Mormonism and the arts

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_Daniel Peterson
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Re: Mormonism and the arts

Post by _Daniel Peterson »

Quasimodo wrote:I think that most of Dürer's paintings were secular.


http://www.google.com/search?q=Albrecht ... 97&bih=784

Quasimodo wrote:Despite Scratch, your taste in art seems pretty good, so far!

If I said that 2+2=4, Scratch would dispute it and would somehow manage to attribute a sinister motivation to me for having said it.
_Quasimodo
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Re: Mormonism and the arts

Post by _Quasimodo »




I went to your image page of Dürer's paintings. Still looks pretty secular to me. A few praying hands and a few religious images (no doubt to make a buck in that era). The rest are mostly portraits (and self portraits, a few bugs thrown in for balance). I'm really not trying to argue your point. How about some more recent artists that I really like.

Diego Rivera: http://www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&hl=en&source=hp&biw=1120&bih=578&q=diego+rivera&gbv=2&oq=diego+&aq=0&aqi=g10&aql=undefined&gs_sm=c&gs_upl=3056l5077l0l6l6l0l1l1l0l215l692l1.3.1l5

The brilliance of his simplicity. I tend to like neo-impressionists.

Going back a bit, Vincent Van Gogh: http://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C1GGGE_enUS356US409&q=Vincent+Van+Gogh&um=1&ie=UTF-8&tbm=isch&source=og&sa=N&hl=en&tab=wi&biw=1120&bih=578

He was a little crazy, but his canvases moved when you looked at them. Almost like the painting was alive. This is what I mean (my own view) when I talk about art. Not what you paint, but how you paint.
Last edited by Guest on Fri Jun 24, 2011 11:02 pm, edited 1 time in total.
This, or any other post that I have made or will make in the future, is strictly my own opinion and consequently of little or no value.

"Faith is believing something you know ain't true" Twain.
_Hoops
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Re: Mormonism and the arts

Post by _Hoops »

John Milton.
Albrecht Dürer.
And, in music, Johann Sebastian Bach.
Just three examples -- of the many that could be given -- but three remarkably great ones.
Don't sell Protestantism short.



You're right, of course.

However, I was coming from a more recent perspective where the divide in faith expression (of which art is a vital component) in recent years - say in the last 100 years - is more profound.
_Daniel Peterson
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Re: Mormonism and the arts

Post by _Daniel Peterson »

Quasimodo wrote:I went to your image page of Dürer's paintings. Still looks pretty secular to me. A few praying hands and a few religious images (no doubt to make a buck in that era).

I'm not sure that they're that easily dismissed. His images of the four horsemen of the Apocalypse, etc., are pretty powerful things. Every artist needed to sell his work, or to gain a patron, in order to survive. But that doesn't convince me that their motives were merely secular.


I've always liked Diego Rivera, from when I first visited Mexico City back when I was seventeen. I saw his murals at the University, etc.

His politics were repulsive, but his art is great.

(You do realize -- don't you? -- that, to the extent that you and I share tastes in art, you're discrediting yourself as saccharine, vanilla, conformist, unadventurous, middle-brow, and conventional?)

Quasimodo wrote:I tend to like neo-impressionists.

My wife and I are very fond of all forms of Impressionism. She spent time in Paris as a student, and . . . well, the Impressionists are a big deal in our house.

Quasimodo wrote:Going back a bit, Vincent Van Gogh: http://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C1GGGE_enUS356US409&q=Vincent+Van+Gogh&um=1&ie=UTF-8&tbm=isch&source=og&sa=N&hl=en&tab=wi&biw=1120&bih=578

He was a little crazy, but his canvases moved when you looked at them. Almost like the painting was alive. This is what I mean (my own view) when I talk about art. Not what you paint, but how you paint.

Another favorite.

I feel sorry for you. You've just forfeited any and all claim to being taken seriously as a connoisseur of art.

Hoops wrote:However, I was coming from a more recent perspective where the divide in faith expression (of which art is a vital component) in recent years - say in the last 100 years - is more profound.

I would tend to agree with that, sadly.
_Lucretia MacEvil
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Re: Mormonism and the arts

Post by _Lucretia MacEvil »

When I was an English major at BYU in the late 60's, one of my professors told us she was writing the "great American novel" and it's title was The Jawbone of the Ass. I found this in Amazon and think it is probably her book (unfortunately, I don't recall her name, only the title stuck with me over the years).

http://www.amazon.com/JAWBONE-ASS-Glena ... 951&sr=1-1

Another thing about my BYU education, I never heard of sexual symbology until after I graduated. Just saying. Make of it what you will.

