Member-only story

DID SOMEONE KILL PAINTING?

Ted Burke
6 min readSep 30, 2024

--

.
Back in the late Nineties I was involved in an online debate as to whether painting were a dead art , in view of the then emerging new digital media which promised to give artists a new canvas, a new palette, a revolutionary way of creating art that hadn’t been done before. I harrumphed and pouted and tried to be sage in my remarks, but there wasn’t much of anything I could offer to the discussion other than this: Painting will be dead when artists stop painting and when art lovers stop desiring to look at the work of past, recent, and current artists. So far, there are no so-described symptoms of paintings’ impending demise. In any case, what is with the impulse for some to declare entire mediums “dead”, as if a literal body had been discovered somewhere, knife in back, bullet in brain, i.e., “the death of literature”, “death of the subject”, “death of the novel”, “the death of the author”, “the end of history”, “jazz is dead”,” history is dead”, “rock is dead”, and so forth. I’ve read these declarations over the years, some with, some without arguments, some articulate, others ruthlessly abstruse, and save for a momentary rush of certainty that the many threads of history are suddenly woven together to the precise moment that the respective professors are making a case for, one realizes that the activities still go on in strength.

--

--

Ted Burke
Ted Burke

Written by Ted Burke

Music journalist, musician, and street photographer. His writing has appeared in the San Diego Reader, Oyster Boy Review, Kicks, San Diego Door ,UCSD GUARDIAN

No responses yet