Module 1humanities
Module 1humanities
ART OF APPRECIATION
ART AND ITS MEANING
• The word “arts” comes from the Aryan word AR which means to put together.
It also comes from the Latin word ARS which means skills, ability and covers
those areas of artistic creativity. It embraces the visual arts, literature ,music
and the visual arts. It expresses aesthetic ideas by use of skills and imagination.
Merriam Webster defines art as “ the conscious use of skills and creative
imagination specially in the production of aesthetic objects”. Art is so diverse
that there are many ways to understand it. Leo Tolstoy defines art as an activity
by which a person, having an emotion intentionally transmits it to others.
According to Plato, art is that which brings harmony with the beauty of the
world. Ruskin states that it is the whole spirit of man. Arthur Dow considers art
as a way of life, of doing, thinking, of feeling, of making choices of living in a
fine way.
CREATIVITY, IMAGINATION AND
THE EXPRESSION IN ART
• Creativity is the act of turning new and imaginative ideas into reality. It is characterized by the
ability to perceive the world in new ways, to find hidden patterns, to make connections between
seemingly unrelated phenomena and to generate solution.(https://www.creativityat work.com) It
is the ability to transcend traditional ideas, rules, relationships, or the like, and to create
meaningful new ideas, forms, methods, interpretations, originality, progressiveness, or
imagination.(https://creativity.com) Imagination is tied very closely to creativity because
imagination is putting things, ideas. Feelings or images together, initially in the artist’s mind.
Through imagination one is able to craft something bold, something new and something better in
the hopes of creating something that will stimulate changes.( https;//quizlet.com) Expression is
automatic in every action, thought or feeling in everyone. (https://www.quors.com)The
Expression of feeling constitutes the creation of art, just as philosophy and other disciplines are
expression of ideas.( https://www.britannica.com) The combination of these three factors lead
men to create a work of art that will surely influence people to seek for change in improving their
lives.
ASSUMPTIONS OF ART
• These assumptions are the principles and bases of appreciating a work of art since
it is in art that man can convey one’s individuality and way of life.
1. Art is universal. Art is everywhere; wherever men have lived together. It has
sprung up among them as a language charged with feelings and significance. Art
as a cultural force can be pervasive and potent. It has no limit and rises above
cultures, races and civilization. It is timeless because it goes beyond the time of
our own existence.
2. Art is not nature. Art is man made, it is a creation of man utilizing his thoughtful
skill and artistry. It is artificial because it is just an imitation or appropriation of
reality and nature. It is a representation of ideas, thought, feelings that are
communicated and expressed in a creative and artistic way. Art created by God
is divine while art created by man is temporary. Art can never be natural because
it is momentary in the constant transformation of change. Artist could create
works of art but they cannot form nature.
ASSUMPTIONS OF ART
1. Art involves experience. Art is a depiction of our daily experiences. It demands taking part. It
involves laying of pigments. Moulding of clay, chipping marble, casting of bronze, constructing of
building, singing of songs, playing roles on stage, acting and going rhythmic movements in a dance.
Every art does something with physical material, the body, thus the only way to find conviction and
assertion is through immersion in the Arts. Art is appreciated if we spend time to look at it, listen to
it, to touch it and feel its presence.
2. Art is cultural. Art is set of shared attitudes, values, goals and practices that define a group of
people, such as the people of a particular region. Culture includes the elements that characterize a
particular people’s way of life. The arts-vast subdivision of culture, composed of many creative
endeavors and discipline. (https://en.em.wikipedia.org)
3. Art is an expression. Art is an expression made visible by a form. It expresses and translates, it
acknowledges and reveals, transfers and reveals. Art is an expression of feeling, belief and
character.(https://meganbostic.squarepace.com)
ASSUMPTIONS OF ART
• Art as a form of creation. A work of art is created by an artist, in order then to
develop an independent existence in the eye of the beholder over which the
creator loses all control. The creation of art is the bringing about of a new
combination of elements in medium (tones in music, words in literature, paints
on canvass and others.(https://www.britannica.com)
CATEGORIES/CLASSIFICATION OF
ARTS
• Visual Arts (2D,3D)
• a. Music- is an art form and cultural activity whose medium is sound organized in time.
• b. Dance- is the movement of the body in a rhythmic way, usually to music and within
the given space for the purpose of expressing an idea or emotion.
• c. 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.
• d. Theatre_ is a collaborative form of art that uses live performers, typically actors or
actresses, to present the experience of real or imagined event before a live audience in
a specific place often a stage.
• Applied Arts
• The application of design and
decorations in everyday objects to make
them aesthetically pleasing
• Furniture design- it is a specialized field
where functions and fashion collide.
CATEGORIES/CLASSIFICATION OF
ARTS
• Applied Arts
• Social Art has a social function when it addresses aspects of (collective) life as opposed to
one person's point of view or experience. Viewers can often relate in some way to social art
and are sometimes even influenced by it. For example, public art in 1930s Germany had an
overwhelming symbolic theme. Did this art exert influence on the German population?
Decidedly so, as did political and patriotic posters in Allied countries during the same time.
Political art, often designed to deliver a certain message, always carries a social function.
