PLUCKY YOUNGSTER: oh no, it’s due tomorrow! what’ll i do…
KAZUMA KIRYU: mm? what’s wrong, kid?
PLUCKY YOUNGSTER: we’re learning about the ocean in class. i was supposed to write a report on the benthic zone, but… i fell behind.
KAZUMA KIRYU: (the benthic zone, huh? …lotta people interested in that, lately.)
PLUCKY YOUNGSTER: please, mister… could you help?
KAZUMA KIRYU: (not good for a bright young kid to fall behind in his studies… school’s the stepping stone for success in life.)
KAZUMA KIRYU: sure, kid. what do you need?
PLUCKY YOUNGSTER: you will? great! if you could just go down there and tell me what it’s like, that would be a great help!
KAZUMA KIRYU: ah.
KAZUMA KIRYU: (well, a promise is a promise.)

The beautiful Blu-ray covers for my all time favorite anime, The Tatami Galaxy. These were illustrated by Yusuke Nakamura, who is most notable for his cover designs for Asian Kung-Fu Generation.

frankly I think a lot more people would be open to postmodern art if we all stopped pretending you had to be very smart to understand it and start acknowledging that the starting point for deriving meaning from it is frequently ‘this is stupid bullshit’

To clarify- it’s not just ‘this is stupid’ and then you’re done, finding the meaning in something that seems meaningless can usually be found by starting with that base feeling, ‘This sucks.’ Okay- why does it suck, specifically?

‘This is just a vaccuum cleaner, it doesn’t belong in a museum’. Okay, follow that thread- why is that weird? Is it the elevation of normal commercial products to be put on a pedestal? Does that sentiment remind you of anything? How does that make you feel?

“This is just splatters, anyone could do this.” Anyone could, couldn’t they? Anyone can create things, anyone can make these movements and gestures. Dancing does the same thing, doesn’t it? How do the splatters imply the artist’s movements? What does it say about them?

“This person made a mobile out of twine, flower pots, and pictures of cats. How is this art?” What mediums do you define as ‘art’? Paint? Marble sculpture? Photos? Why are you so sure that this is what art is? Doesn’t this remind you of the kind of crafts a child would make, or maybe a first-time DIYer? Is that intentional? Does the construction or material evoke any other emotions?

This isn’t an end-all be-all, of course- among many other things, there’s postmodern art that’s just for a show of mastery, there’s art that’s commenting on a very certain time in history or about something within the art community you may not be privy to, and there’s art that’s simply about creating and the creative process. It’s hard to approach a full narrative with just a single sentiment. This can’t cover every single topic, obviously.

That being said, it’s just as important to note that in many cases, there’s no wrong answers in art or interpretation. If your takeaway is completely different from the artist, as long as you don’t try to insist that the artist has no real say over their work’s meaning, that’s totally fine. A large part of non-representational art is reliant on emotions, and emotions are informed by your experience as a human being. Your interpretation is just as right as anyone else’s. And you don’t even have to LIKE everything- I hate Jeff Koons and his stupid balloon dogs! Cremaster makes me incredibly uncomfortable and even if that’s the point it’s still uncomfortable enough that it makes me not like it! You can just not like certain art, it’s not all-or-nothing it’s good or it’s not.

TL;DR- if you have a hard time ‘getting’ art, try listening to your base reaction to what you’re looking at, and then ask yourself why it makes you feel that way, and why it’s constructed the way it is.

go to your local museum. i guarantee you have one. there are so many small museums in the us and i guarantee no matter what you will find one cool thing. i interned at a fucking vacuum museum and i still found things to be excited about while there. this is not a request but a command

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hoina-hysteria-deactivated20221

This is the funniest fucking thing imagine losing to your own car in a popularity poll

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hoina-hysteria

congrats to this post for officially being more popular than kobeni

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Reblogged

Although they are usually portrayed as arch-rivals in movies, Kong and Godzilla are actually very close friends in real life.

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