Thursday, 30 June 2011

Urdu Roman Poetry


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Urdu Roman Poetry
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Ae  Kash  aisa  hota,  log  na  hum  se  itne  bekhabar  hotey ...
Warna  in  Haseeno  ki  mehfilon  me  apne  bhi  zikar  hotey ...

Khuab  to  buhat  they  hamare,  hum  ke  they  ishq  ke  maarey ...
Chand hota, Samanadar hota, aur Samandar me kai Madojazar hotey ...

Mein  sochta  hun  kabhi  kabhi,  tu  mujhe  agar  mil  gaya hota ...
Na  talaash  manzil  ki  hoti,  na  hi  peron  me  itne  safar  hotey ...

Ye  hamara  kam  hi  nahi  tha,  isi  liye  hum  ne  chor  diya ...
Is  Ishq  ki  dunya  me  warna,  hamare  bhi  kai  Behar-o-Bar  hotey ...

Zindagi  ne   kiya   diya  hum   ko ,  ruswaiyon  ke  siwa ? ...
Hum  bhi  Yawer,  Mar  gaye  hotey  to  kuch  to  muatbar  hotey ...
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(My Own Poetry) 
Poetry By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Image Desinged By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Tuesday, 28 June 2011

Designed Love Quotations

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Designed Love Quotations
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"I wish to make a sketch of U... then Love you more and more ... !"
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Image Designed By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Monday, 27 June 2011

Artistic Edge: Approach of Mind

Artistic Edge: Approach of Mind: ".. Approach of Mind .. I love you I like you I don't want to live without you and this is the only approach of my mind ... ! .. Ima..."

Saturday, 25 June 2011

CONFIDENCE

Artistic confidence is a valuable asset when it is warranted, but a terrible liability when not.

The problem is, confidence blinds us to whether it is warranted or not.

Picasso's huge ego gave him the courage to break with a lot of traditions.  On the other hand, Julien Schnabel's ego did him no favors when it led him to believe, "I'm the closest thing to Picasso that you'll see in this fucking life." Confidence is the Jekyll and Hyde of art.

Artist Markus Lüpertz certainly had the confidence to stand up to his critics. When he erected his latest public artwork -- a creepy, 60 foot sculpture of Hercules with one arm, a big nose, blue hair and a stunted body-- the New York Times reported:
in the past his work has been, to put it kindly, misunderstood. One piece was smeared with paint and covered in feathers. Another was beaten with a hammer. Another was removed altogether after protesters demanded it be taken down. “It doesn’t matter,” said Mr. Lüpertz....“The general opinion of my art is that it is rejected. I attribute this to a lack of intelligence among the people.”

 Some of Lupertz's confidence comes from avoiding nay-sayers:
I only work with students who admire me and think I am great.  If I am not the one that takes their breath away, I don’t feel like working with them, because this would be a waste of time. It’s not about their individualism, it’s about my individualism. It’s not about their genius, it’s about my genius.
Lupertz shows us that confidence can transform bad art into immense, unavoidable bad art.

At Stone Mountain, Georgia, sculptors Augustus Lukeman and Walter Hancock defaced an entire mountain with a sculpture the size of three football fields.


The sculpture, which depicts heroes of the Confederate Army, was sponsored by the Ku Klux Klan and the United Daughters of the Confederacy.  As a work of art, it exemplifies the struggle between a pathetic lack of talent and disgusting racism.  Most artists might look for a more inconspicuous location for such a struggle-- perhaps hidden in the back pages of a personal sketchbook.  But if you have unquestioning confidence, you try to assert your position bigger and bolder and more permanently than anyone else's. 

The jackhammer and dynamite are apparently favored tools of the overly confident.  Consider this awful sculpture of chief Crazy Horse, currently on its way to becoming the largest sculpture in the world:
 


The sponsors of this statue hired sculptor Korczak Ziolkowski in 1948 to begin reshaping a mountain into a figure larger than Mount Rushmore.  The head of Crazy Horse alone is 87 feet tall.  The scale model pictured here in front of the despoiled mountain is so bad, an artist with any  judgment would have returned to the drawing board.   But confidence never heard the Turkish proverb, "No matter how far you've gone down the wrong road, turn back."

Confidence has served many artists well, giving them the strength necessary to undertake difficult projects and make bold decisions.  Illustrator and art teacher Sterling Hundley reports,
I've had students in the past ask me the question: "Do you think that I am good enough?"
My answer: "If anyone could say anything in that moment that would keep you from pursuing your dreams, then you should find something else to do with your life."
This is surely true.  On the other hand, when writer Flannery O'Connor was asked whether college writing programs were discouraging young writers, she responded "Not enough."  This is surely true too.

