Fed up with Recipe Art

Search art techniques on You Tube or fine art on Amazon and you will only receive results of kitch or old masters. Delve further and you will find a litany of “methods” to create “art”, usually by pouring paint over a surface and spreading or spilling. Most of these “techniques” involve alcohol inks or poured acrylics. These recipes for creating art are a fallacy and abomination that give false illusion to many that they are artists – when they are really only artisans at best, devoid of what is normally considered art. I hate to sound like an arrogant elitist when I write these criticisms but I am so fed up with recipe process art being received and accepted like regular art. NO! There is no real artistic criteria being applied to these processes! There is no conceptualizing or interpretation of nature going on with these methods! There is only, if that, a decorative aesthetic being used while the process is fulfilled. When anyone can follow a recipe and create what others can be deceived into thinking is art – that is a fallacy. Where there is no mental exercise of visual composition or artistic impression there is no art. When you are not depicting or arranging but are just an instrument operating as a slave to a process there is no art. You are worse than Artificial Intelligence – you are not using your mental acuity at all, you are merely a cog in the machine. Consider photography – a real artist can use it to capture a unique view of reality as art by exercising artistic criteria during its use. Most people just use cameras to capture a moment in time – by exploiting the mechanical process of freezing a segment of light. The same distinction can be applied to painting. Painting using a painting process is like using a camera without artistic choices being made. It is giving up your artistic will – it is failing to impose a vision. Even AI is more significant in that it is creating a vision – it just isn’t their individual vision but an illustration based on other’s art. Nevertheless, it is also a process. Let’s unite to take all the art produced by these processes and drown them in the seas! I refuse to be force fed more recipe art as genuine or worthy of praise!

On Process Art

Those who know me have often heard me rant against ‘process art’ and its proponents. I am going to reprise those complaints with the end of 2023. So many art ‘hobbyists’ discover and follow a particular process for producing pieces and are ultimately deceived into believing it is art and that they are subsequently legitimate artists. Maybe this is brought about by the commercial success of their product as pure decoration or by inept and misguided peers’ adulation. The use of alcohol inks or acrylic pouring come to mind as prime examples of process disguising as unique art. You can find infinite examples of either process and their mostly identical image results with a simple computer search. If you are producing process art using such methods let me clearly tell you that no, you are not producing art – you are just following a process that results in a pretty object. Art needs meditation and purpose in how marks are applied and images are transferred from the mind to the surface. It is never enough to just depend on a process. Of course we all utilize ‘processes’ in order to transfer and realize images but these processes must be secondary to concept and interpretation, and hopefully invisible. For instance, the use of loading brushes with paint might be considered a ‘process’. The distinction is that the process must be slave to the artist and not vice versa. Artists also use processes to print and realize their images in multiples such as woodcut, silk-screen, lithography, etching, etc. but these processes are never the end in itself and have rather always been seen as legitimate vehicles for realizing personal visions – especially in multiples. The clearest modern example is photography – a technological process (machine) that permits individual personal expression but is dangerously close to being abused as a simple process. To further complicate matters we now have Artificial Intelligence (AI) art that is total process but has exponential expression built on communal or specific images from real artists. The distinction of personal vision from technological process has never been harder to distinguish as with AI and it embodies the same philosophical questions that photography once posed and dominated as the preferred machine process for generating images. Sure we can coax computers toward a personal vision, much like cameras, but where does it stop being a repetitive process and begin being the artist? I don’t think anyone can really tell and so we have widespread opposition to AI images as legitimate art. The best advise if you want to be an artist is to avoid technological tools and concentrate on the basics – handmade personal images using rudimentary tools. Mistakes derived from traditional media never seemed so comforting as when considering an alternative to pure process art.