Anybody like fine art ?

Zoot Allures

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To discuss classical music go to

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I saw $100 million painting at AGO and it blew me away


It was spectacular; beyond anything I expected (which was not much as I thought it was just nonsense)



Rothko’s No. 1, White and Red

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I sat on the couch as I figured that must be the perfect spot to view it.

I stared at it for 10 minutes trying to figure it out and it started to move

No biggy as I suspect the subtle layering of the paint and the fuzzy images created the optical illusion

but then something amazing happened

The colours transformed into the most gorgeous colours possible; beauty beyond imagination.

Staring at such beauty was a transcendant experience; very healing as you are given understanding.
Art at its highest form possible

Close experience is a magic mushroom trip with spiritual music being played

So, I felt compelled to read what Rothko had to say and my experience was dead on what he was pursuing. He says his paintings have a sacred quality. They are not just a pretty painting.

He also said a very small percentage of people who view his paintings understand them.
I am one of the chosen few

Thank you Monsieur Rothko
 
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Ceiling Cat

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The Emperor's New Clothes is a classic fairy tale written by Hans Christian Andersen and first published in 1837. It tells the story of a vain emperor who is obsessed with his appearance and fine clothing.

Plot Summary:

A pair of swindlers arrive at the emperor's court, claiming to be master weavers. They promise to make the most magnificent suit of clothes ever seen, but with a magical property—only those who are intelligent and competent can see the fabric. In reality, the weavers make no clothes at all, but they pretend to be working, and the emperor and his courtiers, not wanting to appear foolish or unfit for their positions, all pretend they can see the nonexistent garments.


When the emperor finally "wears" his new clothes in a grand procession, the entire town admires him—except for one honest child, who exclaims, "But he isn’t wearing anything at all!" This truth spreads, but the emperor, though embarrassed, continues his parade as if nothing is wrong.

Moral of the Story:

The tale is a satire on vanity, pride, and the fear of standing out from the crowd. It highlights how people often go along with falsehoods to avoid looking foolish, even when the truth is obvious.



While I do appreciate some of the finer things in life, I do so out of personal taste rather than following fads or indulging in what the so-called "in crowd" deems fashionable. I am not an aficionado of modern art. Perhaps I could be persuaded if simply gazing at an objet d'art sent me into an opium-like trance, but so far, that has yet to happen.
As I’ve mentioned before, I do enjoy a good scotch, though most of the bottles I own are gifted to me by several middle-management career ladies (with benefits). They look after me as I look after them and their portfolios. When they vacation in Cuba, they bring back boxes of cigars for me. On one occasion, I was even gifted an $80 bottle of cherry liqueur, far too extravagant for me to have bought for myself.
Some luxury products, however, owe their popularity solely to celebrity endorsements. Cîroc vodka, for instance, only gained traction because of Diddy’s backing, and Cadillac Escalades were initially a flop until GM handed out 2,000 of them to rappers.

True appreciation for the finer things in life must be done in moderation; otherwise, even luxury becomes mundane. As for fine art, it must inspire a collective sense of wonder and evoke a profound excitement of the mind—otherwise, it is merely tri colored brush strokes on a canvas.

 
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xix

Time Zone Traveller
Jul 27, 2002
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La la land
I think the Gov't bought it for our CPP. They will in 5 years turn it around and get 10x's what they paid.

Like social media young kids don't want FB they want Instagram.
In 5 years from now the new hip social media is norom.com not instagram.
 
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Ponderling

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Jul 19, 2021
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Saw the big mostly white Rothko about 30 years ago in Ottawa while in Uni. Was impressed.

But it is not all white, and the texture and little different hues really sink in when you study it for a bit.

Looked cheesy in the NTSC tv of the day when news reporters covered it, but was a totally different experience in person.
 

Zoot Allures

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I am not an aficionado of modern art. Perhaps I could be persuaded if simply gazing at an objet d'art sent me into an opium-like trance, but so far, that has yet to happen.

This is the first art piece that has given me transcendence, but it was not like an opium trance.
I acknowleged the beauty of the colours that I could hold onto for a few minutres then I accepted
the experience with nonchalance and continued forth. But, apparently some viewers have cried.

To me, great art has always meant great painting skills done with with an aesthetic beauty along with
very creative storey telling through symbolism an astute viewer has to read, not transcendence .


True appreciation for the finer things in life must be done in moderation; otherwise, even luxury becomes mundane. As for fine art, it must inspire a collective sense of wonder and evoke a profound excitement of the mind—otherwise, it is merely tri colored brush strokes on a canvas.

Well stated
 

oral.com

Sapere Aude, Carpe Diem
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I think the Gov't bought it for our CPP. They will in 5 years turn it around and get 10x's what they paid.

Like social media young kids don't want FB they want Instagram.
In 5 years from now the new hip social media is norom.com not instagram.
 

oral.com

Sapere Aude, Carpe Diem
Jul 21, 2004
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93
Toronto
They will value it at 10x their cost and use it as collateral to print more money
 

Mr Deeds

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I think what blows me away is why anybody would pay $100 million dollars for a fucking painting
 
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Zoot Allures

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I think what blows me away is why anybody would pay $100 million dollars for a fucking painting
Not really as it is an investment for the rich to play with

AGO bought that painting far, far, far less than 100 million. They have made their monies back many times over by loaning it out. Great foresight on someones part.

