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@ulysses-s-wishes

She/her pretty much always, interested in books and libraries, early twenties, call me grant if you must but it isn't my name, not quite sure what I'm doing :)

my issue with the argument that "disliking ai art is inherently reactionary" is that it acts like pro-ai art people are somehow less reactionary on their views on art, when like the majority of defense's of ai art as like a higher form art are indistinguishable from the arguments people use to defend the art of like. hitler

like the logic is that hitler was actually a great artist, entirely hinges on the belief that "objectively good art" is just art that looks detailed if you've never drawn before, which like why ai artists who want to prove their actual artists will just make a pretty looking building or lady, cause it's all about aesthetics i guess

like i'm not saying your a nazi if you like ai art, i just think it's silly when people act like anti-ai artist's are just hysterical luddites, and that ai artists are the ONLY people who actually care about art, when 99 percent of ai artists on twitter only care about art that's "beautiful" on an extremely superficial level.

Jacob Geller dissected the intersection of Fascism and modern art in 2020, sadly before the AI art boom, and goes into better detail than I can about how abstraction is a threat to fascist ideals. I also want to draw attention to possibly my favorite commentary on modernism.

Comic by Ad Reinhardt, an abstract painter, who's made multiple comics about art and perception.

AI slop only bring repetition and lack of original idea to the table. it's an advanced form of stolen art collage. It seeks only to trace and multiply without provoking. It's the anthesis of art.

The way I explained it to my young cousin was like this:

Back before cameras, paintings were just recording reality, and that's why painters tried to be as realistic as they could, and only paint things that could exist in the world around them--objects, and people, and animals. Sometimes they did paint things from their imagination, but only to illustrate stories, like stories from their religion.

Then, cameras came along, and painters were free to paint things cameras couldn't see--things like the artist's feelings, or ideas, or thoughts, or lots of things. Some artists tried to see if they could paint from every angle at once, and we call that Cubism. Some artists tried to paint very quickly, as quickly as they could, so they could capture one single moment of the daylight, or their impression of a moment, with all the feelings light gives, and that's why we call them Impressionists. Some artists were more interested in the process of painting, like Mr Rothko; or in finding the most intense versions of a colour, like Mr Klein. Some were more interested in the spaces between things, like Mr Mondrian. But art, after cameras, could suddenly SAY something, say something by itself! And art, as it turns out, has a lot to say!

"I can do that too! I can do that!" You can, little friend! We all can!

My little cousin didn't get mad looking at modern art; she was excited, and asked her parents if she could have fancy grown-up paints, because she didn't know Art could be something she could do, could be something about expressing her feelings and ideas. This is a child who can't yet write very well, and not nearly as fast or as well as she speaks, so you have to understand something clicked for her, that she could express the complex human things inside herself with colour and shapes and images, instead of struggling to learn how to spell "melancholy" or "excited" or conjugate verbs to a degree that could encompass it.

Because words take TIME to master as an art form--I should know, I've been practising using them to express MY ideas and feelings artistically for 36-and-a-half years! Paint, however, doesn't require such mastery in order to begin expressing the artist; certainly it helps to know skills, but it isn't as required as it is with words. You can just scream and yell with paint, you can experiment more purely with images than with sounds, which after all are regimented into languages before we can begin to use them at all, let alone for the art words make.

And honestly, why are whole-ass adults not understanding that "I could make that!" should be exciting, should inspire you to go and make that! Why are you so mad? "I could make that!" Yes you can! And you get to! And you're an adult, you don't have to ask your parents to buy you paint and canvas and brushes, you can go and do that yourself and be expressing your own feelings this very afternoon! Nothing is stopping you! You don't NEED that plagiarism machine, you can do better art yourself! And nobody else in the whole world, now or in the past or in the future, is EVER going to be able to make the art YOU can make, the art YOU have inside you! So go make it!

I took a lot of art classes all throughout high school, and my main art teacher in those years was really into observation drawing. In her classes, we each got a composition book with unlined pages, and had an ongoing assignment to make five observation drawings a week (such as: draw your coffee cup at breakfast, or that cool leaf you found on the sidewalk, etc.), so we're not only drawing/painting things from our imaginations.

She was a big fan of abstract art and sculpture, too.

And the goal was never to make a perfectly "realistic" image of whatever--it was to slow down our eyes & brain, and really pay attention to the world around us, instead of jumping to the conclusion that we already know what [X] looks like, and rush through it.

(The first assignment she gave in class every semester was to draw our own hand without looking at the paper, or lifting the pencil. If your line went off the paper, that was okay, as long as you slowed down, and paid attention to the wrinkles of your knuckles, and the creases in your skin. The analogy she gave that's stuck in my head was it's like driving a car: you don't drive and watch the steering wheel--you watch the road, your eyes follow the curves ahead, and your hands follow your eyes).

Once we got into the habit of actually paying attention to the little things in the world around us, our imaginations and abstract art got more meaningful to us, too.

The thing that I hate about gen. A.I. is that it's being sold as a way to bypass the whole process of personally engaging with the world, and that only the shiniest end product matters.