Distinguishing between helpful and unhelpful confidence is one of the greatest challenges facing any artist.  When is it Jekyll and when is it Hyde?  If there is a formula, I lack the confidence to articulate it here.

Approach of Mind

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Approach of Mind
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I love you
I like you
I don't want to live without you
and
this is the only approach of my mind ... !
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Image & Poetry By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Sajjad Ali - Bol Movie Song Lyrics


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Sajjad Ali - Bol Movie Song Lyrics
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Din pareshan hai, raat bhari hai
Zindagi hai ke , phir bhi piyari hai

Kiya tamasha hai, kab se jaari hai
Zindagi hai ke, phir bhi piyari hai

Is kahani ko kon rokey ga ?
Umr ye sari kon soche ga ?
ho .. Kon Soche Ga ?

Sath kati hai ya guzari hai
Zindagi hai ke, phir bhi piyari hai

Rangon se kahun , lakeeron se kahun ?
Maili Maili si tasweron se kahun ?
hmmm.... Tasweron se Khun ?

Beqarari si Beqarari hai
Beqarari si Beqarari hai
Zindagi hai ke, phir bhi piyari hai

Din pareshan hai, raat bhari hai
Zindagi hai ke , phir bhi piyari hai
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Lyrics of a very beautiful song of "Bol" movie presented by "Shoaib Mansoor" and "GEO Tv".
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Shared & Designed By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Age of Loneliness


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Age of Loneliness
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It is the evening of loneliness,
your name is dancing with the wind,
In this darkness
Every rose of my heart's garden
seem black,

A night without you,
almost killing me and my soul,

I have no feelings of happiness,
Every part of my body is shouting
that I am Alone .. I am Alone ..

A dim light in this darkness
smiling on me ..

and the Rose you gave me is dead
and my tears are part of this ocean of loneliness...

Please

Forgive me for all wrongs I have done,
Love me for all the rights I have done,
I want to be your slave,
coz i am reached at age of Loneliness ... !
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Poem By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Image Designed by: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Thursday, 23 June 2011

Coke Studio on 3rd July 2011

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Coke Studio on 3rd July 2011
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Very very biggest evening coming up on 3rd July, 2011. Very famous artists will perform in this episode. Here we shared the promo of this episode, don't miss it on 3rd July, 2011.

The Team for this episode is as under:
  • Attaullah Khan Essa Khailwi 
  • Akhtar Chanal Zahrim with Komal Rizvi
  • Sanam Marvi with Sajjad Ali
  • The Sketches

The Promo is as under:


We have designed an image regarding this episode.
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Image Designed By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Wednesday, 22 June 2011

Jagjit Singh Ghazal Video

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Jagjit Singh Ghazal Video
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Koi Faryad Tere Dil me dabi ho jese
tu ne aankhon se koi baat kahi ho jese ..
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A very beautiful song by Jagjit Singh in a Indian Movie "Tum Bin"..
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Shared By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Tuesday, 21 June 2011

Coke Studio - Attaullah Khan Essa Khailwi

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Coke Studio - Attaullah Khan Essa Khailwi

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Attaullah Khan Niazi Esakhelvi is a very famous folk singer and and also a poet of Pakistan. He belongs to 'MIANWALI'. He is the only singer that made world record for the highest number of audio albums, which is listed in the Guinness book of records. 

The reason behind his success is that he sings only for the poor people. A healing effect in his voice. 

Attaullah has recently appeared in Coke Studio season 4 Episode 2 on June 5 2011 Singing his Well known Song.


  • Ni Uthan Wale Turjaane Ge - Coke Studio


which was from the best of Coke Studio.
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Image Designed By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Monday, 20 June 2011

Coke Studio - Abida Parveen


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Coke Studio - Abida Parveen
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Abida Parveen was born in 1954. She is a Pakistani singer of Sufi music especially "Sufiana Kalaam". 
She sings many ghazals, urdu love songs, and her kafiss (a solo genre followed by percussion and harmonium) are very unique and totally in style of sufi music.

Abida Parveen sings in different languages like Urdu, Sindhi, Seraiki, Punjabi and Persian. She is a legend of Pakistan.

She worked with many sufi singers but with Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan is very beautiful and it is considered one of the finest Sufi Music of the modernism.

Abida performed recently in the Pakistani TV show Coke Studio, In Coke Studio she sang three beautiful songs. 

  • Ramooz-e-Ishq
  • Nigah-e-Darwaishaan
  • Soz-e-Ishq.

