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In some ways I'm opposed to art with instructions, but consider: Theo van Doesburg discusses the need to explain what de Stijl was about--people (in his opinion) didn't have the aesthetic tools to appreciate the abstract art that was bursting upon the scene in the teens/twenties of the previous century. Kandinsky's seminal works on art also serve as a sort of primer on such matters. Of course, now we are all accustomed to seeing/judging/appreciating abstract art, & we don't need a freakin' manual to appreciate a Kandinsky. But I would not be surprised to see an artistic movement arise in the coming days that would involve a different enough way of seeing that instructions would be helpful. & in the more general sense, aren't art/music appreciation classes basically instruction manuals for enjoying art? on 9/23/01 9:06 AM, luca at lucafeed@tin.it wrote: > Matthias wrote: >> There is a big gap though, between "anything is ok" and "this just came > out" > this is the real problem in improvisation; something which involves >taste, > sense of measure, and to understand the border between the things that >are > having sense for the people who is playing and the ones that can have > something to say to the ones who listen. > Sometimes (mostly in its early days) improvisation followed the idea of >the > "perfoming art", very near to the visual/concrete installations. > This was having a strong cultural sense in the sixties. > I just visited the Venice's Biennale of contemporary art and I have been > discussing with my girlfriend (who is a sculptist and more) about the > sense/use of conceptual arts in our days. > So many installations did really not come out; just the clear sense of >the > urgence of "making something new" and (sometimes) a few words that were > trying to give the installation a conceptual reason. > We agreed that the ones that were emotionally powerful were the ones that > didn't need anyone read the conceptual notes behind them. > The concept came out very clear from themself. > I love abstract art ( I think the way I play is abstract) and I agree >with > Kandisky when he said that the figurative art expresses the image of > something real on which your memory can apply your remembers and > past/dreamed emotions; he described abstraction in art saying that it >goes > deeper, forcing people to explore their inside with great humilty while > facing a representation that has no objective sense. > luca > > > >