The person who is born Rohingya in Myanmar would agree--merely being born is political. We're born into countries with borders and ethnicities with bounded definitions. So yeah, I'd agree that merely being born is political.
If you assume the absence of humans to look at, to react to, and to possibly censor the landscape, you'd be correct--then the landscape wouldn't be political. But without humans to look at, to react to, and to possibly censor it, the painted landscape also wouldn't be considered a work of art. What we judge as a work of art is socially defined, which makes it political.Dr. Shades wrote: ↑Thu Jun 12, 2025 6:27 amBut the landscape itself, assuming an absence of evidence of humans, isn't political.That I, personally, am allowed to paint and exhibit a landscape anyway that I want is due to the political climate where I live.
...
I'm wandering off into the weeds. I feel obligated to concede, right here, that when I argue that all art is political, I'm taking a stance that's not always popular or agreed upon. Many artists try to avoid painting anything that they deem to be political--as art to them is a refuge from the world of politics. Others think that to say 'all art is political' dilutes the meaning of politics--because if everything is political, then why do we even have the concept of 'the political.' They would say, "How is me creating a piece of glazed pottery an act of politics?" I certainly understand and sympathize with that argument, and used to hold it myself. However, I’ve increasing developed a slightly different point of view. Maybe it's our present climate. Then again, maybe it's just me.
...
I've too loud of a voice in this room. I'm going visit the drink table and go for a stroll.