Here we designed one of her beautiful picture fromm Coke Studio albums.
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Designed By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Coke Studio - Ith Naheen - Video and Mp3

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Coke Studio - Ith Naheen - Video and MP3
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Tera kiya kehna .
tu Sanam bhi hai, tu khuda bhi hai ....
Tera kiya kehna .
Ith naheen tey, kith naheen, eho kon peya bolenda bolenda ...
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Very beautiful singing by "Sanam Marvi" in the TV Show "Coke Studio".
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For MP3: 
http://www.pakmediarevolution.net/2011/06/coke-studio-4-sanam-marvi-ith-naheen-with-lyrics-download-audio-video-episode-3/

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Shared By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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For more please visit:
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http://artistic-edge.blogspot.com
http://www.artisticedge.net.tc
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Coke Studio - Sanam Marvi


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Coke Studio - Sanam Marvi
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Sanam Marvi is a very famous singer of Pakistan. She was born in Hyderabad. Her father name is Ghulam Rasool, a sufi singer. She started her musical education at the age of seven with her father. She is also trained by Ustad Fateh Ali Khan. 

She had performed in many concerts around the world belongs to sufi music. She sings music compositions of Baba Bulleh Shah, Baba Sheikh Farid, Sachal Sarmast, the Sufi Musicians from Sindh. She became more popular after her participation in Coke Studio, by her performances in live music atmosphere. 

Here we designed her photo from Coke Studio  for her fans.
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Designed By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
For more please visit:
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http://artistic-edge.blogspot.com
http://www.artisticedge.net.tc
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Sunday, 19 June 2011

Coke Studio - Tina Sani


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Coke Studio - Tina Sani
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Tina Sani was born in Dhaka. She is a female musician of Pakistan. She earned a diploma in design from Kabul. After this she moved to Karachi. In music she was trained in Classical Music from Ustaad Nizamuddin Khan and then by Ustaad Amrohvi.

She entered the professional music world in 1980 in a youth programme hosted by Alamgir.

She was influenced by Malika Pukhraj, Begum Akhtar, Mukhtar Begum and Farida Khanum but she has created her own style of singing in the Pakistan Music Industry. 

At recent Tina Sani has joined with the Coke Studio.

Here we have designed an image of Tina Sani.
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Designed By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
For more please visit:
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http://artistic-edge.blogspot.com
http://www.artisticedge.net.tc
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Coke Studio


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Coke Studio 
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A place where we recognized the sounds, where we understad the music.

Coke Studio - A Pakistani TV Show of exciting music and a mixture of modern and traditional / classical styles. The atmosphere of Coke Studio is very effective for music lovers like, A little light in a huge Darkness, and the colors of the set is also very creative and mixed up with the them of this TV Show.

Coke Studio presents the stars of music industry from Pakistan, a different music plat form where we can hear the old songs with the latest technology and different style of music.

Rohail Hyatt is a musician, producer, and a rock music artist belongs to Pakistan, known for his work with the popular musical band Vital Signs. He is one of the finest music producers also in Pakistan. He is the producer of Coke Studio.

Here we designed his photo for his fans and the Coke Studio Plat Form.
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Designed By: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
For more please visit:
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http://artistic-edge.blogspot.com
http://www.artisticedge.net.tc
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Friday, 17 June 2011

Sunset with a girl


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Sunset with a girl
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Once upon a time
I saw a girl on the sunset
waiting for someone ...
Ah ... That Sunset was incredible
The dark clouds flying
behind the girl ...
mixed with her hairs
I saw a girl on the sunset
Her shawl was dancing
with the moments of air,
Just beyond the sunset
Waits someone so fair
I saw a girl in the sunset
Her hair is in twirl style with shades of gold,
The colour of the sand and her eyes were sparkling in the last light of the day
I felt as if, they were diamonds in hand,
diamonds in hands, which ones are never sold ...

Now that sunset and the girl is my past
Ah ... My Past Days
When I saw a girl on the sunset
I dont want to live in my past memories
But I couldnt ...
But I couldnt ...
forget that sunset with a girl ... !
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Poetry By Syed Yawer Ali (Yaru Ali) - Artistic Edge
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Thursday, 16 June 2011

Designed Urdu Poetry Images


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Designed Urdu Poetry Images
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Graphic Designing is very important in publishing the designed poetry. When you want to publish urdu poetry through an Art Web Site then you should to be care about the image you use. 

Here I 've used a Beautiful Girl Image in this Urdu Poetry and I 've concentrated on her beautiful and artistic eyes. Because it is related to the poetry, which one I 've posted on that designed image.
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Designed by: Yaru Ali - Artistic Edge
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Wednesday, 15 June 2011

THE ERA OF CELEBRITY ILLUSTRATORS

Once upon a time, the world's largest media companies bragged in full page ads about their upcoming illustrations:

From the back cover of Life Magazine.  When was the last time you saw an ad like this?