The fur-covered Dada teacup, useless for holding tea, carried a social function in that it
protested World War I (and nearly everything else in life). Art that depicts social conditions
performs social functions and often this art comes in the form of photography. The Realists
figured this out early in the 19th century. American photographer Dorothea Lange (1895–
1965) along with many others often took pictures of people in conditions that are difficult to
see and think about. Additionally, satire performs social functions. Spanish painter
Francisco Goya (1746–1828) and English portrait artist William Hogarth (1697–1764) both
went this route with varying degrees of success at motivating social change with their art.
Sometimes the possession of specific pieces of art in a community can elevate that
community's status. A stabile by American kinetic artist Alexander Calder (1898– 1976), for
example, can be a community treasure and point of pride
Functions of Art
• The functions of art normally fall into three categories: physical, social, and personal. These
categories can and often do overlap in any given piece of art. When you're ready to start thinking
about these functions, here's how.
• Personal The personal functions of art are often the most difficult to explain. There are many
types of personal functions and these are highly subjective. Personal functions of art are not likely
to be the same from person to person. An artist may create a piece out of a need for self-
expression or gratification. They might also or instead want to communicate a thought or point to
the viewer. Sometimes an artist is only trying to provide an aesthetic experience, both for self and
viewers. A piece might be meant to entertain, provoke thought, or even have no particular effect at
all. Personal function is vague for a reason. From artist to artist and viewer to viewer, one's
experience with art is different. Knowing the background and behaviours of an artist helps when
interpreting the personal function of their pieces. Art may also serve the personal function of
controlling its viewers, much like social art. It can also perform religious service or
acknowledgment. Art has been used to attempt to exert magical control, change the seasons, and
even acquire food. Some art brings order and peace, some creates chaos. There is virtually no
limit to how art can be used.
• Finally, sometimes art is used to maintain a species. This can be seen in rituals of the animal
kingdom and in humans themselves. Biological functions obviously include fertility symbols (in
any culture), but there are many ways humans adorn their bodies with art in order to be attractive
to others and eventually mate.
Determining the Function of Art
• The functions of art apply not only to the artist that created a piece but to you
as the viewer. Your whole experience and understanding of a piece should
contribute to the function you assign it, as well as everything you know about
its context. Next time you are trying to understand a piece of art, try to
remember these four points: (1) context and (2) personal, (3) social, and (4)
physical functions. Remember that some art serves only one function and some
all three (perhaps even more).
Philosophical
Importance of Art
• Integrity or Artistic integrity is generally
defined as the ability to omit an
acceptable level of opposing, disrupting,
and corrupting values that would
otherwise alter an artist's or entities’
original vision in a manner that violates
their own preconceived aesthetic
standards and personal values. This does
not necessitate that an artist needs to
ignore external influences in the
creation process
What is artistic integrity:
• Always painting with passion
• Never copying but taking ideas and tweaking them to make them our own
• Being original….not normal
• Having the courage to take a chance
• Always remembering your artistic vision comes from your life, your
thoughts…..your courage
• Creating a painting because it comes from your soul and not for recognition or prizes
• Being willing to be scared….to create on the edge
• To continue creating when doubt in yourself appears
• Doing your very best each and everyday
Proportion
Proportion refers to a the relative size of objects, a ratio
between parts or entities in some visual representation
(most often visual, but proportion also applies in music
and other arts). Visually, proportion is most
immediately relevant to so-called “representational art”
— say, painting — where it is important in rendering a
realistic or believable image of some object or scene
with which we have some familiarity - for example a
portrait of human being, or a cityscape in Paris.
Radiance
• Radiance signifies the luminosity that emanates from
a beautiful object, which initially seizes the attention
of the beholder. This trait is closely related to the
medieval notions concerning light. For example, in
terms of natural light, there is a sense in which the
paintings in a gallery lose some of their beauty when
the lights are turned off because they are no longer
being perceived.
The Subject of Art
• What is a Subject?
• To a majority of people, the appeal of most works of art lies in the
representation of familiar objects
• Their enjoyment of painting, sculpture and literature comes not from their
perception of the meaning but from the satisfaction they get out of recognizing
the subject or understanding the narrative content. The subject of art refers to
any person, object, scene or event described or represented in a work of art.
Representational or
Objective
Arts that have subject (eg
Painting, Sculpture, Graphic
Arts, Literature and Theatre Arts
Non-Representational or Non-Objective
• Arts that do not have subject.
• Music, Architecture and many of the Functional Arts – Program Music – musical
compositions which have subject
• They do not present descriptions, stories, or references to identifiable objects or symbols.
Rather they, appeal directly to the senses primarily because of the satisfying organization of
their sensuous and expressive elements.
• Many contemporary painters have turned away from representational to nonobjective
painting. They have shifted their attention to the work of art as an object in itself, an exciting
combination of shapes and colours that fulfill an aesthetic need without having to represent
images or tell a story.
• Many modern paintings are like this making them more difficult to comprehend.
Sources of Subject
1. Nature
2. History
3. Greek and Roman Mythology
4. Judeo-Christian Tradition
5. Sacred Oriental Texts
6. Other Works of Art
Kinds of Subject
• Landscapes, Seascapes, and Cityscapes
• The grace and ideal proportions of the human form were captured in religious
sculpture by the ancient Greeks. To them, physical beauty was the symbol of moral
and spiritual perfection; thus they portrayed their gods and goddesses as possessing
perfect human shapes.
• Early Christian and medieval artists seldom represented the nude figure. The
figures they used to decorate the walls and entrances of their churches were
distorted so as not to call undue attention and distract people from their spiritual
thoughts.