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  • Member You - Is Advertising Art?

    The Importance of Being Earnest in Business Card Designs
    There are plenty of rights and wrongs, dos and don’ts in business card design. And it can get pretty confusing trying to remember all of them by heart.Business cards are your allies in making your business thrive. It is the vantage point that connects clients to you and to your business. It pays to invest on quality business cards that will effectively draw clients towards you.Business cards are made to attract attention. Thus, designing your business cards must be based with the intent to lure clients and make an impression on th
    ly outstanding art rarely secures immediate popularity, n'est-ce pas Mon Dieu Seigneur?

    Does not art encourage many ways of looking at the world?

    Is it not often purposefully ambiguous and open to conflicting interpretation?

    Surely, oh Towering One, artists do not worship audiences in the way advertisers do?

    Do they not intentionally break boundaries, counter the status quo, and question accepted beliefs?

    Many spend decades deconstructing society, transcending political, economic and religious systems

    The Secret to Building a Highly Profitable Business
    The first business of any business is to make a profit...Plain and simple!Think about it...Regardless of what kind of business it is, regardless of whether it's selling a product or a service, regardless of whether it's doing business online or offline, if a business isn't making a profit it doesn't have any reason to exist, does it?However...Profit alone isn't enough.*How* a profit is made has far more to do with the ultimate success or failure of a business than the profit itself.You see...
    Oh Grand and Glorious Southern Guru, I am perplexed. What ails thee, my peabrained little grasshopper? My sleep has been short, my walls have been climbed, my hair has been pulled.

    I must know the difference between advertising and high art. Oh Great Creator, please give me the answer.

    Stir no longer, little vacuous one. Art is in the eye of the beholder, and yes, advertising can be high art.

    But Holiest of the Holy, whilst I acknowledge there is a role for subjectivity in the appreciation of art, and that art and advertising similarly use form, colour and symbol to convey messages, and that both can be aesthetically pleasing and accessible, and that both share the goal of changing behavior and attitudes, and that both often highlight the tension between reality and ideals and can shape aesthetic tastes, does not an adequate answer to my question depend upon a precise definition of the term art?

    Are there not different degrees of creativity and originality? Are there not different types of art?

    Surely Majestic One, advertising is not "high" art, but rather popular, propagandistic art?

    Not so, little inchworm. Art is a function of apprehension, ergo, there is no difference between "high" and "low" art.

    But Mighty Aphrodite, do not ads see the world only through a blinkered lens: as products and services, as target markets and audiences? Do they not promote only consumerism and uphold only the status quo? Are not their motives restricted by budgets and deadlines, and by the necessity of pushing product?

    How can ads experiment with ideas for their own sake when fettered by this capitalist manacle?

    Do ads not craft specific messages for specific audiences at specific times?

    Is not their goal to elicit singular responses?

    Do they not aim to please, to arrest the intelligence and to allay our fears with easy solutions, and are they not primarily concerned with positive reactions?

    And does not the prerequisite of mass appeal demand mediocrity? Does not art allow for a delight in, and the free play of, ideas for their own sake? Truly outstanding art rarely secures immediate popularity, n'est-ce pas Mon Dieu Seigneur?

    Does not art encourage many ways of looking at the world?

    Is it not often purposefully ambiguous and open to conflicting interpretation?

    Surely, oh Towering One, artists do not worship audiences in the way advertisers do?

    Do they not intentionally break boundaries, counter the status quo, and question accepted beliefs?

    Many spend decades deconstructing society, transcending political, economic and religious systems,

    Why You Need to Keep Good Financial Records in Business
    In order to make sure that you business is running smoothly, you have to keep good financial records. This is one of the issues with which businesses are most concerned because they want to make sure that they are turning a profit and at the same time paying the appropriate taxes to the government. When a business files an income tax return, it has to have all its I's dotted and t's crossed if it doesn't want to undergo a tax audit. That is why all income and expenses have to be carefully documented and all receipts kept.Any income is li
    art and advertising similarly use form, colour and symbol to convey messages, and that both can be aesthetically pleasing and accessible, and that both share the goal of changing behavior and attitudes, and that both often highlight the tension between reality and ideals and can shape aesthetic tastes, does not an adequate answer to my question depend upon a precise definition of the term art?

    Are there not different degrees of creativity and originality? Are there not different types of art?

    Surely Majestic One, advertising is not "high" art, but rather popular, propagandistic art?

    Not so, little inchworm. Art is a function of apprehension, ergo, there is no difference between "high" and "low" art.

    But Mighty Aphrodite, do not ads see the world only through a blinkered lens: as products and services, as target markets and audiences? Do they not promote only consumerism and uphold only the status quo? Are not their motives restricted by budgets and deadlines, and by the necessity of pushing product?

    How can ads experiment with ideas for their own sake when fettered by this capitalist manacle?

    Do ads not craft specific messages for specific audiences at specific times?

    Is not their goal to elicit singular responses?

    Do they not aim to please, to arrest the intelligence and to allay our fears with easy solutions, and are they not primarily concerned with positive reactions?

    And does not the prerequisite of mass appeal demand mediocrity? Does not art allow for a delight in, and the free play of, ideas for their own sake? Truly outstanding art rarely secures immediate popularity, n'est-ce pas Mon Dieu Seigneur?

    Does not art encourage many ways of looking at the world?

    Is it not often purposefully ambiguous and open to conflicting interpretation?

    Surely, oh Towering One, artists do not worship audiences in the way advertisers do?

