelation, as well as how those formal elements respond to other films in the detective genre, as well as any films in any other traditions that Kiss Kiss invokes.
a side note: when you make a serious work of art, embedded in the work is a kind of self-defense for it's existence. one way to marshal that self-defense is to counterpose the work with all previous works in whatever tradition it occupies. from that vantage, comparison is impossible to avoid.
2. No
3. Yes and No
4. Yes
VinylGuy wrote:its really tiresome to see these ¨good guys¨ talking about any political stuff in tv while also being kinda funny and hip and cool....its just...please enough of this shit.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
I didn't read the rest of this thread but I did read that Nicholas Brown book. Anyway. Movie looks dope. Also Boogie Nights is an absolutely essential movie and a stunning rendering of the decline of American empire.
VinylGuy wrote:its really tiresome to see these ¨good guys¨ talking about any political stuff in tv while also being kinda funny and hip and cool....its just...please enough of this shit.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
yeah, this is all brown, michaels and fried, or, as i sometimes think of it, the nonsite argumentMickey wrote:I didn't read the rest of this thread but I did read that Nicholas Brown book. Anyway. Movie looks dope. Also Boogie Nights is an absolutely essential movie and a stunning rendering of the decline of American empire.
Jorge wrote:I remember I was in Miami when it happened. I was posting from the balcony of my apartment overlooking the beach. And I was having an argument with Adamdude.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
Essential *because* it's a stunning rendering of...Mickey wrote:I didn't read the rest of this thread but I did read that Nicholas Brown book. Anyway. Movie looks dope. Also Boogie Nights is an absolutely essential movie and a stunning rendering of the decline of American empire.
Or are those separate points?
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
Where the fuck have you been, Mickey?
Clouuuuds Rolll byyy...BANG BANG BANG BANG
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
Mickey is back!
This is going to get good now.
This is going to get good now.
BONE FUCKIN´ TOMAHAWK.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
fall term started?E.H. Ruddock wrote:Where the fuck have you been, Mickey?
Jorge wrote:I remember I was in Miami when it happened. I was posting from the balcony of my apartment overlooking the beach. And I was having an argument with Adamdude.
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Re: Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26, 2021)
I've transcended such febrile notions as "term"Malloy wrote:fall term started?E.H. Ruddock wrote:Where the fuck have you been, Mickey?
VinylGuy wrote:its really tiresome to see these ¨good guys¨ talking about any political stuff in tv while also being kinda funny and hip and cool....its just...please enough of this shit.