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At $142.4 Million, Triptych Is the Most Expensive Artwork Ever Sold at an Auction

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I'm sure 99% of people can't tell the value of different types of art, it just seams very random on what's expensive and what's cheap.
 

Slayer-33

Liverpool-2
This is getting depressing...lol

I'm sure 99% of people can't tell the value of different types of art, it just seams very random on what's expensive and what's cheap.

Might as well do some random ass shit, get some hipster ass clothing and hope you hit the jackpot
 

Loxley

Member
As someone who spent 5.5 years in art school and took numerous art history classes, I never have any answers for why shit like this sells for so much. Most of the time it's because the painter is both famous and dead, so they're not producing any new stuff anymore which means the price of their old shit goes way up. Sort of like when a video game like Xenoblade goes out of print, suddenly every copy out there triples in price - rarely does it matter if the game is any good. It's rare and therefore in-demand.

I saw student work sold at our annual student sale for hundreds, sometimes thousands of dollars and it would be the most mundane crap sculptures and paintings I've ever seen.
 

sgjackson

Member
If I was a billionaire I'd totally buy a fucking giant balloon dog statue, because the idea of people trying to sound sophisticated while talking about a giant balloon dog statue is fucking hilarious.
 
It's depressing the number of people intimating Bacon's work is just some contemporary art con job in this thread. This isn't "my kid could have done that!" art, regardless of whether you personally enjoy his aesthetic. Anyone who thinks they could fart out a Bacon-esque painting is sorely deluded.


This on the other hand, angers up my blood. All empty bullshit concepts and verbal fluff, and he doesn't even make the fucking things himself. Look at his studio, a bunch of other craftsmen sitting around fabricating objects for him, almost no hand of the "artist" involved whatsoever. What a presumptuous turd.
 

Concept17

Member
dxAy3F1l.jpg


$86.8 million dollars. I think someone tried explaining why this is so amazing in another thread but I can't remember the exact post.

It started with a P and ended with a retentious.
 

caesar

Banned
Not saying it is worth that, but Francis Bacon was an amazing artist.

The-Versatile-Gent-Francis-Bacon-Exhibition-Art-Gallery-NSW-1954-figure-meat.jpg


innocent.jpg


He was also known for his triptychs.

Three_Studies_for_a_Crucifixion_Francis_Bacon_1962.jpg


And head series.

headi.jpg


Obviously, they're much much larger irl.
 

Reversed

Member
^ You know, that reminds me this artist's portfolio. Careful, it would take your sleep because yes, it looks rather scary.

On topic: I dig it. It's something I would love to have on a book cover. You can see how the artists love to play on a 3D plane.
 
Not saying it is worth that, but Francis Bacon was an amazing artist.

[IG]http://theversatilegent.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/The-Versatile-Gent-Francis-Bacon-Exhibition-Art-Gallery-NSW-1954-figure-meat.jpg[/IMG]

[IG]http://www.phaidon.com/resource/innocent.jpg[/IMG]

He was also known for his triptychs.

[IG]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/d9/Three_Studies_for_a_Crucifixion_Francis_Bacon_1962.jpg[/IMG]

And head series.

headi.jpg


Obviously, they're much much larger irl.

Wow.. these are amazing. The last one in particular.. that is brilliant.
 

teepo

Member
the francis bacon room at the hirshorn is one of my favorite spots in dc

it also helps that it's right next to the giacometti room
 
Fine art prices still amaze me. Though if you can spend $100mil on artwork you've pretty much got the very best of everything so why not go all out.
 

way more

Member
Yet, this is just as satisfying and enjoyable.

tk2007b-christmas-cottage.jpg


You all sound like those pretentious fucks who think tasting menus are better than mcnuggets.
 
You have to see them in person. It's huge and pretty cool.

Oh, the big swath of meaningless color is bigger. Okay, that clearly alleviates all of the issues a person might take with it.

Edit: Kinkade was a cornball hack, but if I have to spend a month quarantined in an art museum, I'd MUCH rather it have Kinkade paintings than Pollock or Rothko, since he at least did a thing.
 

Das Ace

Member
$86.8 million dollars. I think someone tried explaining why this is so amazing in another thread but I can't remember the exact post.

If you ever get the chance, go see a Rothko peice in person. I hated his stuff when I first saw it in highschool, but I say one of his peices in San Fran a couple of years ago...

Pictures like this really don't capture the depth of color at all. I hate to sound pretentious or something, but it's honestly true. Rothko experimented with color in a way that everyone in this thread parroting 'I'm going to be an artist!' wouldn't be able to get even close too.

That painting is six feet-ish by eight feet-ish. It's huge. Much larger than you are when you stand in front of it. It's pretty intense.

I'm not saying it's worth 87 million dollars or anything, but you probably should trash it based on what others have assigned a monetary value to.

Also, Rothko was a tragic artist. Cultural touchstone. If Hendrix's Stratocaster sold for a hundred million tomorrow, how many people would get upset?
 

3N16MA

Banned
If you ever get the chance, go see a Rothko peice in person. I hated his stuff when I first saw it in highschool, but I say one of his peices in San Fran a couple of years ago...

Pictures like this really don't capture the depth of color at all. I hate to sound pretentious or something, but it's honestly true. Rothko experimented with color.

That painting is six feet-ish by eight feet-ish. It's huge. Much larger than you are when you stand in front of it. It's pretty intense.