    Do they not intentionally break boundaries, counter the status quo, and question accepted beliefs?

    Many spend decades deconstructing society, transcending political, economic and religious systems

    Web 2.0 Has Business Owners Blogging The Success Stories of Their Company
    "People" is not just the name of a magazine, it is the subject of virtually every story published today. How people use a certain product. Why they behave the way they do. And what activity they're engaged in that is charming, disarming, or alarming. It's all about the people.Most business publications tell us about people we can never identify with, even though we love to read about them. They have seemingly unlimited resources, celebrity contacts, and brilliant well-connected friends. Fun to read but with very little direct relevance t
    tising is not "high" art, but rather popular, propagandistic art?

    Not so, little inchworm. Art is a function of apprehension, ergo, there is no difference between "high" and "low" art.

    But Mighty Aphrodite, do not ads see the world only through a blinkered lens: as products and services, as target markets and audiences? Do they not promote only consumerism and uphold only the status quo? Are not their motives restricted by budgets and deadlines, and by the necessity of pushing product?

    How can ads experiment with ideas for their own sake when fettered by this capitalist manacle?

    Do ads not craft specific messages for specific audiences at specific times?

    Is not their goal to elicit singular responses?

    Do they not aim to please, to arrest the intelligence and to allay our fears with easy solutions, and are they not primarily concerned with positive reactions?

    And does not the prerequisite of mass appeal demand mediocrity? Does not art allow for a delight in, and the free play of, ideas for their own sake? Truly outstanding art rarely secures immediate popularity, n'est-ce pas Mon Dieu Seigneur?

    Does not art encourage many ways of looking at the world?

    Is it not often purposefully ambiguous and open to conflicting interpretation?

    Surely, oh Towering One, artists do not worship audiences in the way advertisers do?

    Do they not intentionally break boundaries, counter the status quo, and question accepted beliefs?

    Many spend decades deconstructing society, transcending political, economic and religious systems

    Eliminating Profit Robbing Telemarketing Calls to Your Business
    Most of us small business owners don’t have the luxury of having a secretary or office manager to screen our calls for us. It can become overwhelming when answering sales call after sales call from telemarketers prevent us from doing what makes us money. To top it off, we can sometimes be talked into spending our hard earned money on products or services that are often overpriced and/or not needed in the first place.Each time we add a new business telephone number or change the business location of the ones we currently have, our telepho
    ith ideas for their own sake when fettered by this capitalist manacle?

    Do ads not craft specific messages for specific audiences at specific times?

    Is not their goal to elicit singular responses?

    Do they not aim to please, to arrest the intelligence and to allay our fears with easy solutions, and are they not primarily concerned with positive reactions?

    And does not the prerequisite of mass appeal demand mediocrity? Does not art allow for a delight in, and the free play of, ideas for their own sake? Truly outstanding art rarely secures immediate popularity, n'est-ce pas Mon Dieu Seigneur?

    Does not art encourage many ways of looking at the world?

    Is it not often purposefully ambiguous and open to conflicting interpretation?

    Surely, oh Towering One, artists do not worship audiences in the way advertisers do?

    Do they not intentionally break boundaries, counter the status quo, and question accepted beliefs?

    Many spend decades deconstructing society, transcending political, economic and religious systems

    Thousands Of Online Businesses Can Make A Fortune Using Effective Email Copywriting
    Why Is It That Only A Handful Do?The market for copywriters, who can write mega-quick, money making emails, is HUGE.There are literally thousands of business owners and online entrepreneurs searching for quality writers to provide this service for them.But, quite frankly, most business owners have a difficult time creating timely, effective, money making emails. And here’s the reason why…It’s because business owners are hoping, wishing and praying that what they have personally written, will sell. Or, that they’ve hi
    ly outstanding art rarely secures immediate popularity, n'est-ce pas Mon Dieu Seigneur?

    Does not art encourage many ways of looking at the world?

    Is it not often purposefully ambiguous and open to conflicting interpretation?

    Surely, oh Towering One, artists do not worship audiences in the way advertisers do?

    Do they not intentionally break boundaries, counter the status quo, and question accepted beliefs?

    Many spend decades deconstructing society, transcending political, economic and religious systems, do they not?

    You listen not, my pint-sized parvenu. Art is in the eye of the beholder. Hence an advertisement, even if it's only one in a million, can be high art.

    But Lord of the Rings, is it not the sale that motivates the creation of advertisements?

    Does this not put advertising solely in the realm of the shallow and material?

    And thusly, are not ads only original in the context of commerce? And furthermore, did not the great Canadian literary critic Northrop Frye suggest that ads are farcical, ironic and trivial (and that their prodigious power rests here precisely because we view them as a joke, without analyzing their bountiful effects)?

    In short, Monsieur Le President, are not advertisements viewed primarily with scorn?

    And does not true art inspire awe?

    And does it not create new ways of looking at the world and increase our depth of understanding about the meaning of life?

    And, as such, does it not reside squarely in the realm of the deep and spiritual?

    And does not great art burst forth with such stunning originality that it changes the way we see the world and ourselves?

    And are great artists, those rare geniuses, not moved by more than the simple desire for coin, and do they not dwell deeply on the profound questions of man's universal condition?

    And is not the equating of "high" art with advertising symptomatic of decadent, hollow, bankrupt, violent societies, which value material goods, "happiness" and facile solutions above all else?

    And as such, All Knowing One, is this not an equation we should actively oppose?

    Get not thy knickers in a knot wee Gordian. Your philosophizing incites me to slumber.

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