P.S.:

There is a ~Notion~ that's been percolating through my mind that the way generative A.I. "art" is sold: that taking the time to learn a skill is un-fun and a waste of time, is the reason it's so attractive to alt-right tech bros. It lets them pat themselves on the back for being 'galaxy brained' for not looking closely at the world around them (the whole system is built on jumping to conclusions, over and over again, and picking the 'prettiest' average).

Right along with Elon Musk saying empathy is a bug of Western civilization (Snopes.com fact check article).

My high school art teacher would be appalled.

Dudes healthcare is so fake. My ADHD meds are $940 without insurance. But they gave me a website of "coupons" which straight up looks like a scam website, and I got it today for $60! Just a coupon from a random website and it was $900 cheaper. America, I am confusion!! America explain!!

For all my uninsured judys out there it's for Walgreens only: walgreens.rxsense.com

as a pharmacy technician i can share with you some websites that give you those "coupons" for your meds!

goodrx is the most well known one, but if i'm trying to find the cheapest price for a patient i compare it to scriptcycle, and use whichever is offering the best price. you just type in the medication (PLEASE make sure you're getting the right drug, dosage, and quantity) and your zip code and they will spit out some offers for you

some pharmacies may have their own discount card to compare to as well!

if you are getting a name brand medication, you can also look at the manufacturer's website to see if they offer any evouchers for you to use too

good luck out there ๐Ÿ‘

another one is singlecare.com, brought my duloxetine from $240 a month to $20

and there are coupons for hrt on there as well :) different options for different pharmacies

dollarfor.org saved my broke ass, it can save urs too

god Raoul justโ€ฆloves Christine so much. Literally all he wants is for her to be happy and alive. Genuinely tragic that most of his Final Lair lines are hidden underneath the Erik/Christine harmonized argument, because he's out here saying lines like "for pity's sake, Christine say no! Don't throw your life away for my sake!" and "Why make her lie to you to save me?!โ€ and "Christine, forgive me! Please forgive me! I did it all for you and all for nothing!โ€ while being strangled to death.

Like...do you all realize that he was asking her to let him die so she could be free? He was literally willing to be tortured/killed by an obsessive stalker so that Christine could be free and happy. It's the only REAL personal desire he shows in the whole musical besides asking for her love: for Christine to be alive, healthy, and happy.

And his Big Duet with Christine backs this up! In "All I Ask of You," Christine tells Raoul that "all [she wants] is freedom/a world with no more night," implicitly rejecting Mr. "Music of the Night" and the terror he brings. And Raoul, because he loves her, swears to give that to Christine as best as he's able. The only things he asks of her in the entire song is to love him ("love me, that's all I ask of you" // "Then say you'll share with me one love, one lifetime") and let him allow her to feel safe and free ("let me be your shelter" // "let me be your freedom"). The entirety of "All I Ask of You" is justโ€ฆ.*chef's kiss* honestly.

But of course words are cheap. All the sweet nothings in the world wouldn't prove his worth as a suitor if he wasn't willing to walk the walk. But he is. Raoul spends the rest of the musical proving what he told Christine in that song: that he really is the genuinely sweet, loyal, and protective man who would go to the ends of the earth for her, including being willing to sacrifice his own life so she can have both her freedom and a life without being trapped by the "night" (Erik).

Kind of crazy that so many people genuinely want Christine to end up with the man who groomed her, stalked her, harrassed and manipulated her, kidnapped her on two separate occasions, killed two of her coworkers, was going to force her to marry him against her will, tried to kill her fiancรฉ while guilt-tripping her into thinking it would be her own fault (โ€œbuy his freedom with your love! Refuse me and you send your lover to his death!โ€), tried to kill her (with the chandelier), and generally made her life a living hell for at least a year instead. Lol. Hard pass.

Honestly my favorite Vic Michaelis move is in the belligerent neighbor bit because in sayinf โ€œoh it actually worksโ€ they vocalized what we were all thinking, that Sam had just been fake-typing for the bit, when in fact he was real-fake-typing for the bit

Apparently this guy was at his mother in lawโ€™s house and they were all going through photo albums and he sees he photobombed his wife 11 years before they even met. I fucking love this.

this experience is so unrepeatable like iโ€™m at a loss for words

i was going to say โ€˜i have no idea what to do with this informationโ€™ but then i realized its a handy guide to generate fake words that sound english

โ€œWhat to do with this informationโ€: kick ass at hangman

Also useful for simple codebreaking and decoding an unhashed simple letter cypher.

the rocky wastesโ€ฆ

arranging alphabet cereal by flavors

Source: twitter.com

My local queer bookstore is being forced out of their gentrified neighborhood over their free narcan and fentanyl test strips, free store for the unhoused, and free narcan trainings.

Bluestockings is an incredible worker-owned community space that has been apart of the Lower East Side for 25 years. But in the last couple years, they've faced increasing harassment from the wealthier neighbors moving in and complaining about the presence of unhoused people around their store front. Despite all their community work being allowed by their lease, the landlord is pushing for an eviction.

Please help support Bluestockings! Visit them (if you're local), order books online, donate! We need more queer and community-oriented spaces, not another overpriced coffee shop or chain franchise.

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