At first, the question seems easy to answer, the elegant
paintings of Edgar Degas with his ballerina’s who float across the canvas, or
maybe the gargantuan statue of David that Michelangelo so meticulously
sculpted. Maybe even the bizarre sketches of Salvador DalĂ come to mind.
However, what really constitutes as art? I found myself wondering this very
question as I toured Museum Brandhorst, a modern art museum in Munich, Germany.
There were such strange forms of art and I couldn’t figure
out how some of the artists even came up with their ideas. “I could do that,” I thought to myself.
As I continued to walk around and read the descriptions, I tried to decipher
what inspired such strange creations and one particular work: Damien Hirst’s stainless
steel pill cabinet called “The Void” stuck out.
The display includes 6,000 pills made from resin and
plaster, which were then hand painted.
The pills are positioned precisely on rows of shelves. I couldn’t help
but stare in confusion. I thought to myself, “How on earth is this considered
art?” I read the description under the title “In this terrible moment we are
victims clinging helplessly to an environment that refuses to acknowledge the
soul.”
Damien Hirst's stainless pill cabinet "'The Void" |
Visual images often say what verbal language cannot. Instead
of words, artists use images to communicate their feelings and thoughts,
essentially the ineffable. The process of art allows the mind to soar to great
heights and create an image that expresses, rather than states, the artist’s
product, allowing the artist to describe, explain, or even challenge the world
through a different form of language: visual art.
Sometimes you see something and you see beauty, something that speaks to you. Otherwise you see silence.
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