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welkin aka marc is a 29.24 year old boy, has been a member since February 8, 2006, has scored 681 submissions, giving an average score of 1.29, helping 13 designs get printed.
about Burnout
where did the dichotomy of artistic and cutesy come from? i think it's an artificial distinction. why can't something be cute and funny, and still be art? why can't art be cute and funny? sometimes cute can be its own artistic statement or a way of sensitively approaching a more serious concern. i don't think there are people who are just cutesy, or people who are just arty. at least, as far as visitors to a site like this go - where people are basically interested in wearing something that they haven't seen much of in the street.

things that aim to be purely cute can be crap. things that aim to be purely art can be just as crap. both can be nasty to look at.

i don't think this tshirt is totally devoid of meaning and i don't agree that the execution of an idea or even the idea itself has to be completely original to be successful artistically. it's nice to see ideas taken up, improved, refined, changed, added to. it's not necessarily plagiarism. it's a cultural process and it's how art moves from one place to another. it's enriching.

imho.

toddmatic
toddmatic on Nov 21 '06 at 12:51pm
I agree with your overall point, but I'd state one part more strongly. Taking an idea and adding your own twist , or using elements or attributes of one artistic piece as inspiration for your own work is not even close to plagiarism. Otherwise, Andy Warhol -- in creating art from cultural icons -- would never have become a cultural icon himself, but would have been drummed out of the art world for ripping off the Campbell's soup can design.
welkin
welkin on Nov 21 '06 at 6:54pm
cool man.! i agree. and it always seemed to me that appropriation is a core elemnt of postmodernism.



i was thinking about andy warhol too. have you ever read his book "a to b". it's v funny if u haven't read it. i can't remember exactly how, but in it he describes a process by which he would provide instructions to people on his design teams and appreciate it when they came up with something different from what he meant for them to do - because it meant that the idea had been changed and reexamined, and the new perspective often provided him further ideas on how to refine or add to the work. anyway, i like the idea that everyone can own an idea and do whatever they want with it. it's cooperative.
128 days later
federboy
federboy on Mar 30 '07 at 3:00pm
successful artistically?.



You are walking on thin ice there.
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My gallery photos

I haven't submitted any photos. I guess I don't want free money.