Frame a photo of the tree.Was that a painting of a relative?NY galleries recently threw away their old frames.A guy took them from the trash cans, sold them, & made a small fortune!!Galleries realized their mistake, too late.
I think Wiley is telling us to stop thinking that beauty is only to be found in museums, we can see it every day outside our window (unless you live in some place like NYC)….
I remember thinking the same one time when I came out of the Royal Academy (an art gallery in London, England) and went into Green Park. I think this one’s been published before on this site. Is wiley on holiday – more power to him if he is – he’s the best cartoonist around IMHO, now that Gary Larson has retired? (I’m British in case you’re wondering, and no, I’m not happy about Brexit).
Nature is often more beautiful than Art, but Nature isn’t Art. Nature simply IS. The very word “Art” means that the thing under consideration was created, or at the very least a conscious choice was made to define or display it.Yosemite Valley simply IS, and it’s beautiful. Ansel Adams chose where to place the camera (with what kind of lens and what type of film), under what lighting conditions, to create artifacts capturing particular images. You may prefer the landscape to the photographs of it, but the latter are Art and the former is not.The man in this cartoon is placing his view of the tree within the particular confines of the frame he is carrying. He has chosen this tree and that particular angle to compose a certain image that he is enjoying, even if will exist only in his memory where only he can enjoy it.What I’m saying is, the guy with the frame isn’t “appreciating” Art (again: Nature, however beautiful, isn’t Art); he’s CREATING Art.
Bruno: upon seeing the redwoods, what Reagan actually said was: “When you’ve seen one, you’ve seen them all.”
Fritzoid: Yosemite was home for nearly a decade, worked in the darkroom with Ansel, a great privilege indeed! The thing is, he worked out exactly what would appear in the negative and print, before he opened the shutter.
As to art and nature; I’m watching hummingbirds out my window and the artwork, and engineering, of nature is superlative. Interesting that in the Declaration of Independence, it’s “laws of nature, and nature’s God”, not the one created in the minds of Man in his image, that the writer admired. Never feared the laws of nature nearly as much as the ones in Leviticus- that define Man’s inhumanity to Man.
Again, not denying the beauty (terrible or otherwise), just denying that it’s Art.If a tree falls in the forest and nobody is there to interpret it as a metaphor for hubris, impermanence, or human mortality, it isn’t Art. If someone draws the fallen tree, if only because it fell at a picturesque angle, that’s Art (regardless of the aestheitic quality of his drawing).
Dtroutma over 8 years ago
I’d agree.
Can't Sleep over 8 years ago
Maybe this time, I’ll think to print this out an frame it.
johnt204 over 8 years ago
A true nature lover. Much better than some old paint.
Wilde Bill over 8 years ago
You can try, but you can’t put a frame around nature.
38lowell over 8 years ago
Frame a photo of the tree.Was that a painting of a relative?NY galleries recently threw away their old frames.A guy took them from the trash cans, sold them, & made a small fortune!!Galleries realized their mistake, too late.
oldwolf1951 over 8 years ago
“And poems are made by fools like me,but only God can make a tree.”(Joyce Kilmer)
dadoctah over 8 years ago
I may not know much about art, but I know what they tell me I’m supposed to like.
IQTech61 over 8 years ago
Thank you! This isn’t art appreciation, it’s nature appreciation and a rejection of art.
brain Les over 8 years ago
I think Wiley is telling us to stop thinking that beauty is only to be found in museums, we can see it every day outside our window (unless you live in some place like NYC)….
Egrayjames over 8 years ago
I think it was time for his art appreciation to branch out into another direction.
Bilan over 8 years ago
That’s nice. But since you don’t need that painting Mona Lisa anymore, I’ll take it off your hands.
Lyons Group, Inc. over 8 years ago
That just goes to show you not all comic strips need a punchline.
Roger Norton over 8 years ago
I remember thinking the same one time when I came out of the Royal Academy (an art gallery in London, England) and went into Green Park. I think this one’s been published before on this site. Is wiley on holiday – more power to him if he is – he’s the best cartoonist around IMHO, now that Gary Larson has retired? (I’m British in case you’re wondering, and no, I’m not happy about Brexit).
masingermo over 8 years ago
It’s not either-or.
Say What? Premium Member over 8 years ago
I believe art is expressing our interpretations of reality, and pushing the boundaries of what we can see and do in this reality.
lopaka over 8 years ago
Normally artists make statements via their art. I think Wiley made an excellent statement.
mourdac Premium Member over 8 years ago
One of my favorites, Mr. Wiley. Outstanding.
zeexenon over 8 years ago
Hey Cliff, step back. More. More….
CeeJay over 8 years ago
I think that I shall never seeA Poem as lovely as a tree.
Joyce Kilmer
timbob2313 Premium Member over 8 years ago
Wiley,this is going to join my collection of your all time best strips
Fan o’ Lio. over 8 years ago
Beauty does not need to be framed.
fritzoid Premium Member over 8 years ago
Nature is often more beautiful than Art, but Nature isn’t Art. Nature simply IS. The very word “Art” means that the thing under consideration was created, or at the very least a conscious choice was made to define or display it.Yosemite Valley simply IS, and it’s beautiful. Ansel Adams chose where to place the camera (with what kind of lens and what type of film), under what lighting conditions, to create artifacts capturing particular images. You may prefer the landscape to the photographs of it, but the latter are Art and the former is not.The man in this cartoon is placing his view of the tree within the particular confines of the frame he is carrying. He has chosen this tree and that particular angle to compose a certain image that he is enjoying, even if will exist only in his memory where only he can enjoy it.What I’m saying is, the guy with the frame isn’t “appreciating” Art (again: Nature, however beautiful, isn’t Art); he’s CREATING Art.
Dtroutma over 8 years ago
Bruno: upon seeing the redwoods, what Reagan actually said was: “When you’ve seen one, you’ve seen them all.”
Fritzoid: Yosemite was home for nearly a decade, worked in the darkroom with Ansel, a great privilege indeed! The thing is, he worked out exactly what would appear in the negative and print, before he opened the shutter.
As to art and nature; I’m watching hummingbirds out my window and the artwork, and engineering, of nature is superlative. Interesting that in the Declaration of Independence, it’s “laws of nature, and nature’s God”, not the one created in the minds of Man in his image, that the writer admired. Never feared the laws of nature nearly as much as the ones in Leviticus- that define Man’s inhumanity to Man.
todyoung over 8 years ago
It takes a true Mainer to appreciate this.
Tonksquawk over 8 years ago
Works for me!!
Dr_Fogg over 8 years ago
No shirt offer on this one?
fritzoid Premium Member over 8 years ago
Again, not denying the beauty (terrible or otherwise), just denying that it’s Art.If a tree falls in the forest and nobody is there to interpret it as a metaphor for hubris, impermanence, or human mortality, it isn’t Art. If someone draws the fallen tree, if only because it fell at a picturesque angle, that’s Art (regardless of the aestheitic quality of his drawing).
hitman4cookies over 8 years ago
This is a rerun. A good one, but still a rerun.
gammaguy about 8 years ago
A Master work.