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6389838 No.6389838 [Reply] [Original]

What's the most "modern" art today?

>> No.6389841
File: 44 KB, 820x460, pepe (jumbled-up).png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6389841

memes

>> No.6389850

/lit/-Literature

>> No.6389865

>>6389841
A local radio station i listen to actually got a meme program recently.
I wonder when the first meme gallery or museum will open.
And hopefully not by the likes of 9gag and facebook

>> No.6389867
File: 7 KB, 820x460, rothko pepe.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6389867

>>6389865
Can't be long now

>> No.6389869

>>6389865
Memes are living breathing entities, they shouldn't be confined into museums, they should be allowed to roam free in their natural environment

>> No.6389878

Meta meming ruined 4chan

>> No.6389892

i'm forseeing a surge of interest in deviantart outsider art. many say that japan-fetishism is on the wane, but superflat in relation to the internet will probably happen (as in, people will start looking at pixiv more)

>> No.6389894

Art is no longer modern.

It is old fashioned, an idea that has had its time. Appreciated by old people, hated by even older people. We have grown tired of useless object revelling in their own prettiness. Art if it remains present is there to serve a purpose: a desktop wallpaper, a noise to drown out our noisy environments, a totem you wave at people to prove your taste. The extremes of art: the blank canvases, the found objects, have finished art, proved its end, now it is just a utility.

>> No.6389901
File: 127 KB, 304x400, green pepe-Mark-Rothko^^.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6389901

>>6389838

>> No.6389921
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6389921

>>6389894
yep

>> No.6389934

rare pepes

>>6389901
nice rare

>> No.6390000

>>6389894

nothing personnel.... kid.....

>> No.6390121
File: 87 KB, 810x958, curator of a fine memes museum.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6390121

>>6389865
Maybe I'll be able to get a job then.

>> No.6390687

>>6389901
Severe lack of technique.

>> No.6391504
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6391504

>>6389838

>> No.6391718

Vape.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=unN7QvSWSTo&index=5&list=WL

>> No.6391883
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6391883

Vaporgeist

>> No.6391920
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6391920

Serious answer in case you care:
There are many museums being built exclusively oriented to installations. The mixture of film (projections, of course, not real film) and audio with the architecture and some degree of interaction. That has been the big thing since the late 90's and it's only growing.
The upside is that you can pretty much just make a concept and have the gallery people build it for you, if you have enough connections you can include actors and stuff. Of course, it's a medium incredibly hard to get in and most people doing it are wealthy and friends with the owners, or have amassed a ridiculous amount of connections with some decent work here and there.
At a certain momento I was really hoping ARGs would be the next big thing. I have half a dozen projects prepared but no one is willing to give money to something that by definition shouldn't be advertized. Still, maybe one day.