Friday, February 20, 2009

Video Response

The interesting thing about all of these movies is that they portray real artists as what people would describe as the stereotype of an artist; this almost makes it not a stereotype, because real artists were that way. In Lust for Life, Van Gogh was an example of the sad and suicidal artist. Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera were excellent examples of how students often eclipse their teachers in talent, and the quote by Rivera, "I will not compromise my vision," is repeated by artists all the time. Peggy Guggenheim was a wonderful example of the conceited patron with an inflated love for herself, and when Lee Krasner said she thought she knew every abstract artist in New York, but not Jackson Pollock, this illustrated the stereotype that artists know all the other artists. The movie about Basquiat showed the interviewer asking if Jean was angry as an artist, which shows that the interviewer was entertaining stereotypes about artists himself. The film Why Man Creates was satiric and comical, which supported the stereotype that artists have a different view on the world than others who are not artists.
In general, a lot of the stereotypes that were discussed before viewing these films were exhibited in the movies, which goes to show that maybe these stereotypes are not that far from the truth.

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