i agree with that chrissy...although i do think that after you have formed your own ideas and perceptions, it is often interesting and really illuminating to understand where the artist was coming from....what their ideas, inspirations and motivations were..
i think you implied this in your post...
and sometimes that understanding is a catalyst for further thinking and feeling of your own, you know?..
it gives you more food for thought...new ways to understand the work...
and maybe then you walk away with a new perspective...more open minded than when you first saw it..
i think art is like that...it's a process...obviously sometimes you love or hate something right off the bat and your feelings dont change..
but more often than not i really think it's a process that needs time...like layers of an onion!....excuse the over-used analogy but its so true i think....as you sit with it, new things reveal themselves...you become aware of new perspectives, new feelings, etc...and learning about the artist's perspective is just one more little piece to the puzzle that can shed light on the artwork i think..
i ALWAYS want to to know as much about the artist as possible...
not just about the actual piece i am curently viewing...
but about the artist themselves and their entire body of work...
and how this one piece fits into the big picture...
i once heard-
'a writer writes for himself, and not for you'...
a LOT of art is like this...
*is it self-indulgent ?....OF COURSE it is...
it is all about the artist and THEIR point of view....
i think what separates the great artists from the average or mediocre ones is that they have something new or interesting to communicate...
OR they have found an original way to communicate an otherwise unoriginal idea...
*is it a form of therapy?...most definitely ....
i think great artists always put a piece of themselves in their work...
it's how they deal with reality and their emotions...
how they communicate ideas, etc...
a great artist will develop his own language...
and it's always fun for me to see if i can 'speak' their language...
of course some are easier for me to understand than others...
because i may share more of an aesthetic or point of view with certain artists..
but i always always want to know what the original intention of the artist is...
*sometimes i think we can only infer the artist's intentions based on their personal history and body of work...
because very often...their intentions cannot be put into words...
which is the very reason they have not chosen to become writers but visual artist instead...
it is said.
..
'a picture's worth a thousand words'...
how true is that!?!?!...
*my favourite art exhibits are retrospectives....
i see as many of these as i can...
it's so amazing to see the evolution of the artist and to see the whole body of work gathered together in one place like that...
that's when i can usually hear the 'voice' of the artist most clearly...