On 9/18/05, Shel Belinkoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yeah, I think it does.  It implies that you had some clear intention in the
> creation of the work, and that the result met your expectations.  Of
> course, sometimes there's the fortuitous accident, but overall, to me at
> least, knowing why you like your own work indicates an understanding of
> what you've done, and the ability to perhaps honestly critique it.
> 

But, what difference does it make to you, as a viewer, knowing what
the intention of an artist might have been when a work was created?

If I go to an art gallery, it matters not a whit what was going
through the artist's mind during the conception and creation of
his/her work.  There it is, up on a wall, and I look at it.  I like
it, or I don't.  I may "get into it", and stare for hours.  I may
wonder what the artist was "trying to say", but I get that from the
work, not from the artist.  What I "get" may be far different than
what (if anything) the artist was trying to say, but that doesn't
invalidate the work or the artist.

Again, not to beat a dead horse (but you keep bringing these things
up), I don't think that it's up to an artist to critique his/her own
work - that's for critics.  An artist creates art (or in my case, "a
photographer creates photographs").  If I could explain why I liked
some of my photos, I'd probably be a writer, not a photographer.  Or a
critic.

cheers,
frank
-- 
"Sharpness is a bourgeois concept."  -Henri Cartier-Bresson

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