from Engadget by
Darren Murph
If you've been yearning for controversy, why not meet Mr. David Hockney? Commonly know as "
Britain's best-loved living painter," Hockney has suggested that the
proliferation of the iPod has been a primary contributor to the recent "fallow period of painting." He insists that today's society is "all about
sound," and even mentions that people are turning off their eyes and ignoring contemporary art whilst "plugging their ears." Put simply, he believes the modern "decline in visual awareness" rests heavily on Apple's own cash cow, and further stirred the pot by insinuating that it led to "badly dressed people" who cared not about lines nor mass. As expected, a spokeswoman for Apple Australia refuted the claims, and while we certainly have seen no shortage of
brilliant creations since the iPod explosion, there's always two sides to the canvas.
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