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Performance art is art in which the actions of an individual or a group at a
particular place and in a particular time constitute the work. It can happen
anywhere, at any time, or for any length of time. Performance art can be any
situation that involves four basic elements: time, space, the performer's body
and a relationship between performer and audience. It is opposed to painting or
sculpture, for example, where an object constitutes the work. Of course the
lines are often blurred. For instance, the work of Survival Research
Laboratories is considered by most to be "performance art", yet the performers
are actually machines.
Although performance art could be said to include relatively mainstream
activities such as theater, dance, music, and circus-related things like fire
breathing, juggling, and gymnastics, these are normally instead known as the
performing arts. Performance art is a term usually reserved to refer to a kind
of usually avant-garde or conceptual art which grew out of the visual arts.
Performance art, as the term is usually understood, began to be identified in
the 1960s with the work of artists such as Yves Klein, Vito Acconci, Hermann
Nitsch, Chris Burden, Carolee Schneemann, Yoko Ono, Joseph Beuys, Wolf Vostell
and Allan Kaprow, who coined the term happenings. In 1970 the British-based
pair, Gilbert and George, created the first of their "living sculpture"
performances when they painted themselves gold and sang "Underneath The Arches"
for extended periods. Alongside pioneering work in video art by Jud Yalkut and
others, some performance artists began combining video with other media to
create experimental works like those of Chicago's Sandra Binion, who elevated
mundane activities like ironing clothes, scrubbing steps, dining and doing
laundry into living art. Binion has performed all over the world and is highly
regarded as an artist in Europe.
Western cultural theorists often trace performance art activity back to the
beginning of the 20th century. Dada for example, provided a significant
progenitor with the unconventional performances of poetry, often at the Cabaret
Voltaire, by the likes of Richard Huelsenbeck and Tristan Tzara. However, there
are accounts of Renaissance artists putting on public performances that could be
said to be early ancestors to modern performance art. Some performance artists
point to other traditions, ranging from tribal ritual to sporting events.
Performance art activity is not confined to European art traditions; many
notable practitioners can be found in the United States, Asia, and Latin
America.
Roselee Goldberg states in Performance Art: From Futurism to the Present:
“Performance has been a way of appealing directly to a large public, as well as
shocking audiences into reassessing their own notions of art and its relation to
culture. Conversely, public interest in the medium, especially in the 1980s,
stems from an apparent desire of that public to gain access to the art world, to
be a spectator of its ritual and its distinct community, and to be surprised by
the unexpected, always unorthodox presentations that the artists devise. The
work may be presented solo or with a group, with lighting, music or visuals made
by the performance artist him or herself, or in collaboration, and performed in
places ranging from an art gallery or museum to an “alternative space”, a
theatre, café, bar or street corner. Unlike theatre, the performer is the
artist, seldom a character like an actor, and the content rarely follows a
traditional plot or narrative. The performance might be a series of intimate
gestures or large-scale visual theatre, lasting from a few minutes to many
hours; it might be performed only once or repeated several times, with or
without a prepared script, spontaneously improvised, or rehearsed over many
months.”
Performance art genres include body art, fluxus, happening, action poetry, and
intermedia. Some artists, e.g. the Viennese Actionists and neo-Dadaists, prefer
to use the terms live art, "action art", intervention or "manoeuvre" to describe
their activities. These activities are also sometimes referred to simply as
"actions".
Art refers to a diverse range of human activities and artifacts, and may be used
to cover all or any of the arts, including music, literature and other forms. It
is most often used to refer specifically to the visual arts, including mediums
such as painting, sculpture, and printmaking. However it can also be applied to
forms of art that stimulate the other senses, such as music, an auditory art.
Aesthetics is the branch of philosophy which considers art.
