>>39111Architecture applies too, right? Have some view of Orangery in Warsaw's Royal Baths Park.
>>39112Of course, forgot to put it in the OP. Cathedrals give me a boner.
>>39111>How do we make art great again?Dunno
Give people time to develop the skills and expand their knowledge?
>>39185
This is a good idea.
>>39185>>39189>EtsyLmao you live under rocks?
>>39191No, I know about Etsy and use it.
Thinking about it more that probably isnt the answer since most people arent going to pay for the time and money put into a fine piece of art. Those apps just produce shit like necklaces and more porn.
>>39205
I think you're absolutely right about that. Really its the faggots at the top, which are all guilt ridden band wagon cunts.
So I was thinking about it. It is not really that good art is gone or dying, more that people accept stupid shit as great works because of snobby in groups like >>39205 said.
Is the only way to rid ourselves of this to red pill rich in groups or become them?
I am also of the opinion that conservatories and stricter places of study are better for producing high quality art. Similar to the Eastern European way of teaching, as this was how I was taught music.
Any art fags on /mlpol/ that have good sources for scrubs, like myself, to learn more about styles and history?
Also this thread doesn't have to be just European as I think we had some oriental posters before on the original /mlpol/.
Post new stuff of quality and feeling as well as literature and music.
Two of the pieces in
>>39331 are new from a local artist.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=73rX1AfaHz0https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dbbtmskCRUYhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vfdZFduvh4whttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_aMJ21HwlT0https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LGnsqTDY9TwI need moar art depicting mythical horses.
>>43102Same dude, this is just what had horses.
>>43111Checked.
Horses are so aesthetic in European artwork: they give-off an aura of power, nobility and grace.
Even the word "Aryan" from old Sanskrit is derived from "ārya", and means "noble", or "high one". In ancient Mesopotamia, the ancestors of the many tribes across Europe, India, and South-West Asia who later became known as Aryans (mostly the Indo-European/Persian kind) had mastered horses before any other tribes in the region, using the convenience and power of the newly-domesticated animals to concur their neighbors who relied on infantry, spreading their influence all across the middle East and parts of Europe.
The horse, as a cultural symbol, has usually been associated with nobility across history. Being an animal that was generally only used for transport, it was usually only nobles owned them for the better part of of history; and in many places across the world, heirloom horse breeds are considered to be cultural symbols, associated with the histories of the families who bred them. Their association with ancient-to-medieval cavalry charges, in which a lord would lead warrior-nobles into battle, led themto be associated with a king's power and wealth.
I only just got into this pony stuff, but I've always been in the significance in the significance of domestic animals as cultural symbols in the West and the rest of the world.