Monday, December 15, 2008

Vitaly Komar (1943- ) and Alexander Melamid (1945- )


'A wry demonstration of the universality of basic visual tastes came from a 1993 stunt by two artists, Vitaly Komar and Alexander Melamid, who used marketing research polls to assess Americans' taste in art. They asked respondents about their preferences in color, subject matter, composition and style, and found considerable uniformity. People said they liked realistic, smoothly painted landscapes in green and blue containing animals, women, children and heroic figures. To satisfy this consumer demand, Komar and Melamid painted a composite of the responses: a lakeside landscape in a nineteenth-century realist style featuring children, deer, and George Washingon.' Steven Pinker, The Blank Slate (2002)

They carried out research for other countries as well: the rest of the paintings are here, although the definition isn't great. More about their other projects here.

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