Art Lectures
Art Lectures
Art Lectures
Meaning of Humanities
Humanus – Humanitas – Human, Humanity – it refers to the quality of being a human; huma, civilized,
cultured)
Branch of Learning – it refers to the study of the arts. As a study, its material object is “artwork” and its
formal object is “creativity and appreciation.”
Every creation around you which is made by human beings represents someone’s humanity. The
chair you're sitting in, the clothes you're wearing, the building you're in, or your home, even the time of
day which people created, all are representative of someone's humanity -- their human-ness. In other
words, everything that human beings have created can be classified as part of the humanities.
Contrast:
Humanities: Explicit understanding of artworks – extensions of his being (man).
Philosophy: Implicit understanding of himself as composed of body and soul.
All art demands experience. There can be no appreciation of art without experience. An experience is
something that affects your life.
2. Experience is accompanied by emotion or emotional reaction. You like it or you do not like it.
The word art originally meant skill, ability, or craft (corresponding to the Greek techne from which we
derive the words like technical and technique). In the ancient world, a "work of art" was simply any
object that required skill or craft in its production. Only gradually, beginning about the middle of the
17th century, did work of art mean a work of fine or high art.
The artisan or the craftsman is not expected to be original and he is good at his job to the extent that he
can successfully follow the relevant rules. A work of a craft is good if it matches the appropriate
template and performs the desired function.
The artist must be creative and original. Good art cannot be produced by slavish-rule following and
imitation. Great artists are genius whose works transcend the rules and conventions of their time.
The works of art, most of the times, fall under the third class.
Disinterested – not determined by any personal or subjective interest. We take pleasure in something
because we judge it beautiful in itself, rather than judging it beautiful because we find it pleasurable.
Example: I like this artwork because it reminds me of the safety and warmth of our hometown. It is
your own pleasure that serves as the criterion in judging the art as beautiful. Artworks are beautiful in
themselves no matter they could give us subjective pleasure or not.
The following are the arguments that would separate each other from a single category:
Diversity in Arts
The arts are remarkable in their diversity, not only in the subject matter but also in the materials and in
the forms. No rules can govern either in creation or in the appreciation. The artist is influenced by the
world around him, so that his work reflects the time and the place in which he lives. If artists or critics
do set up rules to follow, other artists and critics will prove the rules false. Arts change as life changes.
Authorities in arts state that the work of an artist must be judged against the background of the time in
which he lived.
Aesthetics
Function: noun
1. a particular taste for or approach to what is pleasing to the senses--especially sight.
Aesthetics in this definition is something that appeals to the senses. Someone’s aesthetic has to do with
his or her perceptual or artistic judgment.
Public figures make aesthetic choices to convey something about who they are.
Andy Warhol wore various silver wigs throughout ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s to change his personal
appearance--to create a signature look.
The aesthetic choices we make influence many parts of our lives.
We all have a personal aesthetic (preferences and tastes based on what we see).
The philosophy of aesthetics asks and tries to answer the “Big” Questions:
What is art?
What makes a piece of art beautiful?
How important are personal tastes when judging the quality of art?
What are the standards for judging art?
Why is originality so important in art? How do we define what is original or what is creative?
The major problem in aesthetics concerns the nature of the beautiful. Generally speaking there are two
basic approaches to the problem of beauty:
The objective approach asserts that beauty inheres in the object and that judgments concerning it may
have objective validity.
The subjective approach tends to identify the beautiful with that which pleases the observer.
Outstanding defenders of the objective position were Plato, Aristotle, and G. E. Lessing, and of the
subjective position, Edmund Burke and David Hume.
In his Critique of Judgment, Kant mediated between the two tendencies by showing that aesthetic
judgment has universal validity despite its subjective nature.
Art, the product of creative human activity in which materials are shaped or selected to convey an idea,
emotion, or visually interesting form.
The word art can refer to the visual arts, including painting, sculpture, architecture, photography,
decorative arts, crafts, and other visual works that combine materials or forms.
We also use the word art in a more general sense to encompass other forms of creative activity, such as
dance, drama, and music, or even to describe skill in almost any activity, such as “the art of bread
making” or “the art of travel.”
Artists, philosophers, anthropologists, psychologists and programmers all use the notion of art in their
respective fields, and give it operational definitions that are not very similar to each other.
The main recent sense of the word “art” is roughly as an abbreviation for creative art or “fine art.”
It means that 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.
Leo Tolstoy, claims that what makes something art or not is how it is experienced by its audience, not
by the intention of its creator.
Monroe Beardsley argue that whether or not a piece counts as art depends on what function it plays in a
particular context; the same Greek vase may play a non-artistic function in one context (carrying wine),
and an artistic function in another context (helping us to appreciate the beauty of the human figure).
Aesthetic Theories:
1. Representation (imitation, realism, mimesis)
2. Expressionism (emotionalism)
3. Formalism
4. Communication of moral and religious ideas
5. Symbolic (non-verbal) communication
6. Instrumentalism
7. Institutionalism
Expressionism (emotionalism):
The essence of art is expression of the inner emotions, feelings, moods, and mental states of the artist.
Good art effectively and sincerely brings these inner states to an external objectification.
Formalism:
The essence of art is “significant form” - lines, shapes, colors, and other formal properties of the work;
representation, expression, and other subject matter are irrelevant. Good art uses formal elements to
trigger an “aesthetic emotion” in sensitive observers.