Visual art is defined as the arrangement of colors, forms, or other elements "in
a manner that affects the sense of beauty, specifically the production of the
beautiful in a graphic or plastic medium". The nature of art has been described
by Richard Wollheim as "one of the most elusive of the traditional problems of
human culture". It has been defined as a vehicle for the expression or
communication of emotions and ideas, a means for exploring and appreciating
formal elements for their own sake, and as mimesis or representation. Leo
Tolstoy identified art as a use of indirect means to communicate from one person
to another. Benedetto Croce and R.G. Collingwood advanced the idealist view that
art expresses emotions, and that the work of art therefore essentially exists in
the mind of the creator. Art as form has its roots in the philosophy of Immanuel
Kant, and was developed in the early twentieth century by Roger Fry and Clive
Bell. Art as mimesis or representation has deep roots in the philosophy of
Aristotle.
Traditionally the term art was used to refer to any skill or mastery, a concept
which altered during the Romantic period, when art came to be seen as "a special
faculty of the human mind to be classified with religion and science".
Generally art is a (product of) human activity, made with the intention of
stimulating the human senses as well as the human mind; by transmitting emotions
and/or ideas. Beyond this description, there is no general agreed-upon
definition of art, since defining the boundaries of "art" is subjective.
The evaluation of art has become especially problematic since the 20th century.
Wollheim distinguishes three approaches: the Realist, whereby aesthetic quality
is an absolute value independent of any human view; the Objectivist, whereby it
is also an absolute value, but is dependent on general human experience; and the
Relativist position, whereby it is not an absolute value, but depends on, and
varies with, the human experience of different humans.
An object may be characterized by the intentions, or lack thereof, of its
creator, regardless of its apparent purpose. A cup, which ostensibly can be used
as a container, may be considered art if intended solely as an ornament, while a
painting may be deemed craft if mass-produced.
The Café Terrace on the Place du Forum, Arles, at Night, Vincent van Gogh,
September 1888.Contents
Usage
The most common usage of the word "art," which rose to prominence after 1750, is
understood to denote skill used to produce an aesthetic result. Britannica
Online defines it as "the use of skill and imagination in the creation of
aesthetic objects, environments, or experiences that can be shared with others."
By any of these definitions of the word, artistic works have existed for almost
as long as humankind: from early pre-historic art to contemporary art.
Many books and journal articles have been written about the concept of "art".
Where Adorno said in 1970 "It is now taken for granted that nothing which
concerns art can be taken for granted any more[...]," in 1998, Walt Weaver
claimed that "It is self-evident that nothing concerning art is self-evident
anymore."
The first and broadest sense of art is the one that has remained closest to the
older Latin meaning, which roughly translates to "skill" or "craft," and also
from an Indo-European root meaning "arrangement" or "to arrange". In this sense,
art is whatever is described as having undergone a deliberate process of
arrangement by an agent. A few examples where this meaning proves very broad
include artifact, artificial, artifice, artillery, medical arts, and military
arts. However, there are many other colloquial uses of the word, all with some
relation to its etymology.
The second and more recent sense of the word art is as an abbreviation for
creative art or fine art. Fine art means that a skill is being used to express
the artist’s creativity, or to engage the audience’s aesthetic sensibilities, or
to draw the audience towards consideration of the finer things. Often, if the
skill is being used in a common or practical way, people will consider it a
craft instead of art. Likewise, if the skill is being used in a commercial or
industrial way, it will be considered Commercial art instead of art. On the
other hand, crafts and design are sometimes considered applied art. Some art
followers have argued that the difference between fine art and applied art has
more to do with value judgments made about the art than any clear definitional
difference. However, even fine art often has goals beyond pure creativity and
self-expression. The purpose of works of art may be to communicate ideas, such
as in politically-, spiritually-, or philosophically-motivated art; to create a
sense of beauty (see aesthetics); to explore the nature of perception; for
pleasure; or to generate strong emotions. The purpose may also be seemingly
nonexistent.
Painting by Song Dynasty artist Ma Lin, c. 1250. 24,8 × 25,2 cm.The ultimate
derivation of fine in fine art comes from the philosophy of Aristotle, who
proposed four causes or explanations of a thing. The final cause of a thing is
the purpose for its existence, and the term fine art is derived from this
notion. If the final cause of an artwork is simply the artwork itself, "art for
art's sake", and not a means to another end, then that artwork could
appropriately be called fine. The closely related concept of beauty is
classically defined as "that which when seen, pleases". Pleasure is the final
cause of beauty and thus is not a means to another end, but an end in itself.