I'm not saying it's worth 87 million dollars or anything, but you probably should trash it based on what others have assigned a monetary value to.

Also, Rothko was a tragic artist. Cultural touchstone. If Hendrix's Stratocaster sold for a hundred million tomorrow, how many people would get upset?

I don't doubt that it's more impressive in person and understand that a small pic posted on a forum does not do the actual work justice.

However I doubt I'm going to do a 180 on it if I did see it in person.
 
Spoken like a true hermit.

I've seen such paintings in person. They're "cool" in the sense that colors filling your vision is a form of stimulation, much as a pencil or bag of salt might be. If they give you some kind of emotional buzz, hey, whatever. But there is NOTHING to them. It really is that simple, and the convolutions that people go through to argue otherwise are nothing short of amazing to me. Red on black is red on black, no matter how big it is, and "experimenting with color" is a pretty thin justification for an outright refusal to communicate anything of specificity or import - usually because, when such artists painted figuratively, they did a rather poor job.

Just watch Pollock work: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7bICqvmKL5s . There is, rather obviously, zero technique to what the guy is doing, no vision, and his justifications are ad hoc, at best. Perhaps there's a flick of the wrist, some tiny little thing that would show up if measured microscopically - I've seen such suggested before - but the reason such paintings are so oft-forged is that, at the level of perception we humans actually occupy, there is little to no tangible difference.
 
I don't doubt that it's more impressive in person and understand that a small pic posted on a forum does not do the actual work justice.

However I doubt I'm going to do a 180 on it if I did see it in person.

You probably wouldnt. However ive always thought that seeing an art piece in person vs a 2D image is like the difference between hearing a song on the radio and seeing a rock band playing it live in a stadium.

Yes the song is inherently the same, however the delivery of the audio/visual medium is really what will influence your decision.

Art is obviously very subjective and it is worth what someone is willing to pay for it. The rarity of the piece and the story behind the art and the artist often influences the price much more than subjective artistic merit.
 

Sats

Banned
Does anyone else who read the article sense a faint hint of homoeroticism between the painter, the subject, and the bidders?
 

Das Ace

Member
Just watch Pollock work: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7bICqvmKL5s . There is, rather obviously, zero technique to what the guy is doing, no vision, and his justifications are ad hoc, at best. Perhaps there's a flick of the wrist, some tiny little thing that would show up if measured microscopically - I've seen such suggested before - but the reason such paintings are so oft-forged is that, at the level of perception we humans actually occupy, there is little to no tangible difference.


This is my favourate Pollock peice. You don't get any feeling at all out of it?

I get a hell of a lot more out of it than that tacky cottage painting someone posted up the page.

Just like playing the guitar fast doesn't make you a great musician, painting realistic doesn't make you a great artist.
 
You sound like Karl Pilkington talking to Stephen Merchant when he compared art to "dust".

I don't know of the conversation.

I love art. What I don't love is people throwing paint on a canvas, throwing out alot of pseudointellectual BS to justify why it's "great", why an emotional response to a swath of colors (which seems almost certainly a physiological one) has some "deep meaning", and making bank on it.

If you like the paintings, great. I enjoyed seeing some of them in person, myself. There was one with some particular shade of blue that the artist had developed himself that was pretty neat. But liking something and there being real communicative value there are two different things. I'm perfectly willing to argue the latter on any particular piece, but the artist has to make a good faith effort to try to actually communicate something, in the first place.

Edit: When did I ever say it was about painting realistically vs. non-realistically?
 

dan2026

Member
This art just seems to be do something as random as possible and hope some rich dude will interpret $$$$$$ worth of meaning out of it.
 
This is my favourate Pollock peice. You don't get any feeling at all out of it?

I get a hell of a lot more out of it than that tacky cottage painting someone posted up the page.

Just like playing the guitar fast doesn't make you a great musician, painting realistic doesn't make you a great artist.

It's a bit prettier than most Rorschach tests, I suppose, but it doesn't really communicate anything more. Whether I feel something is irrelevant to whether or not the art actually communicates anything of cogency or depth, though.
 
The point is to get lost in a field of color. A textbook or .jpg completely loses it. If it does nothing for you fine. But you can still "get the concept" without really liking a piece. Art isn't meant to be experienced sans it's space, texture and scale.

Saying it communicates nothing is laughable.
 
Yet, this is just as satisfying and enjoyable.

tk2007b-christmas-cottage.jpg


You all sound like those pretentious fucks who think tasting menus are better than mcnuggets.

:lol. Must be a nuke going off inside, only way it could look that bright.

But yes, the art market is weird, and many artists agree that it's weird and don't like the influence it has in the art world.
 

MrHicks

Banned
This is my favourate Pollock peice. You don't get any feeling at all out of it?

I get a hell of a lot more out of it than that tacky cottage painting someone posted up the page.

Just like playing the guitar fast doesn't make you a great musician, painting realistic doesn't make you a great artist.

painting realistic might not make you a very original artist but the artist is no doubt SKILLED
those random fucking paintsplashes clusterfuck paintings is something a baby can do
 

Ashes

Banned
With such works, it is a case of how deep your pockets are, and can you keep up with the hype.
I wonder if they would sell it to me, if I stated that my intention was to burn it. And display its ashes in a jar with the following caption:

"Remains of world's most expensive painting. 100% accurate digital replica on wall behind".

If people want to enjoy the art they can.

Edit: hmm.. That'd make for a decent short story. Gonna put it on the back burner.
 
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