But is it Art?
Artists, intellectuals, and just about everyone else has debated this since time immemorial.
This humorous, satirical story questions the nature of printmaking, art, science, and human nature, among other things!
The First Artist (But is it Art?)
The First Artist?
What came first, the "artist" or the "art"? Says who?
Five and three score-million years later, another kind of animal, known as Homo sapiens, came across the miraculously preserved dinosaur footprints, and decided that the rock could be cut up into squares, and sold to science museums as "impressions", and to art museums as "prints".
...And then someone claiming to be nearest evolutionary kin to the star dinosaur entered the scene, demanding royalties on the sales...
Of course, such a claim is hard to substantiate, and such a demand is likely to be rejected; but our greedy little hero coined an impressive plot: he went around to every art gallery and science museum that displayed the petrified footprints of his great-great ancestor, and, with great evasive efforts, pricked his thumb and stamped his bloody DNA-laden thumbprint all over the footprints.
A printmaker's art tool?
He Thinks It's Art, But is it "Real" Art?
How do you define "Real" art?
The lust for printed money soon had the idea presses rolling again in his mind, and he minted another Print Plot: he took his thumbprint, and employed various printmaking techniques to enlarge it and print copies of it, and then he pinned the copies up on a wall and poked his thumb with a pin and "signed" them with his thumbprint.
He laid claim that it was a primitive physical and spiritual drive that compelled him to do it, and carefully limited the number of bloody prints to the number of dinosaur footprints that he had "printed" on, calling it a Limited Edition.
He received several million bills of printed money for it, and a few imprinted coins as well.
A prominent art museum had bought a large portion of the prints, and proudly put them on display, along with an acquired dinosaur footprint in stone; and they drew huge crowds of art lovers and curiosity seekers.
Among these viewers was an ex-security guard for the art museum. He had seen many works of art before that had caused him to wonder about what art really was, and this was no different. But when he got back home, he realized that the display had left an impression in his mind, and soon he minted an idea of his own: To churn out counterfeit prints using his own thumbprint, and "signed" with ink that looked like dried blood (he wasn't going to prick his thumb), then sneak into the museum and swap them with the originals, and sell the originals under the table. After all, in the days when he had been a security guard for the museum, he had occasionally been approached by strange characters proposing deals to acquire art by insider theft; but he had always chickened out.
Since, number One, he had taken an intro class in printmaking when he was a student, and since, number Two, he remembered all the ins and outs of the security system at the art museum, and since, number Three, he still had contact with some of the under the table art swindlers that he'd met, his plan went as easy as One-Two-Three.
Art = Science = $ ?
Science Meets Art
Can art be science? Can science be art?
And sure enough, the crowds came. Science buffs and curiosity seekers. Among the crowds of science museum goers was an accomplished biologist who held great interest in the areas of genetics and reptilian evolution. By now, the print displays also featured a photograph of the "bloody-DNA-printmaker-artist", now turned celebrity. The biologist noted what he thought was a striking similarity between the shape of the newly-minted celebrity's jaw and the jaw of a Tyrannosaurus Rex, and remembered that a newly discovered DNA testing technique was giving insight on ancestral lineages predating primate species. He wanted to do a DNA analysis of the signature thumbprint, which was said to be of the artist's blood.
The science museum was at first hesitant, but on seeing that an accomplished biologist was making the request, felt they could only benefit from the possible publicity that it would bring. Since they had only one stone dinosaur imprint, they felt it better to sacrifice the corner of one of their paper prints in the name of science and publicity.
Art Museum Rep VS. Science Museum Rep
Common Denominator: Fame + Art = Fame + Science = $
Is it in our DNA to lust for these things?
Of course, some people from the art museum went over to see how the science museum was displaying the common product, and one very discerning art museum employee (the print curator) made a curious observation: the edition numbers on both the art museum's prints and the science museum's prints were the same!
A science sensation was quickly turning into an art scandal. The celebrity printmaker knew not what to say to the droves of reporters rolling questions at him. Nor could he hide, for his face was by far the most recognized face in town. Had he been scamming everyone and selling "duplicate editions" just to make more money? The glare of the spotlight of negative attention nearly caused him to panic. He thought of skipping town and changing identities. But his fingerprints were on public display.
But were they all his?
An investigative agency was called in. The celebrity's thumbprint matched the bloody thumbprints on both the science museum's and art museum's dinosaur footprints; and on the editioned prints in the science museum. The thumbprints on the art museum's editioned prints matched those of a former art museum employee. His thumbprints ended up in the police records, and his fingerprints covered the bars of his jail cell as he grasped onto them. The celebrity's thumbprints ended up in the gossip columns of the newspapers and magazines, as well as in some rare special feature gossip columns in the art and science journals. The art lovers, science buffs, and curiosity seekers ate it all up. So did everyone else.
In the end, we're all raging DiNosAurs...
What is Art, Anyway?
What Do YOU Think?
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