Nobert
Practically Family
- Messages
- 832
- Location
- In the Maine Woods
"Print is dead."
All the talk of "print is dead" always puts me in mind of an argument by cartoonist (and magazine illustrator) Chris Ware, who got fed up during his art school days with the notion that "painting is dead." As he pointed out, "The only way that would be true is if nobody on earth was interested in making, looking at, or talking about paintings, which obviously isn't the case. It's not as if all the painters woke up one morning and found their canvasses face down on the floor." Economics (another human fabrication, in which we are all forced to believe) certainly is having a corrosive influence, but this is not an act of nature, like Dutch Elm disease. It's something we choose. It's not even a matter of, "Do not go quietly into that dark night," when in this case the dark night is a walk-in closet with the lights turned off.
All the talk of "print is dead" always puts me in mind of an argument by cartoonist (and magazine illustrator) Chris Ware, who got fed up during his art school days with the notion that "painting is dead." As he pointed out, "The only way that would be true is if nobody on earth was interested in making, looking at, or talking about paintings, which obviously isn't the case. It's not as if all the painters woke up one morning and found their canvasses face down on the floor." Economics (another human fabrication, in which we are all forced to believe) certainly is having a corrosive influence, but this is not an act of nature, like Dutch Elm disease. It's something we choose. It's not even a matter of, "Do not go quietly into that dark night," when in this case the dark night is a walk-in closet with the lights turned off.