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Gina Gallery of International Naive Art(ginagallery.com)

29 points·by o4c·14 ore fa·13 comments
ginagallery.com
Gina Gallery of International Naive Art

https://www.ginagallery.com/

15 comments

kldavis4·12 ore fa
In case you were wondering like me, this is visual art by an artist without formal training - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Na%C3%AFve_art
xp84·11 ore fa
Thanks. The website itself has the most infuriatingly long and vague description (Menu->Naive art?)
num42·12 ore fa
Naive art(I dont think it is naive) is exceptionally good, I really liked it. I have asked ChatGPT to generate image in the style of Niko Pirosmani paintings. The ouput looks amazing, moody aesthetics.

https://chatgpt.com/share/6a53afb8-31dc-83ee-9650-ee0628c75d...
dadoum·11 ore fa
One of my favorite piece of art is also regarded as naive art, even though it is a quite unique one, it's the Palais idéal [0] from Cheval.

[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand_Cheval#Palais_id%C3%...
diego_moita·5 ore fa
I think Antonio Gaudí would like it, too.
ChrisMarshallNY·11 ore fa
This seems to be fairly good. It's a different style than mine, but I wish them well.

For fairly bad, may we present MOBA?

https://museumofbadart.org
dostick·12 ore fa
This gallery is pure enjoyment!
akoboldfrying·11 ore fa
In every context I know of, "naive" is a condescending term when applied to an adult. Do artists in this "genre" appreciate their work being labelled this way? "Unconventional" was right there. It means roughly the same thing, but without the side helping of implied... deficit.

Can an artist who submits their work to this gallery -- which features the word in its very name -- really be called "naive"?

I can't tell that the works are "naive" in any sense -- they look no better or worse to me than other artwork -- and I feel no desire to change that by "educating" myself on how "non-naive" art is supposedly better.
Morromist·6 ore fa
It appears to me that these artists aren't actually naive - they have been artists for their entire lifetime and few who know a lot about art think that formal training is required for skill or understanding in art.

It seems rather that this is a particular style of painting. You can see that all the paintings have very similar composition, bright colors, similar subjects.

Probably it started off with some artists with that style being actually naive and discovered by art appreciators and then thousands of people copying that style so that it became its own thing, but it was already called naive.

I think if you really want to find art done by people who are super-isolated from the art world "Outsider art" is a more accurate term these days.
fweimer·9 ore fa
There's Naïve Bayes (although it's sometimes labeled in more explicit terms).

The problem with “unconventional” is that these works are anything but. As far as I can tell, the most of the paintings presented on the site follows a particular style. I don't think someone who is inspired to paint after watching the Joy of Painting would necessarily end up with something like this, so it's not just about being amateurish. It's also quite likely that some of the painters are anything but self-taught and have chosen to paint in this particular way.
diego_moita·11 ore fa
My problem with Naive Art is that it is quite repetitive and limited.

It is a bit like punk rock. After you've heard one or 2 songs from Ramones then you've heard them all. Surely, Ramones, once in a while, can be fun. But after the 3rd song I feel that all they're saying is "we wish we were the Beatles".

Similarly, naive art can be fun, almost as much as Brueghel. But after the 100th 3rd World village with rivers and palm trees I just want to go back to Rembrandt.
halflife·10 ore fa
But not all naive art comes from 3rd world. I remember learning about famous naive artists from Northern Europe which were quite amazing.
iamanatom·12 ore fa
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