*deep breath*
Mr Kissyfur wrote:
DavPaz wrote:
Without artists, we wouldn't need computers.
We'd all be John Coffey, endlessly building a technological marvel, but never using it for anything other than benchmarks.
And my point, distilled to the minimum is 'Engineers are artists'
Some are, certainly. Brunel certainly was. Christopher Wren was. Sur Alan isn't.
Which leads on to my pointing out that in the same week that we awarded the video games person, we also awarded several engineers, biologists, and economists. There is room for all of these fields - engineering and design is our largest school, and the idea that drama or history or sociology somehow detract from it is absurd.
Doctor Glyndwr wrote:
Squirt wrote:
The lovely Mrs Squirt has English and Politics, and the skills she'd learnt on that course have been of great help to her in her career, probably more so than the Maths and Comp Sci degree that I did.
The skills I learnt on my PhD (analysis, scientific approach, pulling data out of noise, presenting complicated results, writing reports) have been far, far more useful to me in my career than the knowledge gained during both of my degrees put together. Even though they were computer science degrees and I'm a software engineer.
This is what people don't realise, particularly with research degrees. You may have written a thesis on the early poetry of Horst Bloerfogmaan, but that doesn't mean you studied lots of textbooks really hard - it means you developed a wide variety of skills to independently advance the knowledge of humankind in a specific area. It's original study, by definition, of something we just didn't know before, and even the obscure and artsy ones demand serious practical investigative and analytical skills.
Captain Caveman wrote:
DavPaz wrote:
I did reference Dadaism earlier in the thread and the hugely detrimental effect it had on art in the 20th century. But I have no intention of arguing with that smug twat with his broad strokes and hugely offensive style of conducting himself. He thinks he's a fucking prince, well he can have his castle. He's welcome to it.
Actually it's not a castle, but is Grade II Listed.
The whole 'modern art' discussion is a bit of red herring here, I think. Visual art is distinct from most other humanities and even other arts in that you generally get only one of every work - one mona lisa, one David, one piglet curry sprayed over a mannequin of a policeman in a green bra, etc. whereas books or films and music can be fully shared.
Plus a large part of the problem with modern art (generalising to an absurd degree, obv) is that it fetches such huge sums, and has so many arseholes talking such utter shit about any old rubbish, because it's spawned a self-perpetuating investment industry. These paintings and so on make vast sums of money because of dickhead advertisers who pour time and money into finding fashionable artists, buying their crap, then locking it up in a cupboard for 20 years and selling it when they're back in vogue.
So um. A lot of it isn't about artistic merit - it's about who's fashionable in the nobbo circles. And yes I am probably 6 pages late, but shush.
Anonymous X wrote:
Doctor Glyndwr wrote:
If maths and art are separate disciplines, I'd invite you to explain which one M C Escher was.
Hang on, the division between "maths" and "art" is merely a cultural construct, isn't it? One so heavily engrained into us that it is hard to question.
(Man, perhaps we wouldn't be having such a volcanic arts versus science discussion if we had the benefit of a more diverse education system like many of our other European cousins have. Having to chose almost exclusively between humanities/arts and the sciences at age 16 is narrows our learning possibilities far too early.)
I applied for History and Biology degrees on the same forms. Couldn't decide at all. I'd swing towards history now because it's basically easier to study independently, so I'm far less rusty (and thanks to the skills I've picked up at work, was able to work in a historical field for a bit, which obviously helped).
Excellently, the lecturer who interviewed me seemed impressed rather than dismissive. I'd imagine a lot of people would have decried it as Wrong and Bad to be equally interested in two unrelated fields.
Although I did once see "Biology with Dance" on a course list somewhere, so who knows.
superdupergill wrote:
I have realised that through skim reading this thread and seeing discussion about 'useless' degrees and modern art I have confused art created in the modern age with 'modern art'. Shush.
I'm going to post this bit of a poem as an example of beautiful art. It is by Edna St Vincent Millay. I find it particulary poignant given recent sad news and I also find it relates to other sad memories as well.
There are a hundred places where I fear to go,
-so with his memory they brim.
And entering with relief some quiet place
Where never fell his foot or shone his face
I say,
"There is no memory of him here!"
And so stand stricken, so remembering him.Oh, I love her when she's on form. I sent one of her couplets to a girlfriend years back.
Safe upon the solid rock the ugly houses stand
Come and see my shining palace built upon the stand!Then there's that bit she wrote in a letter, I forget which, but:
Where you used to be, there is a hole in the world, which I find myself constantly walking around in the daytime, and falling in at night. I miss you like hell. every time
Captain Caveman wrote:
Grim... wrote:
Captain Caveman wrote:
If you do that, the true scale of the absurdity of the situation surely becomes clear. In fact, it's obscene. Clearly, anyone who's prepared to pay the equivalent of 150+ fine country houses for something that looks like a reproduction of a very distastefully painted front door, according to a 10 year old, needs their head examining?
Not if they sell it for the equivalent of 190+ country houses.
Well yeah, but what I'm arguing is that there is, or should be at least some relative correlation between market value and 'actual, intrinsic merit'? I know that's very difficult with works of art, so, my approach is to compare with other stuff of the same market value.
Back in the dotcom boom, people were prepared to pay vast sums for tech shares, even when these clearly had little or no intrinsic value. Sure enough, when the bubble burst, these shares
did revert to being valueless, unlike stuff with actual, demonstrable material value, country houses for instance.
When the apparent 'value' of something is as abstract as 'what someone with money dropping out of their arse is prepared to pay, purely as an investment and with no material purpose', I would question this as a sole yardstick of measuring real value at all.
I dunno, could be on a sticky wicket here. Bottom line, I just find it ludicrous how anyone can say this is worth hundreds of millions of dollars - it's obviously shit, isn't it...?
It is, but I don't really see much difference between a pickled banana stapled to a stuffed wolf's cock being 'valued' at £30 million, and the Microsoft corporation being 'valued' at forty bajillion space dollars. Or a 4p cup of coffee being sold for £2.80, or CODBLOPS going for £50, or a reheated carbonara that I could have made better at home costing £6.
Zardoz wrote:
Sure, but he's a fucking Ninja Turtle isn't he.
8/10