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July 31, 2018

At MoMA

According to Sturgeon's law, ninety per cent of everything is crap. I recently visited MoMA in New York, and, guess what, like what most of the people having inadequate understanding of contemporary art would believe, I thought Sturgeon, an American science fiction writer, was right in his adage. You would browse a floor after another of the museum and fail to breed much familiarity between your traditionalistic taste for art and what a modern art museum, like MoMA and London’s Tate Modern, has to offer.
The Birth of the World by Joan Miro

Julie Mehretu, Laura Owens, Trevor Paglen, Martin Puryear, Lisa Yuskavage, Anicka Yi, Martin Assig, Dan Graham, and the list goes on. Who are they? I don’t know any of them. I never heard of them, I never read about them. A wide array of drawings, photographs, statues, paintings, and all sorts of weird objects that most of us cannot relate ourselves to... What’s the point? What’s the point of all these? What’s the point of modern art?          

What make a piece of art good are the standards we hold it to. The meaning of art is often static. Not art, but its style and concepts change their meaning through time. Contemporary art is essentially a break-off from classical ideas as it challenges the accepted concept of beauty. Trying to understand modern art from our traditionalist perspective is a mistake most of us make.

The Lovers by Rene Magritte
To understand art, one needs to recognise the raison d'etre of the piece, and then evaluate it by those standards. The same applies to contemporary art, which is bad, ugly, and meaningless only if we see it through the lens of a traditionalist. Modern art doesn’t connote representation for representation's sake, but rather stimulates us to look from different vantage points.  

Modern art is about the exploration of and setting new standards of ideas, visions, and creativity. It is the art of our time. Connecting with it often requires more of us.