ARTAPP Midterm Reviewer by
ARTAPP Midterm Reviewer by
— Pablo
- Knowledge of aesthetics Picaso
ARTAPP – A Page | 2
AESTHETIC EXPERIENCE
WHAT IS ART?
An introduction to the concept of art • Tolstoy contends that aesthetic experience is
• Determine a definition of art the experiential union between the artist and
the recipient; it is a common bond of feeling.
• Decide what is art and what is not art
• When in this state, the recipient feels as if the
• Define terms related to the viewing of art work is one’s own and that what it expresses
(aesthetics) is what one longs to express; it is a
replication of emotion.
IN SMALL GROUPS ANSWER THE FOLLOWING
QUESTIONS AESTHETIC EXPERIENCE
• How does art influence society? • This “quality of infectiousness” is what
distinguishes true art from its counterfeit.
• Why is art important?
• This sharing is almost “involuntary, like
• What sort of messages do art have?
radiation or an “electrical spark” [16:131]
IMAGE #1
• The stronger the “infection” (the replication
-Is this art? Why or why not? What of emotion), the more successful the art work
elements does it have or not have? is.
IMAGE #3
TOLSTOY’S AESTHETICS
LEV NIKOLAEVICH TOLSTOY, 1828-1910
“The business of art consists precisely in making
understandable and accessible that which might be
incomprehensible and inaccessible in the form of
reason” [10:81].
WHAT IS ART?
TRUTH → AUTHOR → TEXT → READER The idea for My Bed was inspired by a sexual yet depressive phase in the
artist's life when she had remained in bed for four days without eating or
The reader is three times detached from truth. What the author drinking anything but alcohol. When she looked at the vile, repulsive mess
presents in the text is only his observation and his observation is that had accumulated in her room, she suddenly realized what she had
only a reflection of the universal truth. created. Emin ardently defended My Bed against critics who treated it as a
farce and claimed that anyone could exhibit an unmade bed. To these
ARISTOTLE from The Poetics
claims the artist retorted, "Well, they didn't, did they? No one had ever done
• Responded to Plato's thesis through his book Poetics where he that before."
said that literature is mimetic.
The artwork generated considerable media furore, particularly over the fact
• Mimesis: the ability of literature to be imitative or representational. that the bedsheets were stained with bodily secretions and the floor had
• It is the poet's duty to talk of the future (be it good or bad) and its items from the artist's room, such as condoms, underwear with menstrual
possibilities. blood stains, other detritus, and functional, everyday objects, including a
ARISTOTLE on OEDIPUS REX pair of slippers. The bed was presented in the state that Emin claimed it
had been after languishing in it for several days; at the time she was
• To Aristotle, Oedipus Rex is the perfect tragedy because it suffering suicidal depression brought on by relationship difficulties.
presents (instead of contains) possibilities that may be frightful to
many. Literature allows readers to purge out their emotions. Two performance artists, Yuan Chai and Jian Jun Xi, jumped on the bed
• Catharsis: the purgation of pity and fear with bare torsos to improve the work, which they thought had not gone far
enough. They called their performance Two Naked Men Jump into Tracey's
LONGINUS Bed. The men also had a pillow fight on the bed for around fifteen minutes,
to applause from the crowd, before being removed by security guards. The
• A piece is beautiful when it is sublime. Its language has to be lofty artists were detained but no further action was taken. Prior to its Tate
and excellent for it to achieve sublimity. Gallery showing, the work had appeared elsewhere, including Japan,
• Sublime thoughts can only come from sublime minds. where there were variant surroundings, including at one stage a hangman's
• Sublimity, however, is learned and is not necessarily innate. noose hanging over the bed. This was not present when it was displayed
HORACE from Ars Poetica at the Tate.
• For literature to be considered beautiful, it has to be both sweet Craig Brown wrote a satirical piece about My Bed for Private
and useful (dulce et utile). Eye entitled My Turd.[5] Emin's former boyfriend, former Stuckist artist Billy
Childish, stated that he also had an old bed of hers in the shed which he
SIR PHILIP SIDNEY FROM IN DEFENSE OF POESIE would make available for £20,000.
