• [email protected]
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    2410 months ago

    Velvet Buzzsaw covered this topic goofily but it did bring up an interesting point. Posthumously denying a painter’s desire for privacy is a nearly voyeuristic act of greed. I haven’t read into this enough to know whether Goya wanted privacy, but it still reminded me.

    • 🔍🦘🛎
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      710 months ago

      If you think this topic is interesting, I highly recommend the game The Beginner’s Guide. It’s a full exploration of this specific idea.

      • [email protected]
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        310 months ago

        The game is Wreden’s follow-up to the critically praised The Stanley Parable

        I can’t say I’m not intrigued by a full game created to even further express the nuanced relationship between artist and viewer.

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          10 months ago

          It’s pretty short, only ~3 hours, so you may consider waiting for a sale. But I still think about it 5+ years later, on the same level as Dear Esther, Braid, One Shot, or Undertale.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 months ago

      nearly voyeuristic act of greed

      Uh, no. Saturn is in the Museo del Prado. Society is immeasurably richer for it. Kafka wanted his stories burned when he died. Good thing his executor just ignored him.

      • @RegularGoose
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        10 months ago

        “My desire to pretend I’m a cultured intellectual for profit is more important than the privacy and explicit wishes of a dead person who trusted me.”

        You have no right to anyone else’s private thoughts and creations.

        • @[email protected]
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          510 months ago

          Art exists separate from the artist. If Goya wanted to destroy it, he could have anytime while he was alive. Obviously he liked it a lot.

          What, do you think his ghost is embarrassed that the world loves his secret paintings? This is some fake moralist privacy shit.

          • @RegularGoose
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            10 months ago

            What, do you think his ghost is embarrassed that the world loves his secret paintings?

            No, I’m just not an asshole who thinks I’m entitled to other people’s personal things.

            • @[email protected]
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              -510 months ago

              I guess you’ve never heard that “good artists borrow and great artists steal”? I think some no talent bum, who never made great art, said that.

              • 🐱TheCat
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                210 months ago

                I keep saying this in court when dealing with copyright claims but it seems like it only works for rich people to steal others ideas and profit off them

      • @[email protected]
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        810 months ago

        Max Brod claimed he told Kaka he wasn’t going to burn his works and that he needed to appoint a different executor if he wanted that. We don’t have anything more than Brod’s word, but if it’s true, that makes it hard to feel bad about him getting Kafka published.

        • @[email protected]
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          10 months ago

          I would also add that Kafka did very much publish stuff when he was alive; he wasn’t a tortured genius writing in secret, he was like, writing short stories for the newspaper. He published a novella of his weird random ramblings on things. He was probably kinda known as the bug guy before he died.

          Also like, some of his longer posthumously published books are very obviously not finished. I’d wager Kafka’s statement is less a tortured artist thing and more of a “this book straight up doesn’t have an ending why would you publish it” or “please don’t my editor is probably going to try and finish it” thing. Should you publish an author’s clearly unfinished work is a completely different question with different arguments

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        310 months ago

        This was the plot of the game The Beginner’s Guide (made by the same dev as The Stanley Parable).

        Not sure how to do spolier text on Lemmy, but the basic premise is that some artists make creations for themselves and never intend to share them. Is the world entitled to your personal diary? Notes made on a notepad app? Internet searches? What constitutes art?

      • [email protected]
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        310 months ago

        An astoundingly high proportion of museum pieces were collected by the museum as donations from people of wealth who sought to reduce their tax burdens, which makes me more suspicious rather than less. But I don’t know enough about Kafka’s executor or Goya’s intent to say whether anyone could be called greedy in either case, just a vaguely relevant thought from a middling movie.

        • @[email protected]
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          410 months ago

          This painting was never sold separate from the house. They guy who took it off the wall donated it. So there’s no valuation to donate.