The document discusses the social and cultural factors that contribute to how art is valued and an artist's prestige within the art world. It examines how the interconnected system of money, prestige, ideas, and fashion shape which artists are deemed successful or forgotten over time. In particular, it analyzes how the example of Grandma Moses, who began painting later in life, demonstrates how an artist can gain recognition outside of the traditional art institutions and critics if their work attracts popular interest.
2. agenda 8.30.16
• can great art be made by anyone? why do some
artists become recognized as great talents, while
others languish?
• next time: what is folk art? how is a painting
designated as "folk art" different from a regular
painting?
3. art: question of media
• traditional fine arts: drawing, painting, sculpture,
architecture
• performing arts: music, dance, theater
4. what makes art valuable?
• are the most famous artists the best ones?
• are the ones whose art sells for the most money the best
artists?
• if an artist is unknown in the wider society, does that mean
he or she isn’t very good?
• how do we determine value in art? is there a neutral,
value-free way of comparing artists?
5. Leonardo DA VINCI
Portrait of Lisa Gherardini, wife of
Francesco del Giocondo, known as the
Mona Lisa (the Joconde in French)
c. 1503–06
oil on panel
30.3 x 20.8 inches
Acquired by François I in 1518
6. why is the Mona Lisa
so famous?
• because it is the best painting ever made?
• [qualities of object]
• because Leonardo is a genius?
• [qualities of the maker]
• are there other factors that might contribute to
the painting's reputation?
7. one answer: location, location,
location
• It is located in the Louvre, one of the most well-known art
museums in the world. [i.e., it’s benefited from a central art
world location since 1804]
• where critics who praise some artists and ignore others have
been able to see it
• where art historians have written it into history
• where artists have been influenced by it
• where art lovers and visitors and tourists have come to see
it and photograph it, and buy coffee mugs and totebags with
this image on it
8. “Leonardo undertook to execute, for Francesco del Giocondo, the portrait
of Mona Lisa, his wife, and after he had lingered over it for four years, he
left it unfinished; and the work is today in the possession of King Francis of
France, at Fontainebleau.
Giorgio Vasari ‘The Lives of the Most Excellent
Painters, Sculptors, and Architects’ 1550
9. “Anyone wishing to see the degree to which art could imitate nature could
readily perceive this from the head; since therein are counterfeited all
those minutenesses that with subtlety are able to be painted: seeing that
the eyes had that lustre and moistness which are always seen in the living
creature, and around them were the lashes and all those rosy and pearly
tints that demand the greatest delicacy of execution.
Giorgio Vasari ‘The Lives of the Most Excellent
Painters, Sculptors, and Architects’ 1550
10. “The eyebrows, through his having shown the manner in which the hairs
spring from the flesh, here more close and here more scanty, and curve
according to the pores of the flesh, could not be more natural. The nose,
with its beautiful nostrils, rosy and tender, appeared to be alive. The mouth
with its opening , and with its ends united by the red of the lips to the flesh-
tints of the face, seemed, in truth, to be not colours but flesh. In the pit of
the throat, if one gazed upon it intently, could be seen the beating of the
pulse: and indeed it may be said that it was painted in such a manner as to
make every brave artificer, be he who he may, tremble and lose courage.
Giorgio Vasari ‘The Lives of the Most Excellent
Painters, Sculptors, and Architects’ 1550
11. “He employed also this device: Mona Lisa being very beautiful, while he
was painting her portrait, he retained those who played or sang, and
continually jested, who would make her to remain merry, in order to take
away that melancholy which painters are often wont to give to their
portraits. And in this work of Leonardo there was a smile so pleasing , that
it was a thing more divine than human to behold, and it was held to be
something marvelous, in that it was not other than alive.”
Giorgio Vasari ‘The Lives of the Most Excellent
Painters, Sculptors, and Architects’ 1550
12. Mona Lisa: art historians
follow Vasari's lead and give the Mona Lisa a central place in
art history
later art historians follow the lead of earlier ones, and so on,
to the present day.
13. Mona Lisa: artists
• artists of his day were somewhat influenced by Leonardo,
but not many of his works could be seen in Italy
• however, later artists in France looked to the Mona Lisa as
an icon of traditional art history
30. Frank Gallo (1933—
• born 1933 Toledo, OH
• trained as an artist with
early classes at the
Toledo Museum of Art,
Iowa State and
Cranbrook Academy.
