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Views : 333,206
Genre: Education
License: Standard YouTube License
Uploaded At Oct 28, 2024 ^^
warning: returnyoutubedislikes may not be accurate, this is just an estiment ehe :3
Rating : 4.931 (618/35,443 LTDR)
98.29% of the users lieked the video!!
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User score: 97.44- Overwhelmingly Positive
RYD date created : 2024-11-22T01:45:20.567976Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
I think I finally understood why modern art is so "hated". Humans have a deep seated need to classify, define and describe things, which is why we invented language in the first place as well, modern art always comes up with new ways to trigger a feeling of subversion of the boundaries we define to describe art. This is a prime example, when looking at it, the human mind instinctively classifies it as not art, but on changing perspectives, it becomes art, which proves our instinct wrong; a feeling we're geared to avoid and dislike with intensity.
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one of my special interests is typography, and your analysis of this art perfectly describes why i find typography so interesting. letters are so mundane until you look closely their unique details and components. learning about typographic anatomy was a gateway for me. it made me start looking at typography as a form of art, kind of like a combination of sculpture, collage, and construction.
i spend most of my free time browsing typeface foundries, looking at the subtle differences between typefaces that seem identical, deconstructing their shapes, and reforming them into something new. i love a well designed and well thought out typefaceâespecially the ones with little âbonus featuresâ like special glyphs/characters/symbols and alternative forms/ligatures. it feels like an easter egg in a game.
i also love typefaces that are built from uniform, single-weight strokes and geometric shapes. iâm still searching for a perfectly geometric sans-serif typeface. i could yap about this stuff for hours, but iâm not gonna do that. iâve written way too much already, sorry.
anywaysâthis was a great short, as always. thanks for being a typography nerd, etymology nerd.
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This is actually my favorite part about language and writing, and I use it in my stories. I mostly write fantasy, and the magic system in my current work can be summed up as "my friends and I believe this, so this is how the world will work". My favorite way to write magic is as a language/art that can influence the world because two or more people agree that's how it should be.
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I do calligraphy from time to time (I'm not any good at it, I'm just a fantasy nerd so I just gotta write down passages from Tolkien or such in fancy letters sometimes), but yeah I think we do too easily forget to look at and appreciate the beauty in more modern, perhaps seemingly more plain and utilitarian, types of letters as well
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"the shapes only take meaning when considering in context. The letters become symbols if they're considered next to other letters, and the words become words if they're considered next to other words"
This is basically the concept of arbitrariness of the sign, a fundamental idea in modern linguistics. There is no real relationship between the word "tree" and the idea of a tree. The link between the two is completely arbitrary, and it can be easily swapped by another word, for example if you switch languages. It can be "tree", it can be "arbre", it can be "Baum"; none of these makes more sense than the others in an absolute sense, it just depends on the language you're speaking, and the word in your language is subject to change as well, as the language evolves.
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@stevencandra8378
3 weeks ago
10 bucks my professor finds a citation error
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