←back to thread

218 points pseudolus | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
_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 :)

replies(11): >>43568467 #>>43568535 #>>43568578 #>>43570159 #>>43572116 #>>43572380 #>>43573148 #>>43574325 #>>43574639 #>>43579149 #>>43591762 #
hbsbsbsndk ◴[] No.43568467[source]
It's not surprising that people who love AI and NFTs are willfully ignorant about what makes art meaningful. It's a sadly transactional view of the world.
replies(6): >>43570652 #>>43572311 #>>43573150 #>>43574210 #>>43574653 #>>43576686 #
mingus88 ◴[] No.43570652[source]
It’s obvious that many people in this industry believe themselves to be supremely intelligent and curious hacker types, yet they obviously never taken a humanities course.

They have a huge blind spot that they aren’t even aware of, or worse just devalue the entire history of human thought and creation that doesn’t involve hard science.

replies(4): >>43572788 #>>43574043 #>>43574822 #>>43575098 #
1. nottorp ◴[] No.43574043[source]
Ok but why would you need a "humanities course" to appreciate art?
replies(1): >>43575256 #
2. mingus88 ◴[] No.43575256[source]
You don’t. It’s a great way to get an introduction to a field outside of your typical realm of expertise though.

It’s one of those things that really lets you know how much you don’t know. Then when you comment about such things on the internet you might be open to learning more, as opposed to what many folk in this thread are doing.

replies(1): >>43579534 #
3. nottorp ◴[] No.43579534[source]
I don't know, I don't want to become an expert. I just enjoy my books and paintings and sculptures and architecture...

The problems appear when you start assigning a monetary value to everything you do.