• brief period of fame for
lifesize epoxy sculptures
of women during the
1960s
• then returned to
teaching art
32. “The failure of art theory and criticism to talk about prestige is
an oversight with consequences, because the artworld and
art history cannot be understood without understanding how
prestige works, how it is generated and conferred, how it
privileges and excludes, and how it pervades the culture and
induces complicity. Without prestige as part of the analysis,
the important relational, social aspect of art is obscured; the
subtleties of social positioning in art are concealed. Prestige
opens the way for particular ways of understanding art’s
audience. This ranges from articulating social complicity in
elitism and creating value, but also in analyzing how
estimations of value are contested and resisted.”
(Van Laar and Diepeveen, 55)
33. defining prestige
“Prestige, which we define as a system of hierarchies of
agreed-upon social value, is a twofold thing: it is a quality
that people confer on others, but it is also a system
inextricably bound up with that conferral, a system that gives
the rationale for those value judgments."
(Van Laar and Diepeveen, 5)
34. In examining the workings of prestige, this book also deals
with the process of valuation, best and most sharply
understood through the loss of status. It demonstrates how
prestige works, as it disappears, as it eludes one’s grasp and
one is left behind….This dispatch is larger than the
reputations of individual artists: modes of artmaking take a
back seat, subject matters become banal, and forms of
aesthetic experience lose their luster.”
(Van Laar and Diepeveen, 5)
36. conclusion
• In any society, some objects are called ‘art,’
others are not. These designations are a
matter of social tradition and convention.
Such labels can change over time as a
society’s values and preferences change.
37. What is visual culture?
• It includes everything that art excludes:
• All the objects that are left out from consideration in the
traditional fine arts (painting, sculpture, architecture)
• things made not for elite but ordinary audiences
• things made not primarily for aetrhetic contemplation but
because they have a use
38. The Art World: a system
AN INTERLINKED SYSTEM OF:
•MONEY
•PRESTIGE
•IDEAS
•FASHION
Let’s explore these one at a time.
39. The Art World: money
AN INTERLINKED SYSTEM OF:
•MONEY
• Buyers and Sellers
•private collectors
•institutional collectors
• Galleries
• Auction Houses (resale market)
40. The Art World: prestige
AN INTERLINKED SYSTEM OF:
•MONEY
•PRESTIGE
•What artists receive shows in
large museums?
•What artists receive shows in
galleries?
•What artists are represented by
major gallerists?
•What artists are interesting to
curators?
•What artists are interesting to
critics?
•What artists are interesting to art
historians and other intellectuals?
41. The Art World: ideas
AN INTERLINKED SYSTEM OF:
•MONEY
•PRESTIGE
•IDEAS
•what artists are written about in
mass-circulation newspapers and
magazines?
• what artists are written about
by art critics in more specialized
publications?
• what artists are written about
by scholars in highly specialized
publications?
42. The Art World: fashion
AN INTERLINKED SYSTEM OF:
•MONEY
•PRESTIGE
•IDEAS
•FASHION
“who’s up/down, who’s in/out”
“who’s pricey, or in demand?”
“who’s the latest, coolest thing?”
43. Flashy mix of money, style and
smarts
Brad Pitt with
Ambra Medda,
Design Director,
Design/Miami,
2008
44. Art can serve to create a fashionable
environment for other forms of display
Art Basel
Miami Beach,
(“Miami Basel”)
2008
45. The Art World: example
Pictured at a 2008 event in Moscow: Larry Gagosian, Dasha Zukhova, Takashi Murakami
46. The Art World: example
Tobias Meyer, auctioneer at prestigious auction house Sotheby’s
47. The art world is not all
glamorous types clad in black!
Viewing a recent
acquisition of Dali
prints
at the Oglethorpe
University Art
Museum, Atlanta, GA,
Summer 2010
48. OK, so who else?
Anyone who has an interest, whether casual or devoted, in
following the culture of contemporary art as it changes over time
•Art students
•Students in general
•People in general who are interested
in art or want to be culturally aware
Creator: Moses, Grandma, 1860-1961
Title: Quilting Bee
Date: 1950
Measurements: 20 x 24 in
Creator: Moses, Grandma (Anna Mary Robertson Moses), 1860 - 1961
Culture: American
Title: In Days of Thrift
Work Type: Painting
Date: 11-May-43
Material: oil and tempera on paperboard
Measurements: panel: 18 x 24 in.; 45.72 x 60.96 cm
Description: signed at lower left: MOSES, inscribed at lower right: in days of Thrift
Repository: Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton, MA
Repository: Gift of Elinor Fosdick Downs, class of 1933, in memory of Elizabeth Miner Fosdick, class of 1918
Accession Number: SC 2004:33
Collection: Smith College Museum of Art
Collection: http://www.smith.edu/artmuseum/
Rights: Contact info: Louise A. Laplante, Collections Manager/Registrar, Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton, MA 01063; Tel No.: 413-585-2765; Fax: 413-527-1595; llaplant@smith.edu
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