Art can describe several things: a study of creative skill, a process of using
the creative skill, a product of the creative skill, or the audience’s
experience with the creative skill. The creative arts (art as discipline) are a
collection of disciplines (arts) that produce artworks (art as objects) that are
compelled by a personal drive (art as activity) and echo or reflect a message,
mood, or symbolism for the viewer to interpret (art as experience). Artworks can
be defined by purposeful, creative interpretations of limitless concepts or
ideas in order to communicate something to another person. Artworks can be
explicitly made for this purpose or interpreted based on images or objects.
Art is something that stimulates an individual's thoughts, emotions, beliefs, or
ideas through the senses. It is also an expression of an idea and it can take
many different forms and serve many different purposes.
Although the application of scientific theories to derive a new scientific
theory involves skill and results in the "creation" of something new, this
represents science only and is not categorized as art.
Theories
Fountain by Marcel Duchamp. 1917In the nineteenth century, artists were
primarily concerned with ideas of truth and beauty: typically the aesthetic
theorist John Ruskin, who championed the raw naturalism of J. M. W. Turner, saw
art's role as the communication by artifice of an essential truth that could
only be found in nature. There was a radical break in the thinking about art in
the early twentieth century with the arrival of Modernism, and then in the late
twentieth century with the advent of postmodernism. Clement Greenberg's 1960
article "Modernist Painting" defined Modern Art as "the use of characteristic
methods of a discipline to criticize the discipline itself".
Greenberg originally applied this idea to the Abstract Expressionist movement
and used it as a way to understand and justify flat (non-illusionistic) abstract
painting:
Realistic, naturalistic art had dissembled the medium, using art to conceal art;
modernism used art to call attention to art. The limitations that constitute the
medium of painting – the flat surface, the shape of the support, the properties
of the pigment — were treated by the Old Masters as negative factors that could
be acknowledged only implicitly or indirectly. Under Modernism these same
limitations came to be regarded as positive factors, and were acknowledged
openly.
Though only originally intended as a way of understanding a specific set of
artists, this definition of Modern Art underlies most of the ideas of art within
the various art movements of the 20th century and early 21st century. The art of
Marcel Duchamp becomes clear when seen within this context; when submitting a
urinal, titled fountain, to the Society of Independent Artists exhibit in 1917
he was critiquing the art exhibition using its own methods.
Andy Warhol became an important artist through critiquing popular culture, as
well as the art world, through the language of that popular culture. The later
postmodern artists of the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s took these ideas further by
expanding this technique of self-criticism beyond high art to all cultural
image-making, including fashion images, comics, billboards and pornography.
Utility
One of the defining characteristics of fine art as opposed to applied art is the
absence of any clear usefulness or utilitarian value. However, this requirement
is sometimes criticized as being class prejudice against labor and utility.
Opponents of the view that art cannot be useful, argue that all human activity
has some utilitarian function, and the objects claimed to be "non-utilitarian"
actually have the function of attempting to mystify and codify flawed social
hierarchies. It is also sometimes argued that even seemingly non-useful art is
not useless, but rather that its use is the effect it has on the psyche of the
creator or viewer.
Art is also used by art therapists, psychotherapists and clinical psychologists
as art therapy. Art can also be used as a tool of Personality Test. The end
product is not the principal goal in this case, but rather a process of healing,
through creative acts, is sought. The resultant piece of artwork may also offer
insight into the troubles experienced by the subject and may suggest suitable
approaches to be used in more conventional forms of psychiatric therapy.
Spray-paint graffiti on a wall in Rome.
Graffiti art and other types of street art are graphics and images that are
spray-painted or stencilled on publicly viewable walls, buildings, buses,
trains, and bridges, usually without permission. This type of art is part of
various youth cultures, such as the US hip-hop culture. It is used to express
political views and depict creative images.
