Not your everyday news, everyday!
Home Invites Blogs Events Groups Members News
Home > Blogs > Post Content

digital art, stigma and bliss (70 hits)

"But It ain't paint!!!" The whole art establishment sings in unison. It's like a tag line they tack onto the end of a sentence. Digital art is good for web pages, advertisement work, a poster here and there, but as you reach for the fine art label, "it ain't paint!" This is coupled with another phrase, "it's a print". The digital artist must contend with these tag lines or his art is doomed to the video monitor. It ain't paint, it's a print.

That's right and yeah we know. Digital art is it's own form, the computer allows you to do things that traditional media could rarely approach. You can do from stick figures to a photo realistic picture and also digital camera photos in a seamless stream. The chink is the printout.

Digital art stigma? A photograph can be fine art, it doesn't matter how the picture is produced. Oil paintings can be photographed or scanned into a computer to be reproduced by digital printing for sale. The print of an oil painting is regarded as fine art. To do art on a computer and directly print it out is called "a copy". I guess it is because the original is really a undecipherable computer file that can only be viewed on the computer or as a printout. And who owns that file, who controls that file or the number of times that file is printed out. I think the rarity factor that keeps the worth of a work of art high is blown out the window with digital art. Then the file can be altered, edited or erased.

It ain't paint! It's more like a silk screen, or any other kind of "printing", flat, no texture. You can say it with your nose in the air, "it's flat, it has no texture!" Yes, that is the nature of the print, whether it's inkjet or offset, lithograph, serigraph, or etching. Is it hand print vs machine print, I don't know!?

It's a print. If the picture can be printed any number of times and each print is exactly the same, where is the original? How shall we put a value on it, there is no distinguishing the master work from the 500th print. I will admit, a highly managed professional made print will look better than one made on your desktop printer. Could print quality be the distinguishing mark of value?

Digital art as fine art is a big nut to crack for many. Being a computer draftsman for years, I appreciate what can be done with computers and printers. Folks trained in traditional media might view work on the computer as shortcuts and parlor tricks, easy art. I will attest digital art requires a different skill set to push the media but still the rules of art apply, color, proportions, composition, etc. Time will tell how computer art is regarded. For me, I can digitally paint all day and not make a mess. I have used pen and ink for drafting and painted with acrylics, so I know a little traditional media work. So for me the artist, digital art is the way to go, for the art dealer and the art buying public, there is a way to go.

I had a vision of walking into a building, there are monitors of all sizes on the walls arranged in pleasant settings. Is this a TV store? no, wait, an art gallery, wow!!
Posted By: Arnold Johnson
Friday, December 18th 2009 at 9:56AM
You can also click here to view all posts by this author...

Report obscenity | post comment
Share |
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
i initially foresaw my digital art being displayed on flatscreens and monitors (like the digital art frames sold everywhere, only larger) - but those proved to be too expensive... until im able to obtain more grant money i've settled upon printing my work on canvas and fine art papers... canvas prints are one-and-done and will not be reprinted by me at that size in that form (smaller paper prints, maybe) - these serve as my 'originals'. i'll then destroy my digital files so it cant be reproduced as it was... this maintains the value i place on works that sell.

but yeah, monitors would be ideal...
Saturday, January 16th 2010 at 9:22PM
ron davis
I am hoping for two things to happen, one is ePaper in full color. But they are trying to make it fast refresh to compete with and replace LCDs. I think they are missing a big opportunity here. Slow refresh large size ePaper would be great for static art. The cost of this display is way cheaper than LCDs. This could lead to the second thing, the brick and mortar digital arts gallery because the digital picture frame can then be made any size, low power and low cost.

Printing today by fine artist is under exploited, it is an off the hook technology.
Sunday, January 17th 2010 at 9:11AM
Arnold Johnson
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k6bkmPjVF-k...
Sunday, January 17th 2010 at 1:18PM
ron davis
Yeah ron, that is so cool, I drool every time I see it.
Sunday, January 17th 2010 at 4:10PM
Arnold Johnson
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
More From This Author
The circle of art life
my digital art explorations
Forward This Blog Entry!
Blogs Home

(Advertise Here)