Ben Lifson
New member
Mr Webster & "Ben's definition"
Dear Mr Webster
You have not been reading my definition of abstraction. I myself have no definition of abstraction and certainly no opinion as to what is or is not abstract.
What you have been reading when I wrote that when the means of making a picture (line, light, shape, color, etc>0 refer only to themselves and neither denote nor connote anything in the world we all share is abstract I am merely conveying to you the standard commonplace precise meaning of the word within the discourse of artists and of theorists, critics, historians, collectors and curators of art.
Please read Meyer Schapiro's two essays on abstract art in Volume 4, "Modern Art", of his 4 or 5 volume edition of his collected writings, published by George Braziller.
Schapiro is universally recognized as one of the greatest art historians and writers on art of the 20th Century. Some would say The Greatest.
Don't worry about his being too academic. He was highly intelligent. Therefore, his writing conveys his intelligence. It is intelligent writing. But it is also clear, plain and accessible. Not academic writing at all.
Thrilling writing, actually. His essay on Cezanne's still lifes, with its 5-page interlude on the nature of still life pictures temselves, always thrills and inspires me so much that I leave it unread, grab my camera and go out to see if I can't make a still life worthy of the name.
yrr
Dear Mr Webster
You have not been reading my definition of abstraction. I myself have no definition of abstraction and certainly no opinion as to what is or is not abstract.
What you have been reading when I wrote that when the means of making a picture (line, light, shape, color, etc>0 refer only to themselves and neither denote nor connote anything in the world we all share is abstract I am merely conveying to you the standard commonplace precise meaning of the word within the discourse of artists and of theorists, critics, historians, collectors and curators of art.
Please read Meyer Schapiro's two essays on abstract art in Volume 4, "Modern Art", of his 4 or 5 volume edition of his collected writings, published by George Braziller.
Schapiro is universally recognized as one of the greatest art historians and writers on art of the 20th Century. Some would say The Greatest.
Don't worry about his being too academic. He was highly intelligent. Therefore, his writing conveys his intelligence. It is intelligent writing. But it is also clear, plain and accessible. Not academic writing at all.
Thrilling writing, actually. His essay on Cezanne's still lifes, with its 5-page interlude on the nature of still life pictures temselves, always thrills and inspires me so much that I leave it unread, grab my camera and go out to see if I can't make a still life worthy of the name.
yrr