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DPChallenge Forums >> Photography Discussion >> People don't know art...
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Showing posts 26 - 30 of 30, (reverse)
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08/01/2011 04:24:08 PM · #26
Originally posted by amsterdamman:

When I was a ceramic potter there was a common practice when putting together a group sale tent that the pieces everyone thought were horrible, hideous and just awful
were priced 3x the other pieces, and usually many of them would sell.
Horrible creates a reaction, some people can not see subtle beauty, they need "Saw IX" to feel anything at all. So real bad art at least makes an impact,
and if it is expensive, well, it just has to be good! People tend to be less impressed with a vase you bought for five bucks vs one that you paid 100k for.


Indeed. There is that mindset. I had the same thing when i put a few photos into a group show at a gallery a year or so ago. I priced them as i thought fair-mounting and framing costs, gallery cut etc. They'll never sell at that, the gallery owner told me. You'll have have to bump that right up before people will buy them. Of course, as a gallery owner she had an eye on her cut, but still, i guessed she knew her job. Still never sold any though.
08/02/2011 09:04:03 AM · #27
Was just reading an opinion article on PCMag.com by John C Dvorak. He is, by his own admission, a curmudgeon, but his insights also have a lot of truth to them. Anyway, I just read the following bit in today's column and thought it was applicable to this discussion as well.

Originally posted by John C. Dvorak:


This is the difference between a company run by a visionary and a company run by functional businessmen with no vision or self-confidence. It explains why Microsoft cannot really innovate. It's like a blind painter. There is no way the company would know if it painted a masterpiece unless someone told them. And some things, like art, cannot be fully appreciated for decades after its creation. So, all the feedback is classic, conservative, and typical of the public. They praise what they know and understand, then they hate what they have never seen before.

08/02/2011 09:40:59 AM · #28
Seriously, though, people.

How many of us can really claim to know Art?



Message edited by author 2011-08-02 09:41:07.
08/02/2011 04:10:44 PM · #29
Originally posted by DomD:

//www.petapixel.com/2011/07/13/why-you-shouldnt-give-too-much-weight-to-anonymous-online-critics/

Some see photography as an art, and some see it as a craft. I think both points of view are valid, but people tend to not notice the difference.
08/02/2011 04:31:49 PM · #30
Originally posted by yanko:


Ask yourself this, would you rather pay money to go see a concert or spend that money to watch your friend sing the same songs with karaoke machine?


Depends on the friend. =P
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