In a social context, art can serve to boost the public's morale. Art is often
utilized as a form of propaganda, and thus can be used to subtly influence
popular conceptions or mood. In some cases, artworks are appropriated to be used
in this manner, without the creator having initially intended the art to be used
as propaganda.
From a more anthropological perspective, art is often a way of passing ideas and
concepts on to later generations in a (somewhat) universal language. The
interpretation of this language depends upon the observer’s perspective and
context. So conversely the very subjectivity of art demonstrates its importance
in facilitating the exchange and discussion of rival ideas, or to provide a
social context in which disparate groups of people might congregate and mingle.
Classification disputes
Classificatory disputes about art
Image of a horse from the Lascaux caves.It is common in the history of art for
people to dispute whether a particular form or work, or particular piece of work
counts as art or not. In fact for much of the past century the idea of art has
been to simply challenge what art is. Philosophers of Art call these disputes
“classificatory disputes about art.” For example, Ancient Greek philosophers
debated about whether or not ethics should be considered the "art of living
well". Classificatory disputes in the 20th century included: cubist and
impressionist paintings, Duchamp’s Fountain, the movies, superlative imitations
of banknotes, propaganda, and even a crucifix immersed in urine. Conceptual art
often intentionally pushes the boundaries of what counts as art and a number of
recent conceptual artists, such as Damien Hirst and Tracy Emin have produced
works about which there are active disputes. Video games and role-playing games
are both fields where some recent critics have asserted that they do count as
art, and some have asserted that they do not.
Philosopher David Novitz has argued that disagreement about the definition of
art are rarely the heart of the problem. Rather, "the passionate concerns and
interests that humans vest in their social life" are "so much a part of all
classificatory disputes about art" (Novitz, 1996). According to Novitz,
classificatory disputes are more often disputes about our values and where we
are trying to go with our society than they are about theory proper. For
example, when the Daily Mail criticized Hirst's and Emin’s work by arguing "For
1,000 years art has been one of our great civilising forces. Today, pickled
sheep and soiled beds threaten to make barbarians of us all" they are not
advancing a definition or theory about art, but questioning the value of Hirst’s
and Emin’s work.
Controversial art
Theodore Gericault's "Raft of the Medusa" (1820), was a social commentary on a
current event, unprecedented at the time. Edouard Manet's "Le Déjeuner sur
l'Herbe" (1863), was considered scandalous not because of the nude woman, but
because she is seated next to fully-dressed men. John Singer Sargent's "Madame
Pierre Gautreau (Madam X)" (1884), caused a huge uproar over the reddish pink
used to color the woman's ear lobe, considered far too suggestive and supposedly
ruining the high-society model's reputation.
In the twentieth century, Pablo Picasso's Guernica (1937) used arresting cubist
techniques and stark monochromatic oils, to depict the harrowing consequences of
a contemporary bombing of a small, ancient Basque town. Leon Golub's
Interrogation III (1981), depicts a female nude, hooded detainee strapped to a
chair, her legs open to reveal her sexual organs, surrounded by two tormentors
dressed in everyday clothing. Andres Serrano's Piss Christ (1989) is a
photograph of a crucifix, sacred to the Christian religion and representing
Christ's sacrifice and final suffering, submerged in a glass of the artist's own
urine. The resulting uproar led to comments in the United States Senate about
public funding of the arts.
In the twenty-first century, Eric Fischl created Tumbling Woman as a memorial to
those who jumped or fell to their death in the attacks on the World Trade Center
on September 11, 2001. Initially installed at Rockefeller Center in New York
City, within a year the work was removed as too disturbing.
Art, class and value
Versailles: Louis Le Vau opened up the interior court to create the expansive
entrance cour d'honneur, later copied all over EuropeArt has been perceived by
some as belonging to some social classes and often excluding others. In this
context, art is seen as an upper-class activity associated with wealth, the
ability to purchase art, and the leisure required to pursue or enjoy it. For
example, the palaces of Versailles or the Hermitage in St. Petersburg with their
vast collections of art, amassed by the fabulously wealthy royalty of Europe
exemplify this view. Collecting such art is the preserve of the rich, or of
governments and institutions.
