« Bottled Water Wars | Main | Shockingly Doctrinal » 20 Jul 2008 03:40 pm The Religion Of ArtBy Patrick Appel I've was rifling through old articles on the art market, and stumbled across this 1994 TNR article (doc) by Michael Lewis. It explains art's belief structure as well as anything I've encountered. A choice paragraph:
While the art world is decidedly secular (sometimes fiercely so), there are obvious parallels between art and religion. Forgotten artists, made famous after death, are esteemed in a manner similar to religious martyrs. The artworks themselves are often revered in the same way holy objects are revered; ostensibly worthless art, such as Robert Rauschenberg's white paintings, are made valuable by their connection to art history in much the same way communion wafers are made meaningful by their connection to scripture. Art's belief structure is part of why Damien Hirst could sell a formaldehyded shark for a cool $12 million. While such a purchase might not make sense to ordinary person, to an art affectionado the price is affirmed by a belief in the nobility and near sacredness of art-making. (Image by Flickr user Kecko) TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200e553bee56b8834 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'The Religion Of Art' |

