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Ex. 51. Read the texts and give your opinion on this kind of art.

I.

Can some art be ‘rubbish’ and some rubbish be ‘art’?

Most of us throw it away but if you’re an artist maybe you don’t.

A few weeks ago I woke up to find that our town had acquired a new sculpture. Surprisingly, it wasn’t in the town’s art gallery. It was in the main street - on the pavement, to be precise.

No one knows what it is exactly. This is partly because no one can see it very well. The sculpture stands on yellow scaffolding above everyone’s heads and looks as if it might be four horses, made out of old tin cans and plastic bottles!

Everyone in the town’s talking about it but opinion is divided. Some people think it’s ‘interesting’, while others say it’s ‘an eyesore’. Most young people think it’s ‘fun’, although one or two think it must be a joke. Several people have even written to the local paper to complain that it’s an obstruction. But the question no one can answer is: is it art?

 

II.

Pop Art absurdists

On Tuesday, a large painting by Jasper Johns, the 57-year-old Pop Art absurdist, sold at Christie’s, New York, for £2.2 million. This was an auction record for the work of a living artist, according to my friend Geraldine Norman. I suppose it is the pressure of the great American foundations which keeps this particular pantomime on the road.They have spent so much money on the same sort of rubbish already that they have to go on buying it or their previous investment in ‘modern art’ will be seen to be worthless.

But then I read of an enterprising Austrian who has offered Mick Jagger a vast sum of money for his ashes, hoping to sell them eventually in hour-glasses for many hundreds of thousands of pounds each. A spokesman for Jagger was quoted as saying ‘It’s going to be a heavy thing for Mick to figure out and give an answer.’ Even if it is in death, what’s he going to value more - his body or his money?

Few of us, I imagine, would be prepared to pay 50p for the whole collection of Rolling Bones. But the fact that money is available for this sort of nonsense might make us revise Marx’s theory of Surplus Value. Technological capitalism produces so much more wealth than there are useful things to spend it on that we have to spend it on rubbish.

(The Sunday Telegraph)

Notes:

· Jasper Johns (born 1930, Allendale, South Carolina) U.S. painter. Best known for presenting images of common objects such as numbers, letters, flags, beer cans and light bulbs.

· Christie’s - International auctioneers specializing in works of art.

· Geraldine Norman - British newspaper correspondent specializing in the art market

· keeps this .... pantomime on the road - A sarcastic adaptation of the phrase keep the show on the road (= allow it to continue)

· Rolling Bones - a joke referring to Mick Jagger (born 1944), founder of the rock group the Rolling Stones, which first performed in 1962

· Marx’ theory of Surplus Value - ‘The part of the value of the product produced by labour that exceeds the wages paid, regarded, in Marxian economics, as the profit of the capitalist.’ (Random House Dictionary)



 

III.

A child could do that!

British people often complain about modern abstract painting by saying, ‘It doesn’t look very special to. A child of four could do that’. Well, in 1993 a child of four did do it.

One of the painting offered to the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts for its annual exhibition was a work called Rhythm of the trees. The Academy’s experts liked it and included it in the exhibition. Only later did they discover that its creator, Carly Johnson, was four years old (the title was her grandfather’s idea).

The news of this discovery was greatly enjoyed by the whole of Britain. Everybody loves it when experts are made to look like fools, especially when they are experts about something that most people don’t understand. It did not occur to many people to think that perhaps a child genius had been discovered. Somebody else must have liked Carly’s painting too - it sold for £295.

 


Date: 2016-04-22; view: 1241


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