I love it when the filthy rich invest in a painting they want to display in their yacht or mansion that turns out to be a fraud
as even art galleries are fooled then they have to pull the painting

Never, never buy any painting or any even sketch piece as an investment as 50% are fraud
 
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Zoot Allures

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too bad the exhibit closed on Friday

it was worth a visit
Even though the AGO owns the Rothko painting it is in high demand so AGO loans it out as a source of income

Oddly, another AGO jewel "The massacre of the innocents", by Rubens that has greater value if sold on the open market and is far more famous yet is hung more often than the Rothko

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I find it to be a highly skilled painting with lots of symbolisim but no transcendence like the Rothko

For example, why are the roman soldiers naked as they kill babies because the Magi told Herod one of them
was to be the King Jesus? IMHO Ruebens is saying it is the soldiers innocence that is massacred, not the babies as the babies die innocent. The use of light with the overcast sky allowing only the massacre to receive light is a sign from God , the dying womans hand reaching out to the viewer in the middle of the painting. The symbolism never ends

In July 2002, Rubens’s Massacre of the Innocents, which depicts the Biblical scene of a violent massacre in Bethlehem, fetched a price of £49.5 million ($76.5 million) at Sotheby’s and was donated to Toronto’s Art Gallery of Ontario.

The masscre is considered a biblical myth
 
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Zoot Allures

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I recognize what Jackson Pollock is doing but I cannot fully appreciate it.
I could not tell if it was a fake which seems to me the test of a masterpiece

A rothko was found to be fake after experts said it was real.
If I was asked to authenticate a Rothko I would refuse to authenticate
it if I did not experience transcendence. WTF?


Paul Jackson Pollock
was an American painter. A major figure in the abstract expressionist movement, Pollock was widely noticed for his "drip technique" of pouring or splashing liquid household paint onto a horizontal surface, enabling him to view and paint his canvases from all angles. It was called all-over painting and action painting, since he covered the entire canvas and used the force of his whole body to paint, often in a frenetic dancing style. This extreme form of abstraction divided critics: some praised the immediacy of the creation, while others derided the random effects.




"My painting does not come from the easel. I prefer to tack the unstretched canvas to the hard wall or the floor. I need the resistance of a hard surface. On the floor I am more at ease. I feel nearer, more part of the painting, since this way I can walk around it, work from the four sides and literally be in the painting.

I continue to get further away from the usual painter's tools such as easel, palette, brushes, etc. I prefer sticks, trowels, knives and dripping fluid paint or a heavy impasto with sand, broken glass or other foreign matter added.

When I am in my painting, I'm not aware of what I'm doing. It is only after a sort of "get acquainted" period that I see what I have been about. I have no fear of making changes, destroying the image, etc., because the painting has a life of its own. I try to let it come through. It is only when I lose contact with the painting that the result is a mess. Otherwise there is pure harmony, an easy give and take, and the painting comes out well."

Convergence is regarded as his best drip paintings

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When you're painting out of your unconscious, figures are bound to emerge. ”
-Jackson Pollock
 
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Zoot Allures

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Bidding on Maurizio Castellan's latest masterpiece started at $800,000.

View attachment 417143
You, Sir, HAVE A LOT TO LEARN about art!


The uneaten banana is an excellent art piece, there is no doubt,
but second rate compared to his true masterpieces !!!!



the eaten banana
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Unnamed as to name a great art piece is to destroy it. That is why some abstract painters give their paintings numbers instead of names 1742163593263.png

he is a very brave artist
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self portraits

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which one is the andy warhol and which one is Castellan? DO NOT LET THE ANDY WARHOL SIGNATURE FOOL YOU!
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Zoot Allures

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Albert Bierstadt is hands down my favorite painter. His landscapes are breathtaking. I can't upload this one because the file is too big so here's the link:

Finally, someone wants to seriously discuss art


Albert Bierstadt was best known for his lavish, sweeping landscapes of the American West.
He joined several journeys of the Westward Expansion to paint the scenes. He was not the first artist to record the sites,
but he was the foremost painter of the Rocky Mountain School.

He was not realism as he adds to the painting

He was a romantic painter sometimes called luminism

I love the way his style allows him to use his creativity, although it gave viewers
a misunderstsnding of the ugliness and cruelty the old west truly was.
Like Roy Rogers did LOL


Very talented and imaginative in his desire to capture nature's beauty

He uses his imagination here and invites you to do the same.
I see sweeping clouds creating a clockwise vortex into nature.
Beautiful

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Nothing needs to be said
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Oil on canvas . He probably made sketches then painted them in his sancutary
 
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Insidious Von

My head is my home
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Maurizio Castellan is a regula Caravaggio.

I brought Dr. Taylor Palmby up to speed. She didn't know this painting which kicked off her Rammstein's Dicke Titten video. Half to give her credit, she's doing great work.

cara head.jpg

Sarah beheading the Assyrian General Holofernes.
 
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