They are mixed media, latex paint, joint compound, muddy foot prints etc. I have seen things in gallerys, and museums, that look worse.

Ruark wrote: Mon Jun 08, 2020 3:54 pm I've actually spent quite a bit of time around gallery artists and studied some art analysis and art history in college, but the valuation of a lot of abstract art still leaves me scratching my head.
I remember several decades ago, going through the Denver Museum of Art, a huge world class art museum with paintings and sculptures from every famous artist you ever heard of. Rembrandt, Monet, DaVinci, Dali, Picasso, Degas, Michelangelo, Van Gogh, Bierstadt, Remington, et. al.
When you first entered the museum, you stepped through some glass doors and on a wall right in front of you is a big 8-foot-square blank canvas. Absolutely blank: no frame, paint or finish on it of any kind. The name was on the little wall card. It was... are you ready.... "Blank Canvas." I kid you not.
I asked a museum staff if they'd hang up a blank canvas if I walked in with one. He said "oh, no, of course not" like it was a stupid question. "So why did you hang HIS up?" I asked. He said, "well, because he's a very famous artist." Actually, that probably was a stupid question.
I just chalked it up to another lesson in the School of Life.
Darwin?philip964 wrote: Mon Jun 08, 2020 11:10 pmRuark wrote: Mon Jun 08, 2020 3:54 pm I've actually spent quite a bit of time around gallery artists and studied some art analysis and art history in college, but the valuation of a lot of abstract art still leaves me scratching my head.
I remember several decades ago, going through the Denver Museum of Art, a huge world class art museum with paintings and sculptures from every famous artist you ever heard of. Rembrandt, Monet, DaVinci, Dali, Picasso, Degas, Michelangelo, Van Gogh, Bierstadt, Remington, et. al.
When you first entered the museum, you stepped through some glass doors and on a wall right in front of you is a big 8-foot-square blank canvas. Absolutely blank: no frame, paint or finish on it of any kind. The name was on the little wall card. It was... are you ready.... "Blank Canvas." I kid you not.
I asked a museum staff if they'd hang up a blank canvas if I walked in with one. He said "oh, no, of course not" like it was a stupid question. "So why did you hang HIS up?" I asked. He said, "well, because he's a very famous artist." Actually, that probably was a stupid question.
I just chalked it up to another lesson in the School of Life.
You mean something like this.
This is the Rothco Chapel in Houston. It is open to the public for free after they finish the $20 million dollar renovation.
The late Mark Rothko is a famous modern artist. Many of his paintings are very colorful. He painted these and then committed suicide. He wasn’t in a colorful mood at the time.
OK, I'll agree that the Rothko paintings are a trifle...monochromatic. But it's worth going to the chapel to see the Broken Obelisk statue outside, in a nice reflecting pool.This is the Rothco Chapel in Houston. It is open to the public for free after they finish the $20 million dollar renovation.
The late Mark Rothko is a famous modern artist. Many of his paintings are very colorful. He painted these and then committed suicide. He wasn’t in a colorful mood at the time.
If you look carefully at the Rothco chapel paintings they are not just black paint. There is careful texturing overlaid with interesting brush work by the artist. The color is not just black, but a complex series of dark color on top of dark color.03Lightningrocks wrote: Tue Jun 09, 2020 9:29 am I am starting to think we have a few liberal snowflakes hiding on this forum.![]()
Wow. Law enforcement in Germany using big scary guns? I'm shocked!philip964 wrote: Thu Feb 09, 2023 11:21 am Porsche with MP5 factory door pocket accessory?
Only available in Germany.
Geez, its an automatic.
And so is the car!philip964 wrote: Thu Feb 09, 2023 11:21 am Porsche with MP5 factory door pocket accessory?
Only available in Germany.
Geez, its an automatic.