Let me try again, though I realize in advance the futility of this.
I can only say that people need an art education to speak on topics like this. Sorry if that sounds elitist, but anyone would realize the absurdity of discussing mathematics without having studied any math.
Coomb's art is safe, easy, unadventurous, non-original. It replicates a formula that has been used countless times. It takes no chances with form, line or color, it offers us nothing new. It does not challenge us to think. It does not try to expand our aesthetic boundaries. Rather, it borrows on a tradition, refines it to a safe comfortable level, and no doubt this is intentional as I'm sure the artist makes a fine living because the general public has simple tastes precisely because it is artistically uneducated. This problem goes back a long time, and it's always amusing to recall that Van Gogh, before he became an artist, briefly worked as an art dealer and actually tried to dissuade people from buying some of the art on offer because he knew it was Reader's Digest style art.
If you are a writer, which I'm judging from your signature, I'm at a loss to understand what you find so bad about my analogy. Shall we accept that a Shakespeare sonnet is not better or more important than a want ad, then?
The problem, too, is this use of the word "beauty," which is loaded and off the point, and also the recurring idea that one's personal tastes are all that matter, whereas I have repeatedly made the point that personal tastes can be divorced from solid artistic judgment.





