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Time & Perspective Quote by Lester Bangs

"Every great work of art has two faces, one toward its own time and one toward the future, toward eternity"

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Bangs is smuggling a dare into what sounds like a museum placard. The “two faces” line flatters art with destiny, then snaps it back into the grime of the present: a great work has to talk to its own moment in a language that moment can actually hear. For a rock critic who lived in the churn of scenes, labels, hype cycles, and subcultures, that first face matters. Art isn’t great because it floats above history; it’s great because it metabolizes history - slang, politics, cheap gear, bad apartments, new drugs, new anxieties - and turns it into form.

The second face, “toward the future, toward eternity,” is where Bangs’ skepticism quietly bites. “Eternity” isn’t a halo he’s handing out; it’s a stress test. Time is the meanest critic, stripping away context, fashion, and the original audience’s private jokes. If the work still hits, it wasn’t merely “important” - it was built with an internal engine: a formal invention, a psychological truth, a tension that stays legible after the scene dies.

The subtext is also a warning to critics (himself included). If you only evaluate art by timelessness, you miss why it mattered when it arrived like a disruptive technology. If you only evaluate it as zeitgeist, you’re just doing trend reporting. Bangs is arguing for a criticism that can hear both frequencies at once: the immediate shock of the new and the long echo that proves it was more than noise.

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TopicArt
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Two Faces of Great Art - Lester Bangs
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Lester Bangs (December 14, 1948 - April 30, 1982) was a Critic from USA.

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