• Hegar@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    Most cultural institutions exist in imaginary space but have incredible power over people. The state, god, heirarchy, status, identity. I definitely think the unreal is way more present in our lives than people normally accept.

    • Dr_Satan@lemm.eeOP
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      11 months ago

      I’m in art.

      Almost invariably, you show them a piece, they ask “what is it?”, “what does it mean?”.

      (Sometimes they even want an explanatory essay pinned to the wall next to the frame)

      Because the meaning, the dream-manifestation, is more important to them than the actual experience.

      For most of us, dreams are realer than reality.

      • Hegar@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        the meaning, the dream-manifestation, is more important to them than the actual experience.

        I’m going to be thinking over that for a while.

        Back home I used to go to the annual exhibition of the top high school art students. The explanations were often long-winded, pretentious, not always super coherent. Fair enough I was too in high school. But there was one I loved. It was a very industrial looking metal sculpture of fish skeleton made of rusty engine parts, all teeth and gears. Maybe 3’x3’. The explanation was: “A fish. A big fish. A big scary fish with a motor!”