Fine and expensive goods have been popular markers of status in many cultures,
and continue to be so today. There has been a cultural push in the other
direction since at least 1793, when the Louvre, which had been a private palace
of the Kings of France, was opened to the public as an art museum during the
French Revolution. Most modern public museums and art education programs for
children in schools can be traced back to this impulse to have art available to
everyone. Museums in the United States tend to be gifts from the very rich to
the masses (The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, for example, was
created by John Taylor Johnston, a railroad executive whose personal art
collection seeded the museum.) But despite all this, at least one of the
important functions of art in the 21st century remains as a marker of wealth and
social status.
Performance by Joseph Beuys, 1978 : Everyone an artist — On the way to the
libertarian form of the social organismThere have been attempts by artists to
create art that can not be bought by the wealthy as a status object. One of the
prime original motivators of much of the art of the late 1960s and 1970s was to
create art that could not be bought and sold. It is "necessary to present
something more than mere objects" said the major post war German artist Joseph
Beuys. This time period saw the rise of such things as performance art, video
art, and conceptual art. The idea was that if the artwork was a performance that
would leave nothing behind, or was simply an idea, it could not be bought and
sold. "Democratic precepts revolving around the idea that a work of art is a
commodity impelled the aesthetic innovation which germinated in the mid-1960s
and was reaped throughout the 1970s. Artists broadly identified under the
heading of Conceptual art... substituting performance and publishing activities
for engagement with both the material and materialistic concerns of painted or
sculptural form... [have] endeavored to undermine the art object qua object."
In the decades since, these ideas have been somewhat lost as the art market has
learned to sell limited edition DVDs of video works, invitations to exclusive
performance art pieces, and the objects left over from conceptual pieces. Many
of these performances create works that are only understood by the elite who
have been educated as to why an idea or video or piece of apparent garbage may
be considered art. The marker of status becomes understanding the work instead
of necessarily owning it, and the artwork remains an upper-class activity. "With
the widespread use of DVD recording technology in the early 2000s, artists, and
the gallery system that derives its profits from the sale of artworks, gained an
important means of controlling the sale of video and computer artworks in
limited editions to collectors." Another example of this shift is the art of
Chris Burden. Chris Burden is most famous for his 1971 performance art piece
Shoot in which he had a friend shoot him in the arm with a 22 rifle (and in
which nothing was sold). By the late 1980s in exhibitions and a museum
retrospective he was exhibiting "relics" of early performance art pieces in
plexiglass boxes, including two nails that he used to nail himself to the back
of a Volkswagen Beetle in the 1974 artwork Trans-Fixed. By 2003 he was selling
the artwork Gold Bullets, 22-karat gold bullets that called to mind his most
famous work, in plexiglass boxes set on a high pedestal at the Gagosian Gallery.
This allowed collectors to buy bullets that allude to this important work, that
are by this artist, that seem to have other added value in that they are made of
gold, and that will be understood as important by others that know the history
of conceptual art.
Forms, genres, mediums, and styles
The arts
The creative arts are often divided into more specific categories, such as
decorative arts, plastic arts, performing arts, or literature. So for example
painting is a form of visual art, and poetry is a form of literature.
An art form is a specific form for artistic expression to take, it is a more
specific term than art in general, but less specific than genre.
Some examples include, but are by no means limited to:
Acting
Architecture
Ceramics
Choreography
Cinema
Digital art
Drawing
Dance
Graphic design
Mixed media
Mosaic
Music
Painting
Performance art
Photography
Poetry
Printmaking
Sculpture
Theatre
An artistic medium is the substance the artistic work is made out of. So for
example, stone and bronze are both mediums that sculpture uses sometimes.
Multiple forms can share a medium (poetry and music, both use sound), or one
form can use multiple media.
The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Katsushika Hokusai (Japanese, 1760–1849), colored
woodcut print
Detail of Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa, showing the painting technique of
sfumatoA genre is a set of conventions and styles within an art form and media.
