Does that idea of beauty as feminine come from the Burkean (or Kantian) distinction between the beautiful and the sublime? Is it still used nowadays? It's strange that the works of so many masculine artists can be "dismissed...as inherently feminine".
Yes! Beauty is almost a question of habit. Only some musics/paintings/poems are more difficult to see as beautiful than others, because they don't fit classical criteria. I didn't like Picasso or Matisse straight away, for instance, but now I find their works beautiful. Same for some of Schubert's pieces, funnily enough. I wonder whether I'll end up finding dodecaphonic music beautiful one day though - I know some people do.Perhaps... but then again it may also convey the inability of those who are "experts"... even artists within a single genre, to recognize the beauty in other artistic forms when these go beyond the accepted forms that beauty took in the past. I have pointed out to my studio-mates that their inability to appreciate the more jarring "beauty" of Gorecki, Ornette Coleman, Osvaldo Golijov... or any Modernist/Contemporary "classical" composer is certainly not unlike the response that many others have when responding to Modernist/Post-Modernist painting.
Thanks a lot, by the way, for the pictures and comments. Very interesting.
Hmm, I agree and disagree with you. Of course it's easier being impressed by and try to follow such models when you're just out of your teens (don't know why, though). But as an adult, while you can admit to yourself that you'll never live such a life (too many responsibilities), and that's probably part of growing up, I don't think it's wise to completely forsake them. There's nothing particularly "quaint" about decadent art, if you think of Huysmans or Mirbeau. Rather, it points to a certain ideal - of cleverness, of aesthetics, of beauty - and what a pity it is to abandon all ideals! I'm rather sick of having to leave them to adolescents!Charming sentiment, that to some degree fits my own, but I always needed specific-rendered role models, somewhat less lavish than Kafka's exuberance for Wilde. Decadent wit and art for art's sake was quaint when I was an impressionable underclassman.![]()




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Typically Duchampesque too.
, although she did lose in court against Faulkner's estate, while she was sick), is worthy on its on merits. I don't know. She does dollop out degradation nearly as well as any inner city drug dealer.
