Pompidou Center: Inside

The Pompidou Center celebrates modern art with sculptures, paintings, photographs and assemblages.

And I didn't understand most of it.

Art requires that the artist express himself in a language that the viewer can understand. For much of history, both artist and viewer used a common language. Maybe that required learning the language, but once that happened, the art could be appreciated.

With modern art, the artist can use his own language to express himself, and not care whether the viewer understand. The question then becomes what's the point of viewing modern art, if you have no idea what the artist is saying.  It's a little like an English speaker trying to understand someone who speaks only Chinese.

In this regard, Picasso seems quaint. I could at least recognize human figures and the irreverence in his work, however distorted.

La Pisseuese by Pablo Picasso
And some of the art I could admire because it was technically proficient and attractive. Such as Double Metamorphosis by Yaacov Agam, which looked like a black painting from the side but revealed colors and shapes as you walked by an looked through slats.

Double Metamorphosis III by Yaacov Agam
But what could I make of assemblages of garbage, or random squiggles on canvas or random materials and shapes thrown on the floor. These were neither comprehensible nor attractive, and much of the Center's art was like that.

If you like modern art, then you'll enjoy the Pompidou. If your have a Museum Pass or can otherwise enter the museum for free, spend an hour or two inside, just to say you were there, and so you can see some great views of Paris from the top floor. Otherwise, don't pay to go in and instead enjoy the outdoor spectacle.

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