Instrumentalism:
The essence of art is its usefulness in helping us to comprehend and improve our overall life
experiences. Good art is always a means to some important end.
Institutionalism:
Art is determined by status conferred upon it by the institutions of the art world not by an observable
property in the artwork itself.
Does it give insight into the human condition? How does art relate to science or religion?
Is art perhaps a tool of education, or indoctrination, or enculturation? Does art make us more moral?
Can it uplift us spiritually? Is art perhaps politics by other means? Is there some value to sharing or
expressing emotions?
Is art perhaps a tool of education, or indoctrination, or enculturation? Does art make us more moral?
Can it uplift us spiritually? Is art perhaps politics by other means? Is there some value to sharing or
expressing emotions?
Aesthetic Judgment
Judgments of aesthetic value clearly rely on our ability to discriminate at a sensory level.
Aesthetics examines what makes something beautiful, sublime, disgusting, fun, cute, silly, entertaining,
pretentious, discordant, harmonious, boring, humorous, or tragic.
For Kant, judgments of beauty are sensory, emotional, and intellectual all at once.
2. Objects are aesthetically valuable if they possess a special aesthetic property or exhibit a special
aesthetic form.
3. Objects are aesthetically valuable if they have the capacity to convey meaning or to teach general
truths.
4. Objects are aesthetically valuable if they have the capacity to produce pleasure in those who
experience or appreciate them.
5. Objects are aesthetically valuable if they have the capacity to convey values or beliefs central to the
cultures or traditions in which they originate, or important to the artists who made them.
6. Objects are aesthetically valuable if they have the capacity to help bring about social or political
change.
7. Objects are aesthetically valuable if they have the capacity to produce certain emotions we value, at
least when the emotion is brought about by art rather than by life.
8. Objects are aesthetically valuable if they have the capacity to produce special non-emotional
experiences, such as a feeling of autonomy or the will suspension of disbelief.
Aesthetic Universal
The philosopher Denis Dutton identified seven universal signatures in human aesthetics:
Expertise or virtuosity. Technical artistic skills are cultivated, recognized, and admired.
2. Non-utilitarian pleasure. People enjoy art for art's sake, and don't demand that it keep them warm or
put food on the table.
3. Style. Artistic objects and performances satisfy rules of composition that place them in a
recognizable style.
4. Criticism. People make a point of judging, appreciating, and interpreting works of art.
5. Imitation. With a few important exceptions like music and abstract painting, works of art simulate
experiences of the world.
6. Special focus. Art is set aside from ordinary life and made a dramatic focus of experience.
7. Imagination. Artists and their audiences entertain hypothetical worlds in the theater of the
imagination.
FUNCTIONS OF ART
PERSONAL FUNCTION
It is being used to provide comfort, happiness and convenience to human. The artist tries to express his
personal feelings through the art work.
AESTHETIC FUNCTION
Art becomes influential for man to be aware of the beauty of nature. Aesthetic is when there is the real
feelings of appreciation to nature’s beauty and are manifested through appreciation and enjoyment
when in contact with the artwork.
CATEGORIES/CLASSIFICATIONS OF ART
Architecture is the art and science of planning, designing, and constructing buildings and nonbuilding
structures for human shelter or use (3D).
Performing/Combined Arts
Music is an art form and cultural activity whose medium is sound organized in time.
Dance is the movement of the body in a rhythmic way, usually to music and within a given space for
the purpose of expressing an idea or emotion.
Film also called movie or motion picture, is a series of still images that when shown on a screen creates
an illusion of moving images.
Theater is a collaborative form of art that uses live performers, typically actors or actresses, to present
the experience of a real or imagined event before a live audience in a specific place, often a stage.
Literary is concentrating the writing, study or content of literature, especially of the kind valued for
quality of form.
Performance poetry is poetry specifically composed for or during a performance before an audience
rather than on print mostly open to improvisation.
Digital Arts
It is the art that is made with the assistance of electronic devices, or intended to displayed on a
computer, which is the most element in digital art.
Applied Arts
Applied arts are the application of design and decoration to everyday objects to make them
aesthetically pleasing.
Fashion design is the art of applying design, aesthetics, and natural beauty to clothing and its
accessories.
Furniture design is the art applying in designing couches, chairs, tables, shelves and decorative accents
for furniture pieces.
Interior design is enhancing the interior of a building to achieve a healthier and more aesthetically
pleasing environment for the people using the space.
Graphic design is an artistic process of effective communication. Designers combine words, images,
and symbols to create a visual representation of ideas.
PREPARATION
This is the first phas which, most people call "work". A writer, for example, prepares by writing, by
reading, or by revising earlier work. A musician plays scales, chords, or aongs; a painter messes with
painta or visits an art gallery; an entrepreneur researches problems to solve.
INCUBATION
This would be the mystical process because you often don't know that yzour incubating an idea. It's
during this phase that conscious and subconscious minds are working on the idea, making new
connections, separating out necessary ideas and grabingfor other idea.
ILLUMINATION
This is the "Eureka" moment that many os us spend our days questing after. When it hits, the creative
urge is so incredibly strong that we lose track of whatelse is happening. The driving impulse is to get
whatever is going on down to whatever medium it's intended dor.