Forrest’s Reviews > Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artifice: A Treatise, Critique, and Call to Action > Status Update

Forrest
is on page 51 of 208
The power of art is opposed to illusion: it inheres in the revelation of realities that underlie the partial perceptions of our ordinary model of the world.
— Nov 25, 2018 03:43PM
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Forrest’s Previous Updates

Forrest
is on page 162 of 208
[Note to self: The second full paragraph here needs to be quoted directly and fully.]
— Dec 10, 2018 11:35AM

Forrest
is on page 162 of 208
The idea that one should engage a work of art as if it was created and meant specifically for you is profound. This is the kind of appreciation that art deserves.
— Dec 09, 2018 05:11PM

Forrest
is on page 140 of 208
Ah, unchecked consumerism. The source of so many of our problems, affecting . . . art?!? Or, more properly, effecting artifice.
— Dec 08, 2018 09:02PM

Forrest
is on page 131 of 208
[Note to self] The last para about art and its referents, about what art is "about", and why it doesn't matter, seems to be a central thesis of this chapter. Quote it and dissect it.
— Dec 02, 2018 07:48PM

Forrest
is on page 118 of 208
Dostoyevsky and Flaubert's apparent contradiction of conviction versus creation is just what I feel when writing. I'm sometimes asked why I, a religious person, write horror. It's a good question, and I think it has to do with touching the numinous in a different way than my religious practice. Awe is a spiritual feeling and is often evoked through the horrific or the terrifying.
— Dec 01, 2018 05:33PM

Forrest
is on page 116 of 208
The art vs politics or, rather, art preceding politics notion is compelling.
— Dec 01, 2018 04:30PM

Forrest
is on page 101 of 208
I'm not a fan of the use of the word "rifts," though I think Martel uses it deliberately. But I definitely support the underlying concept.
— Nov 28, 2018 08:59PM