Great art is rooted in the hardest of human emotion. Is why we look back to ancient culture with reverance and sometimes nostalgia. We wouldn't want to be there in the midst of the brawl, most of us moderns would rather jump from the bridge. But our human spirit and memory recognizes the suffering and sacrifices of the ancestors. It's why there really isn't any "great art" anymore, at least in the classical sense, as those with the means to produce it don't have any great emotions. We will probably get there again, but like an LLM, sometimes humans need to reconstitute the entire corpus to make a rather small change
Spotted Paul Graham's throwaway account.
> It's why there really isn't any "great art" anymore, at least in the classical sense<p>This is a tautology, no? There's plenty of great art being made today by people feeling the same emotions as those in the past.
Gotta love how some of the spectators on the larger <i>Joseph Heintz the Younger</i> painting enjoy the entertainment. Too bad that these images predate the invention of popcorn!
I love reading the little vignettes of history. Thanks for posting!
If anyone's played Assassin's Creed II (or any of the Ezio games) (these older games were produced with help from historians) Ezio's scar comes from a street fight on Ponte Vecchio in Venice: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKTXd7L01pI2" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKTXd7L01pI2</a>