• Defended literature from Puritans who claimed that literature is My Bed was bought by Charles Saatchi for £150,000 and displayed as part
immoral and untruthful because it leads people to sin. of the first exhibition when the Saatchi Gallery opened its new premises
• The events presented in literature may not be real but can be at County Hall, London (which it has now vacated). Saatchi also installed
allegories of reality. the bed in a dedicated room in his own home.
• The author does not create reality for reality is already made. He
instead presents a world that is better than reality for it is not When it was announced, in May 2014, that the work was to be
enslaved by empirical data. This, however, does not mean that auctioned, David Maupin, Emin's dealer in New York, described the
literature is escapist. £800,000 – £1.2 million estimate as too low. When auctioned
• Readers imitate what they read because what they read can be by Christie's in July 2014, the piece was sold for a little over £2.5 million.
better than reality.
-O-
TATTOOS: PINTADOS Even our representatives in international beauty pageants used these
Visayan tattoo patterns:
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g4wR3Bg-6mA Visayan ⚫ Jearson Demavivas. Designer of Miss Universe 2018, Catriona
Tattoo Art | Art at Home | Episode 6 | Raffy Bee is here Gray’s costume used the patterns in Catriona's bodysuit during
her national costume.
Some people's perception of those who have tattoos are sometimes ⚫ The same goes for Beatrice Luigi Gomez (MU Philippines 2021)
negative. When a person has a tattoo he or she is oftentimes tagged who wore a gown created by internationally renowned Designer
as someone who is astig, siga, brave and even rebellious. Francis Libiran. According to him, he used the patterns to
mainstream the pintados who were once noted for their intricate
Tattoos have long played a significant role in the lives of Filipinos even tattoo designs.
before Pre-colonial Times.
For early Visayans, tattoos are earned through acts of bravery may it In Northern Luzon, the tattooing culture is still thriving.
be in battles, hunting, sailing and other significant experiences. ⚫ Apo Whang-od also known as Maria Oggay, is a Filipina tattoo
As documented, tattoos are commonly etched on warrior skin. artist from the tribe of Butbut in Buscalan, Kalinga, Philippines.
NOTE: “The more tattoo a person has, the braver he is perceived Whang-od is known as the last mambabatok or kalinga tattooist.
to be.” ⚫ She has been tattooing for the past 80 years - including
headhunters of indigenous tribe, at the beginning of her long
Different cultures have varying perspectives on the significance of career.
tattoos. ⚫ She was nominated by the Senate for the Gawad sa Manlilikha
⚫ Ancient Egyptians considered tattoos as protective markings ng Bayan (GAMABA) or the National Living Treasures Award
from diseases, especially for women when they are pregnant. for fostering and preserving the traditional tattoo art of
⚫ In Thailand, Yantra tattoos are sacred markings on the body Kalinga.
which act as a charm for those who bear them.
⚫ On the other hand, Greek culture use tattoos to mark their slaves NOTE: Tattooing is more than just an art. It is a reflection of our
when they are treated as “possessions”. rich culture and history as Filipinos.
⚫ In the Philippines, tattooing during the pre-colonial times were a
widespread tradition not only culminated in one's life as a warrior Ancient Tattooing Traditions - One Tribe Custom Filipino Tattoos
but it had also several connections with our animistic roots. (onetribetattoo.com)
⚫ Based on the Boxer Codex from the late 16th century, Patik was When the Spaniards first arrived in the Visayan islands in 1521, they
characterized by bold lines up legs and back plus matching labelled the natives of this region as "pintados", meaning "painted
geometric floral designs on both pectoral and buttocks. people" or "painted ones", as most of their entire bodies were covered
⚫ To the Early Visayans, these markings were an outward in tattoos leaving only their hands and feet bare. The three illustrations
symbol of status, beauty, family and pride. below are from the Boxer Codex depicting the tattoos of the ancient
⚫ They represented an individual's journey and accomplishments. Visayans. c.1595. Last image is a carving of "Prince Giolo", a tattooed
A public testimony inscribed unto their flesh recounting acts native known to be from a southern island (Miangas) previously part of
of combat bravery and strength. “The more tattoo the warrior, the Philippines. He was purchased as a slave in Mindanao in 1692 by
the more revered.” English privateer William Dampier. Giolo was then displayed as part of
⚫ Tattoo designs and patterns are mostly inspired by nature. The a public exhibition in England to showcase his fully tattooed body.