For instance, well recognized genres in film, for example, are western, horror
and romantic comedy. Genres in music include death metal and trip hop. Genres in
painting include still life, and pastorial landscape. A particular work of art
may bend or combine genre but each genre has a recognizable group of
conventions, clichés and troupes. (One note: the word genre has a second older
meaning within painting, genre painting was a phrase used in the 17th to 19th
century to refer specifically to paintings of scenes of everyday life and can
still be used in this way.)
An artwork, artist’s, or movements style is the distinctive method and form that
art takes. Any loose brushy, dripped or poured abstaract painting is called
expressionistic (with a lower case "e" and the "ic" at the end). Often these
styles are linked with a particular historical period, set of ideas, and
particular artistic movement. So Jackson Pollock is called an Abstract
Expressionist. Because a particular style has very specific cultural meanings it
is important to be sensitive to differences in technique. Roy Lichtenstein's
paintings are not pointillist, even though it uses of dots, because it is not
aligned with the original proponents of Pointillism. Lichtenstein used Ben-Day
dots: they are evenly-spaced and create flat areas of color. These types of dots
were used to color comic strips and are intended to combine the high art of
painting with the low art of comics - to comment on culture and its unreality.
Pointillism employs dots that are spaced in a way to create variation in color
and depth - it was an attempt to paint images that were closer to the way we
really see color - an attempt to get closer to reality. They both use dots but
the meaning is opposite.
These are all ways of beginning to define a work of art, to narrow it down.
"Imagine you are an art critic whose mission is to compare the meanings you find
in a wide range of individual artworks. How would you proceed with your task?
One way to begin is to examine the materials each artist selected in making an
object, image video, or event. The decision to cast a sculpture in bronze, for
instance, inevitably effects its meaning; the work becomes something different
than if it had been cast in gold or plastic or chocolate, even if everything
else about the artwork remained the same. Next, you might examine how the
materials in each artwork have become an arrangement of shapes, colors,
textures, and lines. These, in turn, are organized into various patterns and
compositional structures. In your interpretation, you would comment on how
salient features of the form contribute to the overall meaning of the finished
artwork. [But in the end] the meaning of most artworks... is not exhausted by a
discussion of materials, techniques, and form. Most interpretations also include
a discussion of the ideas and feelings the artwork engenders."
History
History of Art
Venus of WillendorfArt predates history; sculptures, cave paintings, rock
paintings, and petroglyphs from the Upper Paleolithic starting roughly 40,000
years ago have been found, but the precise meaning of such art is often disputed
because so little is known about the cultures that produced them. The oldest art
objects in the world: a series of tiny, drilled snail shells about 75,000yrs
old, were discovered in a South African cave, see Art of South Africa.
The great traditions in art have a foundation in the art of one of the great
ancient civilizations: Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia, India, China, Greece,
Rome or Arabia (ancient Yemen and Oman). Each of these centers of early
civilization developed a unique and characteristic style in their art. Because
of the size and duration these civilizations, more of their art works have
survived and more of their influence has been transmitted to other cultures and
later times. They have also provided the first records of how artists worked.
For example, this period of Greek art saw a veneration of the human physical
form and the development of equivalent skills to show musculature, poise, beauty
and anatomically correct proportions
In Byzantine and Gothic art of the Western Middle Ages, art focused on the
expression of Biblical and not material truths, and emphasized methods which
would show the higher unseen glory of a heavenly world, such as the use of gold
in paintings, or glass in mosaics or windows, which also presented figures in
idealized, patterned (i.e. "flat") forms.
The stylized signature of Sultan Mahmud II of the Ottoman Empire was written in
Arabic calligraphy. It reads Mahmud Khan son of Abdulhamid is forever
victorious.The western Renaissance saw a return to valuation of the material
world, and the place of humans in it, and this paradigm shift is reflected in
art forms, which show the corporeality of the human body, and the three
dimensional reality of landscape.
