"Both the processes and outcomes of the creative process are highly indicative of the nature and character of the individual. Creativity itself is the mother of infinite interpretations, leading invariably to infinite conflictions, and thus has the greatest potential of all the instincts to reveal the nature of the individual to the society at large. The most conspicuous incarnation of potential is apparent through the sheer variety of art, specifically visual art. "
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Disagreements with previous schools of thought have been universal to all art movements, ranging from minor quarrels to out-and-out rejection. The painting, the sculpture, and more recently the photograph and the film are all physical representations of the infinite branches of the decision tree, each artist choosing and adhering to their own interpretation, none more right or wrong than the other. Recently though, an art movement has entered the public consciousness which represents such a shift in thinking that it wholly eschews social convention, likening itself subconsciously to the rebellious artists of the Renaissance. This art movement is, of course, graffiti. Being unlike anything the world had seen in a very long time, graffiti is outlawed both in conventional society and in the art world, subjugating it as childish and obscene. But the graffiti movement, so wonderfully naïve and unjaded, lives outside of social convention and the rules and regulations of the "gallery art" world. World renowned graffiti artist Shok I recalls "[...] I think [graffiti writers] achieved the impossible by simply not knowing that they couldn't" SHOK I. The fact that society so ostracizes graffiti art lends it a sense of urgency and defiance, fueling the artists who brashly etch their name above the city in six-foot-high letters. However, without the constant push and pull between graffiti artists and the confines of the law, graffiti would fall flat on its face and cease to bear any significant meaning. Yet due to its illegality there is great hidden meaning behind graffiti art which allows it to remain vital. Otherwise, graffiti art's meaning would otherwise be invisible but to the informed. As such, just as all previous art movements have done, the message and meaning behind graffiti is a function of the conflict between artists and social standards, and thus the illegality of graffiti legitimizes it as an art form. "
_________________ no, i am not listening to spice 1 right now.
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