names of tattoo designs used by our ancestors were recorded by In Luzon, the largest island of the Philippines is inhabited by a number
William Henry Scott and most of these designs reflected the of indigenous groups. More popular for their extensive tattoos and
beautiful imagery of nature. rituals are the northern mountain tribespeople of the Cordillera Region,
*Book of Scott - “Barangay Sixteenth-Century Philippine Culture collectively known as "Cordillerans" or "Igorots".
and Society”
In her essay about the Boxer Codex, Patricia May Jurilla has
entertainingly written the history of this manuscript. Historians
have speculated that the creation of the Boxer Codex was
sponsored by either Luis Perez Dasmarinas, the son of Spanish
Governor-General Gomez Perez Dasmarinas; a Spanish
soldier, or Juan de Cuellar, the governor's secretary. Only
someone who was rich and influential could have produced and
owned this expensive body of work.
Visayan Couple who belonged to the nobility A pair of male and female hunters from
is depicted with gold embellishments Zambales. "..if some close relative dies or is killed,
they have to kill other men to avenge the death of their
kinsman, and until mourning is done, they cut off their
hair at the back and in front, and they stop eating rice,
and promise not to do other things until they have
achieved their revenge."
Tagalog Common Men. "The Moros (Islamized
Tagalogs) are dressed with clothes of cotton and are
A Cagayan warrior in a feathered headdress. not naked like the Bisayans...from the calves of the
"They wear their hair long up to the shoulders and cut knees they wear many chainlets often made of brass,
short at the front up to the temples. They wear on their which they call bitiques (bitik). These are worn only by
heads crowns or garlands made of fragrant herbs. the men who regard them as very stylish."
Their weapons are lances and shields a fathom long
and three-fourths (of a fathom) wide. They have some
quilted weapons and a cap like a colored morrion or
helmet and some daggers more than eight fingers in
width and a palm and a half in length, with hilts of
ebony, with which they can cut off a head with one
stroke."
Naturales Tagalos
Bisayans
Visayan Couple
A pair of gold-
who belonged to
embellished
the nobility is
Visayan Noble
depicted with gold
couple.
embellishments
Negrillos or Negrito
hunting couple A Zambales
Hunting Pair
Tagalog common
men
Cagayan Woman
Tagalog Common
Women
NEW HISTORICISM in Art Appreciation THINKERS
GENERAL PRINCIPLES
• There is no one culture and history.
Society is composed of different MIKHAIL BAKHTIN
cultures and histories. • Carnivalesque: a literary (or
• There is no single way of viewing artistic) mode that sees the
culture and history, hence, they liberation from the sacred and
can't be viewed objectively. desirable by allowing the
• In art, a work is believed to be a unacceptable, the blasphemous,
product of the moment in history in and the eccentric equal footing.
which the work was born. • Symbolically, the carnival is a
place of freedom.
Campbell’s by: Andy Warhol
MICHEL FOUCAULT
• Panopticism: based on the idea of the
NH CHALLENGES
panopticon, a prison, which allows all
TRADITIONAL DEFINITIONS
prisoners to be observed by a single
• culture ("Her taste shows that
security guard, without the inmates
she's cultured."), taste ("Wala being able to tell whether they are
kang taste!"), and aesthetic being watched. The inmates, therefore,
("Walang aesthetics ang painting. are compelled to regulate their
Ang gulo tingnan.") behavior.
• To NH, culture, taste, and • Panopticism believes that some
aesthetics sometimes have elitist structures are designed to cause self-
orientations. imposed pressure, so people are
coerced to comply with rules.