Saturday, May 29, 2010

Art is a Conversation, Not a Patent Office

Thank you to David Shields, author of a new book, "Reality Hunger: A New Manifesto." Headlined at the Huffington Post as "In Writing, Art and Music Everybody Steals." As I've always said about my own work, I stand on the shoulders of giants, and at the present moment, Helen Frankenthaler's work is very much in my art-head.

Quotes from the article:


"Art is a conversation between and among artists, not a patent office."


"Reality can't be copyrighted."


"William Gibson: Who owns the words? We all do, though not all of us know it yet."


"And once we all did: artists have plundered one another since the beginning of time; copyright has existed only during the last 60 years."


"In digital culture, it's especially important for us to be able to sample, remix, mash-up materials available to us at the click of a button, but the law has a stranglehold on literature, perhaps because both literature and the law are verbal."


"The mimetic function has been replaced by manipulation of the original."


Shields lists numerous examples of artists using the work and ideas of predecessors. The image is my drawing, "Mountains and Sea," in definite homage to Helen Frankenthaler's own piece of the same name, 44"x30", 2009, pencil, prismacolor and oil stick on 90# Stonehenge paper.

1 comment:

kathy halper said...

Love this. And I agree.