Measuring Up – Is Greatness An Absolute?

Terry Teachout ponders Charles Murray’s attempts to statistically analyze “greatness.” “The question of whether or not it is possible to demonstrate objectively the existence of absolute standards of aesthetic quality will probably always remain open. That such absolute standards do exist, however, seems to me indisputable. No matter how aggressively postmodern thinkers may deny the significance of the consensus of judgment—or the overwhelming dominance of Western culture—the whole of human history and experience is arrayed against them. It cannot be coincidental that, as Clement Greenberg observed, ‘the people who try hardest and look hardest end up, over the ages, by agreeing with one another in the main’.”

The World’s Most-Desired Art (A Top 10 List)

What are the most-wanted pieces of art in private hands? ARTnews has made a list of the ten most-coveted artworks. “Yearning — the more discreet the better — makes the art world go ’round. Dealers and auction specialists at the top of their game know where the most wanted artworks are at any given moment and what price might wrest a coveted object from its owner. Museum curators keep track of the same information to court loans and gifts. Collectors, meanwhile, no matter how desired the works in their own collections, always have an eye on something else.”

Low-Fi, High-Tech: Is Chip Music The New Punk?

Technology has officially invaded pop music, and the results have been, well, bland. Endless digital remixes and computer-generated backing instrumentals have created an entire catalog of dull, generic, lifeless songs by artists who really ought to know better. But a new do-it-yourself movement known as “chip music,” vaguely remniescent of 1970s punk, has emerged from the shadow of the technology beast, employing high-tech but low-fidelity “instruments,” such as old Nintendo GameBoys, to create music which reeks of contempt for the mainstream music industry. “The essence of chip music is in reverse engineering an electronic interface – whether it’s a Game Boy or a computer’s sound chip – and subverting its original design.”