Chris Knight
Established Member
I don't think there is such a thing as an absolute in design. It all has to stand within a context and to judge it outside that context is unfair or ignorant.
That context can be many kinds of thing - peer pressure (just think of kids trying to be different with their shirts out of their trousers whereas they are desperately conforming), the environment (eg the room in which furniture is located - I think Eltham Palace is great to illustrate this for Art Deco), the period (I last had Crêpes Suzette in the 70's) and so on.
The trouble with Tony's pieces is that the context is somewhat different for each of us. What background are we judging it against? Without this information and a shared appreciation of it, it is hard to share one's views of a piece.
That context can be many kinds of thing - peer pressure (just think of kids trying to be different with their shirts out of their trousers whereas they are desperately conforming), the environment (eg the room in which furniture is located - I think Eltham Palace is great to illustrate this for Art Deco), the period (I last had Crêpes Suzette in the 70's) and so on.
The trouble with Tony's pieces is that the context is somewhat different for each of us. What background are we judging it against? Without this information and a shared appreciation of it, it is hard to share one's views of a piece.