One more thing: the required health class for freshman. The text was written by the same prof who taught my class. It included a one page chapter on sex. It was blacked out.
The person who is certain and who claims divine warrant for his certainty belongs now to the infancy of our species. Christopher Hitchens

Faith does not give you the answers, it just stops you asking the questions. Frater
_Quasimodo
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Re: Mormonism and the arts

Post by _Quasimodo »

Daniel Peterson wrote:
I've always liked Diego Rivera, from when I first visited Mexico City back when I was seventeen. I saw his murals at the University, etc.

His politics were repulsive, but his art is great.

(You do realize -- don't you? -- that, to the extent that you and I share tastes in art, you're discrediting yourself as saccharine, vanilla, conformist, unadventurous, middle-brow, and conventional?)

I feel sorry for you. You've just forfeited any and all claim to being taken seriously as a connoisseur of art.


You could have warned me in a PM that you were going to agree with me. That would have given me a chance to go back and edit my posts.

As it stands, I'm on record, on this board, with agreeing with the "evil" Dr. Peterson. Soon, they will be calling me an apologist (I've been called much worse in my time).

Thanks, so much, for your kind replies! We didn't really touch on the "Mormon" aspect of art. Maybe we still can.
This, or any other post that I have made or will make in the future, is strictly my own opinion and consequently of little or no value.

"Faith is believing something you know ain't true" Twain.
_MsJack
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Re: Mormonism and the arts

Post by _MsJack »

Doctor Scratch wrote:And let's face it: the thought of you playing Grand Theft Auto 3 could have scored you some serious hipster credibility. I'm a little disappointed to learn that this never happened. I mean, think about it: Dr. Peterson, navigating a tank through the streets of Liberty City? Now that is an image that even I could treasure.

All it would have meant was that Dan has good taste in video games, because GTA: III was awesome. I really don't think the GTA games that came after it were as good, though Vice City was admirable. Saints Row 2 beat them all.
"It seems to me that these women were the head (κεφάλαιον) of the church which was at Philippi." ~ John Chrysostom, Homilies on Philippians 13

My Blogs: Weighted Glory | Worlds Without End: A Mormon Studies Roundtable | Twitter
_Doctor Scratch
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Re: Mormonism and the arts

Post by _Doctor Scratch »

MsJack wrote:
Doctor Scratch wrote:And let's face it: the thought of you playing Grand Theft Auto 3 could have scored you some serious hipster credibility. I'm a little disappointed to learn that this never happened. I mean, think about it: Dr. Peterson, navigating a tank through the streets of Liberty City? Now that is an image that even I could treasure.

All it would have meant was that Dan has good taste in video games, because GTA: III was awesome. I really don't think the GTA games that came after it were as good, though Vice City was admirable. Saints Row 2 beat them all.


I guess he's too much of a stodgy, grimly humorless philistine to understand. What a pity!
"[I]f, while hoping that everybody else will be honest and so forth, I can personally prosper through unethical and immoral acts without being detected and without risk, why should I not?." --Daniel Peterson, 6/4/14
_Doctor CamNC4Me
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Re: Mormonism and the arts

Post by _Doctor CamNC4Me »

Daniel Peterson wrote:When I think of you, I'm glad I have a shredder.


Hello Dr. Peterson,

I sympathize with you. Mr. Simon also Internet stalked me, and posted that information to the Internet on his blog. He even posted a picture of my wife.

It is, indeed, very unsettling.

V/R
Dr. Cameron
In the face of madness, rationality has no power - Xiao Wang, US historiographer, 2287 AD.

Every record...falsified, every book rewritten...every statue...has been renamed or torn down, every date...altered...the process is continuing...minute by minute. History has stopped. Nothing exists except an endless present in which the Ideology is always right.
_zeezrom
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Re: Mormonism and the arts

Post by _zeezrom »

I'm a little nervous now about what people might be able to find out about my personal family life online. I believe a line was crossed on this thread.
Oh for shame, how the mortals put the blame on us gods, for they say evils come from us, but it is they, rather, who by their own recklessness win sorrow beyond what is given... Zeus (1178 BC)

The Holy Sacrament.
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