contemporaryart

215 items found

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donotdestroy:

“I don’t think it’s necessary to be original. It’s necessary to be honest.”

Martin Creed: What’s the point of it? is the first major retrospective of Creed’s ingenious and often highly provocative work. Since the beginning of his career, when he made small objects that could be placed anywhere, Creed has made work that questions the very nature of art and challenges taboos. His work takes on a multitude of forms—from sculpture, paintings, neons, films and installations, to music and performance—appearing both in the art gallery and in broader public circulation. At once rigorous and humorous, his art continually surprises, disrupts and overturns our expectations. It reflects on the unease we face in making choices, the comfort we find in repetition, the desire to control, and the inevitable losses of control that shape existence.

Martin Creed
Work No. 88
1995
A sheet of A4 paper crumpled into a ball.

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donotdestroy:

The dopamine, the deceitful dopamine, gives them a false sense of value.

— Soroosh Shahrivar

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donotdestroy:

“The whole thing [about] art and money is ridiculous. The value of a painting at auction is not necessarily the value of the painting. It’s the value of two people bidding against each other because they really want the painting.”

799537135411757056

donotdestroy:

“อย่าถือว่าเราเป็นคนเก่ง ต้องศึกษาเล่าเรียนอีกมาก ฉันเองยังคงศึกษาหาความรู้ตลอดเวลา”

— อ.ศิลป์ พีระศรี

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“You don’t need a special place to meditate. You can transcend anywhere in the world. The unified field is here, and there, and everywhere.” — David Lynch
_
Gravitational force: a long-range attraction that influences all particles.

The Unified Field of Consciousness Series: Gravitational.
2023
Digital art
3000 x 4500 px
Software: Adobe Illustrator

Created by the human mind and handcrafted.

Only NFTs are available in our store. OBO (or best offer price).

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donotdestroy:

“They speak of poverty, yet their art finds its home among the wealthy.”

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donotdestroy:

Fine vs Decorative Art

If a painting is created mainly to match a luxurious interior rather than to express something deeply personal or challenge ideas, then it leans more toward decorative art, even if it’s technically a painting. It becomes part of the decor rather than a standalone statement.

That raises an interesting question—does the intent of the artist or the way the artwork is used define whether it’s fine art or decorative art? If someone paints with raw emotion and meaning but it ends up as a luxury wall piece, does that change what it is?

Especially with modern abstract painting—it’s everywhere in high-end homes, hotels, and corporate spaces. A lot of it seems designed to be aesthetically pleasing but not too thought-provoking, so it blends into the environment rather than demanding attention. It feels like abstraction has been commercialized into a luxury good rather than a form of deep expression, at least in many cases.

Of course, that doesn’t mean all abstract art today is purely decorative. There are still artists pushing boundaries and using abstraction in meaningful ways. But a lot of what sells seems to be more about fitting a vibe than saying something.

By ChatGPT

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