Magazines urged readers to spend more time studying illustrations:


This was all driven by economics, of course.  The general public followed the work of top illustrators and made purchasing decisions based on their art:

Before the invention of movies and computer videos, illustrators were the George Lucas and Steven Spielberg of their day. They created magic images that captured the public imagination and shaped public taste.  They invented cultural icons:


This was the great power of stationary images in an era before people learned that pictures could also be made to move and talk.

Like the Cecile B. DeMille of his day, Gustave Dore (1832-1883) shaped the world's image of epic stories such as the Bible, Paradise Lost and Dante's Divine Comedy.  His books (and his visions) were everywhere.



Celebrity illustrators were were richly paid for their contribution to the mass entertainment industry. Charles Dana Gibson, who created the popular Gibson Girl, went from being a cartoonist for Life Magazine to taking over the entire magazine.  His work enabled him to retire to his own private 700 acre island. Illustrator Henry Raleigh earned enough from drawing illustrations for three or four months to spend the balance of the year traveling the world lavishly with family and friends. He spent freely, giving away thousands of dollars. He maintained a yacht, owned a mansion and kept a large studio in downtown Manhattan.

Those days are gone.  Like a huge peristaltic wave, the mass entertainment market has moved beyond illustration to other media.

There is nothing surprising about this.  The golden age of illustration began in the 19th century by crushing  the old fashioned wood engraving industry, which could no longer retain an audience when compared to color photo-engraving. Later, silent movies could not hold out for long against sound movies.  Black and white movies were similarly vanquished by color movies.  It remains to be seen what will happen with 3D, or 48 frame per second movies, or the next development after that. 

This evolution seems to be powered primarily by the economics of mass marketing.  There will always be a significant role for still pictures, but a medium that talks (and therefore doesn't require the consumer to read text), that moves (and therefore doesn't require the consumer to imagine the implications of a moment isolated by a static drawing), a medium that completely fills our sight, sound, olfactory and other senses, allowing us to passively absorb, seems to have a natural advantage over a medium that doesn't fill in all the blanks for us. 

I see no prospect of this trend reversing itself, barring a global electromagnetic pulse (EMP) from thermonuclear war that renders all electronic viewing devices useless.  If nuclear winter ever comes, illustrators can look forward to returning to their historic birthright as the powerful shamans who make magic images on the cave walls.

But for now, I think it is important to emphasize that, while illustration is no longer the centerpiece of the entertainment world, and the great peristaltic wave took celebrityhood and money with it, it did leave the "art" portion behind.  And that, my friends, is the most important part.

Wednesday, 8 June 2011

IS IT OKAY TO LIKE PULP ART?


Last week the Society of Illustrators opened a wonderful exhibition of pulp magazine covers from the 1930s and 40s.  The show includes nearly 90 paintings of scantily clad damsels in distress, hooded fiends with elaborate torture devices, and futuristic space heroes.  This is probably the most emotionally uncomplicated art you will ever find: big, juicy paintings with the open heart (and emotional maturity) of a 14 year old boy.

Some of the paintings, such as this gem by the great Baron Leydenfrost, are executed with astonishing skill:


But most of these pictures are painted with a technique as vulgar as their content. There was no room for subtle colors and elaborate compositions on a magazine rack crowded with competing pulp magazines.

The girls on these covers always seemed to be in peril, and ripe for rescue by the proper hero.  


Young male readers were tantalized by the prospect of what lay beyond those slightly parted dressing gowns or those strategically torn shirts.  They pored over these illustrations for clues to the mysteries that awaited them someday.  It's a mark of their innocence that their best plan for winning such favors was by rescuing a girl from space monsters.

If you're looking for a holiday from moral complexity, pulp art may be just the oasis for you. In fact, the owner of this marvelous collection, Robert Lesser, calls it “escape” art.  But its simple mindedness is the source of both its joyful strength and its gnawing weakness.

Which brings me to my question of the week: Is it okay to like pulp art?

Let's put aside that this stuff is politicallly incorrect.  My question is focused solely on artistic merit. Is this stuff anything more than “chewing gum for the eyes”?  What are we to make of art that is not particularly well painted and does not challenge us mentally or emotionally, that raises no questions and doesn't expand our vision, but is undeniably likable for nostalgic reasons?

Beryl Markham cautioned us about the temptation to look over our shoulder at simpler, bygone days:
Never turn back and never believe that an hour you remember is a better hour.... Passed years seem safe ones, vanquished ones, while the future lives in a cloud, formidable from a distance. The cloud clears as you enter it. I have learned this, but like everyone I learned it late.
This is a worthy sentiment, but I nevertheless think pulp art is a valid art form.  The moral obviousness of these pictures gives them an ethical virility that you won't find in more sophisticated art. They are akin to religious paintings from the age of faith, which left no ambiguity about who was the bad guy, who was the hero, and which blonde needed to be rescued.

The fact that such ethical clarity is an illusion doesn’t mean it isn't art.