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To: MEG33
Read "The Painted Word" by Tom Wolfe.
Suddenly you will completely understand WHY modern art is a bizarre joke on the world.

"From Bauhaus to Our House" does the same for architecture.
Unfortunatly while you can ignore modern art, you can't ignore modern architecture.......
3 posted on 05/10/2003 5:29:35 AM PDT by Kozak
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To: Kozak
These two books are the best books on modern art and architecture written in the 20th century.
5 posted on 05/10/2003 5:42:05 AM PDT by moneyrunner (I have not flattered its rank breath, nor bowed to its idolatries a patient knee.)
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To: Kozak
" you can't ignore modern architecture"

Ditto. There are some amazing modern buildings that are a complete work of art all to themselves.
6 posted on 05/10/2003 5:42:28 AM PDT by Rebelbase
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To: Kozak
Read "The Painted Word" by Tom Wolfe..

Thanks, Tom Wolfe is great at laying bare the truth, although he was wrong in 1975 in hoping that the hoax would be completely exposed by 2000.

click

Excerpt:

"Every art student will marvel over the fact that a whole generation of artists devoted their careers to getting the Word (and to internalizing it) and to the extraordinary task of divesting themselves of whatever there was in their imagination and technical ability that did not fit the Word. They will listen to art historians say, with the sort of smile now reserved for the study of Phrygian astrology: “That’s how it was then!”—as they describe how, on the one hand, the scientists of the mid-twentieth century proceeded by building upon the discoveries of their predecessors and thereby lit up the sky . . . while the artists proceeded by averting their eyes from whatever their predecessors, from da Vinci on, had discovered, shrinking from it, terrified, or disintegrating it with the universal solvent of the Word. The more industrious scholars will derive considerable pleasure from describing how the art-history professors and journalists of the period 1945-75, along with so many students, intellectuals, and art tourists of every sort, actually struggled to see the paintings directly, in the old pre-World War II way, like Plato’s cave dwellers watching the shadows, without knowing what had projected them, which was the Word.

What happy hours await them all! With what sniggers, laughter, and good-humored amazement they will look back upon the era of the Painted Word!"

7 posted on 05/10/2003 5:50:36 AM PDT by xJones
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