The artistic experience

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Well, quite obviously that's not the kind of propaganda I had in mind.

We were talking about Hitler
I'm not going to quote your many comments about propaganda>false>not art>not an artist. (paraphrased of course).

Propaganda is propaganda. It doesn't matter what the result is or who created it. Disagreeing with it or agreeing with it doesn't change what it is. You implied that the art must be "true" and if it's propaganda no one can connect with it (again, paraphrasing). I'm just saying that's the falsehood. You don't get to decide who qualifies as an artist based on their personal morality or their thoughts while creating it. You only get to judge the result. The art.
 
Discussion of politics in the abstract is fine. Discussion of historical figures such as Hitler is fine, provided it is relevant (it is here). Discussion of politics as a tool of human influence is also fine. It's a writing forum and it is difficult to discuss certain elements of writing without considering how it has been used to influence opinion (politics) since its inception, so it's lot like the subject of politics itself is completely off limits.

What is not fine is the discussion of politics to push or broadcast your own ideology, thoughts, and opinions. Or any politically adjacent subject that is likely to devolve into inflammatory discussion, which, unfortunately is just about everything on the Internet these days. Personally, I'd like to think this particular community could discuss such things politely and intelligently, but that is no longer the case with any cadre of humans, so it will continue to be off limits.

We used to have a debate room for things like this but canned that years ago because nobody was able to grasp the basic tenets of debate--namely the evidence over opinion part.

The question was regarding artistic experience. Louanne and some quotable artists believe it's a thing, but it doesn't appear as if anyone else is living la vida loca in that regard. Bring the discussion back to that, please.
 
You don't get to decide who qualifies as an artist based on their personal morality or their thoughts while creating it.

I don't think I did this. Here are a couple of my previous quotes -

Art may reflect dark themes, too.

empathy is the ability to share and understand the feelings of others.

there is no qualifier on the ability that the feelings must only be "good"


And nowhere in my "equation" do I mention anything about the "vice and virtue" of the writer

As far as writing is concerned, its art has something to do with this -

a restless mind + questions + contemplation + quest for understanding + a desire to share + a need for expression + honesty/truth + love of language + discipline


But I will add that I do have my opinions, and I am entitled to them
 
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Lively discussion! Let’s see if I can clarify some of my points.

True art must express something that is true to the artist.

False propaganda cannot be true art.

Normal Rockwell painted true scenes from American life. Those scenes were true to him.

His art is true, so propaganda can be true.

Propaganda may have dual purposes – to influence, or to manipulate.

Does true art influence? Yes

Does false propaganda manipulate? Yes

False propaganda is often designed for negative effects – like stoking fear and hate against a perceived enemy

Positive propaganda is often designed for honourable outcomes – in the case of Rockwell, boosting morale, unifying community and the country, and defining positive values
 
Propaganda may have dual purposes – to influence, or to manipulate.
What's the difference?



unifying community and the country
Against whom? The communist threat that the US would go to war with all over the globe?

and defining positive values
By depicting white people having picnics in an otherwise segregated America?

That's the beauty of propaganda. It's easily cloaked as "honourable outcomes." Hook. Line. Sinker.
 
What's the difference?

Manipulation is the negative form of influence. It's often self-serving and deceptive, used often for the manipulator's personal gain

Against whom?

Rockwell painted his "propaganda" pictures during WW2

By depicting white people having picnics in an otherwise segregated America?

Rockwell's move to Look magazine finally allowed him to reflect the growing racial tension in the US of the 1950s and 1960s

Three of his paintings -

Southern Justice
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New Kids in the Neighborhood
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The Problem We All Live With (A painting of Ruby Bridges that Obama had hung in the White House in 2011)
1770134689605.jpeg
 
What's the difference?




Against whom? The communist threat that the US would go to war with all over the globe?


By depicting white people having picnics in an otherwise segregated America?

That's the beauty of propaganda. It's easily cloaked as "honourable outcomes." Hook. Line. Sinker.
Yes. You said exactly what I was about to say.
 
Manipulation is the negative form of influence. It's often self-serving and deceptive, used often for the manipulator's personal gain

But you don't know any of that if you're just looking at a painting of a landscape, do you?


Rockwell's move to Look magazine finally allowed him to reflect the growing racial tension in the US of the 1950s and 1960s
So he redeemed himself? Or what? His freedom series has a very different vibe.
 
But you don't know any of that if you're just looking at a painting of a landscape, do you?

I don't know what you're talking about. I never said his landscape paintings were propaganda.

So he redeemed himself? Or what? His freedom series has a very different vibe.

I was replying to Homer
 
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