Most people believe art should be beautiful
What is Art?
·
The word Art was once
used in the same context as Craft because they both involved specialized
skills.
Fine arts; painting, sculpture, architecture, music, and poetry.
Artist and Audience
·
A lot started in
apprenticeships.
Some art is more universally viewed/perceived by an audience.
Usually an illustration was the work of multiple artists,
Some artists create more for themselves rather than others or museums.
Artist's task is pursue his/her own vision of art; express his/her own ideas,
insights, and feelings; and to create as inner necessity dictates.
Art and Beauty
·
Most people believe
art should be beautiful.
Beauty and art were originally discussed together because both were felt to
provide pleasure.
We don't always get pleasure when looking at a piece of art. Art portrays a
wide variety of emotions.
The experience of looking at a piece of art is valuable in its own sake.
Beauty does not have one distinct deifnition and has a wide interpretation.
Disinterested
Contemplation
·
We set aside any
personal, practical stake we might have in what we are looking at.
Example: If we are examining a peach to see whether it is ripe enough to eat,
we are contemplating it with direct personal interest. If we step back to
admire its color, its texture, its roundness,, with no thought of eating it,
then we are contemplating it disinterestedly.
Art and Appearances
·
Art changed in a way
that the image wasn't the same as it would look in person.
"Why should the artist persist in treating subjects that can be
established so clearly with the lens of a camera" -Picasso.
Representational and
Abstract Art
·
First Communion by
Picasso is representational because it presents the visual world in such a way
that we recognize it. This approach is naturalistic.
Seated Woman Holding a Fan by Picasso is abstract. He used the appearances of
the world as a starting point and simplified or exaggerated certain aspects.
Trompe L'oeil: works so convincingly lifelike that we can be fooled for a
moment that they are real.
Stylized: describes representational art that conforms to a preset style or set
of conventions for depicting the world.
Nonrepresentational
Art
·
Nonrepresentational or
nonobjective: developed from the search for art's essence in the wake of the
challenge presented by photography.
Style
·
Refers to a
characteristic or group of characteristics that we recognize as constant,
recurring, or coherent.
Style is the result of a series of choices.
Cultural styles, period or historical styles, and school styles.
Art and Meaning
·
"What is the
artist trying to say?"
Meaning in art is rarely simple and straightforward.
Art inspires interpretations that are many and changeable.
Art is always about something.
Key terms: Form, content, iconography, and context.
Form and Content
·
Form: the way a work
of art looks. Includes size, shape, materials, color, and composition.
Content: what a work of art is about. (Subject matter).
Iconography
·
Literally
"describing images," involves identifying, describing, and
interpreting subject matter in art.
Context
·
Context: its web of
connections to the larger world of human culture.
Think of the time in which the piece was created and how it affected the people
of the time.
Art and Objects
·
A painting is an
object but also the result of a process.
Installation: a space is presented as a work of art that can be entered,
explored, experienced, and reflected upon.
Idea based art: conceptual art.
Art has a much greater interpretation than when it first began.