
Artwork that shows the difference between rejecting the aesthetic criteria and just being bad is something that people will in turn enjoy to see becauseit will allow them to understand how the artist thinks and how he/she feels about the world and its culture. The pop art painting doesn’t seem like it was made simply to advertise something to its viewers rather than for the viewers to make their own perceptions of the artist’s interpretation of the world. The painting on the left has elements of the exisiting aesthic criteria such as line, color, value, texture and shape—despite its efforts to move away from these critera. The DADA artwork shows an attempt to change the way things are and do things differently. The colors are very bright in the artwork on the left which would attract its viewer’s attention very quickly and easily. This makes it a lot easier to advertise something to them. Whereas the one of the left has more subdued colors that accentuate the painting but also makes it very subtle. The artwork on the left is quite unified and everything seems to be in its place. Each part of the puppet enhances the puppet as a whole. The one on the right, on the other hand seems as if it had been put together haphazardly. Each of the smaller parts of the work seem unconnected and random to the painting as a whole. And so the painting on the left by the DADA artist shows the difference between purposely rejecting existing criteria and just being “bad” art.
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