I feel like a traitor to my profession. Not to statisticians, but to being an art consumer. I did not enjoy the Tate Modern. No, that is not appropriately expressing my opinion. Not only did I dislike the Tate Modern, I left feeling upset, dirty, and slightly sick. Furthermore, I do not even want to go back to see the Munch exhibit (I love
The Scream so this is saying something). It was the art that got to me.
Though I am not an art historian, a critic, or even an amateur artist, I appreciate art. I have taken so many art history classes and been inspired by many artists. And being a human, I can enjoy art for art's sake. I enjoy pretty scenes, thoughtful slogans, even political statements in art.
None of which you will find in modern "art". At least, you have to look hard, trudging through the sleaze.
Am I being too harsh? Just because "I don't get it" I say I hate modern art? That would not be fair, if it were true. I don't get some of it, but that is not why I don't like modern art. (Besides, "getting" the art is not always an uplifting experience.) Artists are a mirror of society; what they paint, why they create, reflects the mores and opinions of people. Society creates the atmosphere where artists learn. Look back on history and note the evolution of art.
Stone Age:
Survival of the human race. The art focuses on fertility of the land and the race.
Cave art, Woman of Willendorf
Egyptian:
Concern with status and afterlife
Pyramids, Book of the Dead
Greek:
Balance in everything. Perfection of the body
Parthenon (the most visually correct building in the world), the Discobolus
Middle Ages:
Church, religion is supreme and man is nothing
Notre Dame, buildings to commemorate God
Renaissance:
Humanism, rebirth of ideas in sciences,
techniques, and religion
Michelangelo, da Vinci
Baroque: Religious wars
Rembrandt, Caravaggio
Romanticism: American and French Revolutions
Turner,
Liberty Leading the People
Impressionism: More revolutions, people getting restless with old art

Monet, Pissarro
Cubism, Futurism: WWI, Russian Revolution
Picasso, Leger
Surrealism: Great Depression, WWII
Dali, Duchamp
Pop art: Cold War, revolts
Warhol, Pollock
Yes, I skipped a few art movements, but you can see the trend and correlation between society and art. So what is today's world focusing on? Throughout the last few decades, people have been growing more and more secular and apathetic about everything else. Think about it: in "civilized" countries like the US and UK, people are focused on other people (how much time did you waste on Facebook today?), anything to get them from taking responsibility for their own lives, anything to stop them from looking beyond the surface, the constructed front everyone has. Days have become routine, and to break the routine, people do the same thing (usually involving getting drunk or spending money on clothes or vacations or glossy magazines). They work, they spend the money, and they waste time, just waiting for...something. Self-reflection is a fad, religion is a joke, and living for and in the moment is void. And the trend of dissociating oneself from life and reality is growing ever stronger. People are growing lazy; if they want something, they want it now, a quick fix, the snap answer.
Modern art reflects this disease of apathy for reflection, dissociation from reality, and need for instant gratification. Modern artists aren't interested in developing technique, patience, or thought. They are going for the shock value. Pornographic, bizarre, and just plain disturbing–that is what is seen as art now. It is almost a challenge from the artists; this is art, can't you see? If not, you must be a closed-minded freak.
Looking at some of the pieces in the Tate I could not tell what the artist was thinking or trying to convey. All I got was the artist must have been bored or psycho. The art was not for a cause, none that I could see anyway.
So, is this art? What constitutes art?