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218 points pseudolus | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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_petronius ◴[] No.43568326[source]
Some art-haters in the comments, so to defend this piece of contemporary art for a moment: one thing I love about it is a commitment to the long future of art, creativity, and civilization. What does it take to keep an instrument playing for six hundred years? To commit to that idea -- like the century-long projects of cathedral building in the middle ages, or the idea of planting trees you won't live to see mature -- is (to me) the awesome thing about the Halberstadt performance. All rendered in a medium (church organ) that has existed for an even longer time.

It's a pretty hopeful, optimistic view of the future in a time of high uncertainty, but also represents a positive argument: it's worth doing these things because they are interesting, weird, and fun, and because they represent a continuity with past and future people we will never meet.

Plus, you can already buy a ticket to the finale, so your distant descendants can go see it :)

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seydor ◴[] No.43573148[source]
Cage died in 1992 , this is not contemporary art
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1. thih9 ◴[] No.43573228[source]
> Contemporary art is a term used to describe the art of today, generally referring to art produced from the 1970s onwards.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contemporary_art