Landscape of pine valley, by Ming Dynasty artist Chen Hongshou.In the east,
Islamic art's rejection of iconography led to emphasis on geometric patterns,
Islamic calligraphy, and architecture. Further east, religion dominated artistic
styles and forms too. India and Tibet saw emphasis on painted sculptures and
dance with religious painting borrowing many conventions from sculpture and
tending to bright contrasting colors with emphasis on outlines. China saw many
art forms flourish, jade carving, bronzework, pottery (including the stunning
terracotta army of Emperor Qin), poetry, calligraphy, music, painting, drama,
fiction, etc. Chinese styles vary greatly from era to era and are traditionally
named after the ruling dynasty. So, for example, Tang Dynasty paintings are
monochromatic and sparse, emphasizing idealized landscapes, but Ming Dynasty
paintings are busy, colorful, and focus on telling stories via setting and
composition. Japan names its styles after imperial dynasties too, and also saw
much interplay between the styles of calligraphy and painting. Woodblock
printing became important in Japan after the 17th century.
The western Age of Enlightenment in the 18th century saw artistic depictions of
physical and rational certainties of the clockwork universe, as well as
politically revolutionary visions of a post-monarchist world, such as Blake’s
portrayal of Newton as a divine geometer, or David’s propagandistic paintings.
This led to Romantic rejections of this in favor of pictures of the emotional
side and individuality of humans, exemplified in the novels of Goethe. The late
19th century then saw a host of artistic movements, such as academic art,
symbolism, impressionism and fauvism among others.
By the 20th century these pictures were falling apart, shattered not only by new
discoveries of relativity by Einstein and of unseen psychology by Freud, but
also by unprecedented technological development accelerated by the implosion of
civilisation in two world wars. The history of twentieth century art is a
narrative of endless possibilities and the search for new standards, each being
torn down in succession by the next. Thus the parameters of Impressionism,
Expressionism, Fauvism, Cubism, Dadaism, Surrealism, etc cannot be maintained
very much beyond the time of their invention. Increasing global interaction
during this time saw an equivalent influence of other cultures into Western art,
such as Pablo Picasso being influenced by African sculpture. Japanese woodblock
prints (which had themselves been influenced by Western Renaissance
draftsmanship) had an immense influence on Impressionism and subsequent
development. Then African sculptures were taken up by Picasso and to some extent
by Matisse. Similarly, the west has had huge impacts on Eastern art in 19th and
20th century, with originally western ideas like Communism and Post-Modernism
exerting powerful influence on artistic styles.
Modernism, the idealistic search for truth, gave way in the latter half of the
20th century to a realization of its unattainability. Relativity was accepted as
an unavoidable truth, which led to the period of contemporary art and postmodern
criticism, where cultures of the world and of history are seen as changing
forms, which can be appreciated and drawn from only with irony. Furthermore the
separation of cultures is increasingly blurred and some argue it is now more
appropriate to think in terms of a global culture, rather than regional
cultures.
Characteristics
Art tends to facilitate intuitive rather than rational understanding, and is
usually consciously created with this intention. Fine art intentionally serves
no other purpose. As a result of this impetus, works of art are elusive,
refractive to attempts at classification, because they can be appreciated in
more than one way, and are often susceptible to many different interpretations.
For example, in the case of Gericault's Raft of the Medusa, special knowledge
concerning the shipwreck that the painting depicts is not a prerequisite to
appreciating it, but allows the appreciation of Gericault's political intentions
in the piece.
Even art that superficially depicts a mundane event or object, may invite
reflection upon elevated themes.
Traditionally, the highest achievements of art demonstrate a high level of
ability or fluency within a medium. This characteristic might be considered a
point of contention, since many modern artists (most notably, conceptual
artists) do not themselves create the works they conceive, or do not even create
the work in a conventional, demonstrative sense, for instance, Tracey Emin's My
Bed. Art has a transformative capacity: confers particularly appealing or
aesthetically satisfying structures or forms upon an original set of unrelated,
passive constituents.
Skill
Adam. Detail from Michelangelo's fresco in the Cappella Sistina (1511)Art can
connote a sense of trained ability or mastery of a medium. Art can also simply
refer to the developed and efficient use of a language to convey meaning with
immediacy and or depth.
Basically, art is an act of expressing our feelings, thoughts, and observations.
