Official: It’s Not Art, It’s A Lightbulb
All but the most hard core Islington coffee-morning types seem to agree that what passes for modern “art”, isn’t.
Indeed, passing through the Tate Modern (the usually missing “The” has been replaced here for grammatical accuracy) is likely to reduce a true art lover to garlic tears of rage and impotent contempt.
So it is with considerable nausea that we report that the European Commission is correct (aargh, that hurt) to say:
European Commission officials claim pieces by the American artist – who is famous for installations using fluorescent strip lights – are liable for full VAT because they are no more than “lighting fittings”.
It means that any museum or gallery bringing his works into the country from outside the EU will have to pay a full VAT levy, which is due to rise to 20 per cent on Jan 1.
The ruling will also affect the works of Bill Viola, a US artist whose slow motion video pieces won acclaim when they were exhibited at the National Gallery in London.
It’s bound to be time for the article to rehash a tired cliche.
It is likely to reignite age-old the debate over what does and does not constitute art.
Oh yes, there it is. And no it’s not “likely to”, really, because everybody has made their minds up long ago.
Just to add an extra frisson of joy to the whole episode:
St Paul’s Cathedral could be among the first victims of the ruling. It has commissioned two altar pieces from Viola, due to be unveiled next year
Serves ’em right for wasting money on nonsense. TheEye hasn’t been in the shadow of St Paul’s for over a decade, but suspects that visitors are now aggressively mugged for entrance donations and gift shop sales. Now you know where your money is going – not on restoring the place but on fancy lightbulbs.
Anyone or any organisation which commissions that sort of crap deserves to be ripped off ..
And as I have no intention of visiting St Paul’s .. they won’t be making a farthing out of me ..
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I don’t know why cathedrals have to buy such awful artworks; there is no shortage of very good art suitable for sacred settings.
At Ely cathedral they managed to buy a Madonna of such lumpen awkwardness that even Prince Charles sucked his breath in when he saw it, and he’s really not a very good judge. The ruddy thing is perched up on a windowsill like a giant Wades Whimsey, without the elegance or humour. The arms are all wrong.
Last time I went there, she had a thick layer or dust on her decollete as no one could get up there to clean her and she looked like a cave woman whose chest needed waxing.
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The poor old COE just can’t seem to stop itself – haven’t seen the Ely monstrosity…
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WTF is the CofE getting involved with ‘modern art’ anyway? Don’t they know that Jackson Pollard/Pillock(?) was a KGB plot to demoralise the West? Or maybe it was the CIA.
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