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About art ...
[[Image:Monalisa.jpg|thumb|right|The Mona Lisa]] There is wide disagreement over what constitutes art, and there is no single definition that is widely agreed upon. A common view is that art requires a creative and unique perception of both the artist and audience. For example, a common contemporary criticism of some modern painting might be, 'my five-year old could have painted that' — implying that the work is somehow less worthy of the title art, either because the viewer fails to find meaning in the work, or because the work does not appear to have required any skill to produce. This view is often described as a lay critique and derives from the fact that in Western culture at least, art has traditionally been pushed in the direction of representationalism, the literal presentation of reality through literal images. Art can connote a sense of trained ability or mastery of a medium. It can also simply refer to the developed and efficient use of a language so as to convey meaning, with immediacy and or depth. Making this judgment requires a basis for criticism: a way to determine whether the impact of the object on the senses meets the criteria to be considered art, whether it is perceived to be ugly or beautiful. Perception is always colored by experience, so a reaction to art as 'ugly' or 'beautiful' is necessarily subjective. Countless schools have each proposed their own ways to define quality, yet they all seem to agree in at least one point: once their aesthetic choices have been 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 (which, oddly enough, tends to be the most personal one). Art also appeals to human emotions. It can arouse aesthetic or moral feelings, and can be understood as a way of communicating these feelings. Artists have to express themselves so that their public is aroused, but they do not have to do so consciously. Art explores both human emotions and ways to arouse them — and good art brings something new and original in either of these two respects. Consider photography. Are photographs of un-posed 'real life' to be considered art? The common answer is overwhelmingly yes, even though many of these photographs simply seek to reproduce by machine what people can see with their own eyes. However, the reproduction is not neutral — a selection is being made by the artist. This is also one of the goals of found art: to recontextualize the art of everyday objects. Different forms of artThere are a variety of Arts, including visual arts and design, decorative arts, plastic arts, and the performing arts. Artistic expression takes many forms, painting, drawing, sculpture, music, literature, performance art and possibly architecture are the most widely recognised forms. However, since the advent of modernism and the technological revolution, new forms have emerged. These include film, photography, comics, video art, installation art, conceptual art, and computer art.Within each form, a wide range of genres may exist. For instance, a painting may be a still life, a portrait, a landscape and may deal with historical or domestic subjects. In addition, a work of art may be representational or abstract. The use of artThere are many who ascribe to certain arts the quality of being non-utilitarian. This fits within the 'art as good' system of definitions and suffers from a class prejudice against labor and utility. Opponents of this view argue that all human activity has some utilitarian function, and these objects claimed to be 'non-utilitarian' actually have the rather mundane and banal utility of attempting to mystify and codify unworkable justifications for arbitrary social hierarchy.The history of artDefining art: what is and what is not1. requires creative perception both by the artist and by the audience2. elusive 3. communicates on many levels and is open to many interpretations 4. connotes a sense of ability 5. interplay between the conscious and unconscious part of our being, between what is real and what is an illusion 6. Any human creation which contains an idea other than its utilitarian purpose. See also- Aesthetics, the philosophy of beauty - Art groups - Art history - Art-o-mat - recycled cigarette machines which sell miniature pieces of art - Art school - Art styles, periods and movements - Art techniques and materials - Definition of music - List of artists - List of artworks - Military art - Martial arts - http://moodle.ed.uiuc.edu/wiked/index.php/Art_Education Art Education Further reading- Peter Magyar, Thought palaces. Amsterdam: Architectura & Natura Press, 1999- Aristotle, Metaphysics - Plato, Theory of forms - Carl Jung, Man and his Symbols - Gyorgy Doczi, The Power of Limits. External links- Great Museums in the World (Louvre, Metropolitan Museum, MoMA, Picasso …) - Art History With biographies and Works of the Surrealist Masters - Dictionary of Art Terms - Artcyclopedia. - Art and the spiritual life - Art Movements at artmovements.net - Art as a private language For the Celtic mythological figure Art, see Airt; for the play, see Art (play). Category:Arts ar:فن ast:Arte ca:Art co:Arti cs:Umění da:Kunst de:Kunst es:Arte eo:Arto fa:هنر fr:Art fy:Keunst io:Arto ia:Arte it:Arte he:אמנות sw:Usanifu ku:Huner la:Ars ms:Seni nah:Toltecayotl nl:Kunst This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "art".
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