There is an understanding that is reached with the material as a result of
handling it, which facilitates one's thought processes.
A common view is that the epithet “art”, particular in its elevated sense,
requires a certain level of creative expertise by the artist, whether this be a
demonstration of technical ability or an originality in stylistic approach such
as in the plays of Shakespeare, or a combination of these two. For example, a
common contemporary criticism of some modern art occurs along the lines of
objecting to the apparent lack of skill or ability required in the production of
the artistic object. One might take Tracey Emin's My Bed, or Hirst's The
Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living, as examples of
pieces wherein the artist exercised little to no traditionally recognised set of
skills, but may be said to have innovated by exercising skill in manipulating
the mass media as a medium. In the first case, Emin simply slept (and engaged in
other activities) in her bed before placing the result in a gallery. She has
been insistent that there is a high degree of selection and arrangement in this
work, which include objects such as underwear and bottles around the bed. The
shocking mundanity of this arrangement has proved to be startling enough to lead
others to begin to interpret the work as art. In the second case, Hirst came up
with the conceptual design for the artwork. Although he physically participated
in the creation of this piece, he has left the eventual creation of many other
works to employed artisans. In this case the celebrity of Hirst is founded
entirely on his ability to produce shocking concepts. The actual production is,
as with most objects, a matter of assembly. These approaches are exemplary of a
particular kind of contemporary art known as conceptual art.
Judgments of value
Aboriginal hollow log tombs. National Gallery, Canberra, AustraliaSomewhat in
relation to the above, the word art is also used to apply judgments of value, as
in such expressions like "that meal was a work of art" (the cook is an artist),
or "the art of deception," (the highly attained level of skill of the deceiver
is praised). It is this use of the word as a measure of high quality and high
value that gives the term its flavor of subjectivity.
Making judgments of value requires a basis for criticism. At the simplest level,
a way to determine whether the impact of the object on the senses meets the
criteria to be considered art, is whether it is perceived to be attractive or
repulsive. Though perception is always colored by experience, and is necessarily
subjective, it is commonly taken that - that which is not aesthetically
satisfying in some fashion cannot be art. However, "good" art is not always or
even regularly aesthetically appealing to a majority of viewers. In other words,
an artist's prime motivation need not be the pursuit of the aesthetic. Also, art
often depicts terrible images made for social, moral, or thought-provoking
reasons. For example, Francisco Goya's painting depicting the Spanish shootings
of 3rd of May 1808, is a graphic depiction of a firing squad executing several
pleading civilians. Yet at the same time, the horrific imagery demonstrates
Goya's keen artistic ability in composition and execution and produces fitting
social and political outrage. Thus, the debate continues as to what mode of
aesthetic satisfaction, if any, is required to define 'art'.
The assumption of new values or the rebellion against accepted notions of what
is aesthetically superior need not occur concurrently with a complete
abandonment of the pursuit of that which is aesthetically appealing. Indeed, the
reverse is often true, that in the revision of what is popularly conceived of as
being aesthetically appealing, allows for a re-invigoration of aesthetic
sensibility, and a new appreciation for the standards of art itself. Countless
schools have proposed their own ways to define quality, yet they all seem to
agree in at least one point: once their aesthetic choices are accepted, the
value of the work of art is determined by its capacity to transcend the limits
of its chosen medium in order to strike some universal chord by the rarity of
the skill of the artist or in its accurate reflection in what is termed the
zeitgeist.
Communicating emotion
Art appeals to many of the human emotions. It can arouse aesthetic or moral
feelings, and can be understood as a way of communicating these feelings.
Artists express something so that their audience is aroused to some extent, but
they do not have to do so consciously. Art explores what is commonly termed as
the human condition that is essentially what it is to be human. Effective art
often brings about some new insight concerning the human condition either singly
or en-mass, which is not necessarily always positive, or necessarily widens the
boundaries of collective human ability. The degree of skill that the artist has,
will affect their ability to trigger an emotional response and thereby provide
new insights, the ability to manipulate them at will shows exemplary skill and
determination.

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