↪Brett
If your position is that it can’t be understood, then that’s fine, but it means you have nothing to offer.
I have by definition offered something relevant, or meaningful to the discussion, — Punshhh
Surely a tree is conscious of its environment in some way, because it reacts is subtle and sophisticated ways to its environment as a responsive living organism, indeed in ways which are very artistic. I have a slice across the trunk of a tree highly polished hanging on my wall, in my opinion, it is equally as artistic as the Picasso on the wall next to it. — Punshhh
↪Brett What is it considered to be?
Some kind of a fertility symbol, yes? Not a work of art.
Perhaps it is a work of art - perhaps there's a degree of ambiguity over what to classify it as - — Bartricks
This question came up in Quora, and there were as many different answers as there were respondents. 'what is art' should be defined in all discussions of art, but never really is.
I understand art as an expression of human consciousness, and art work as information about the artists consciousness. Art as an expression of human consciousness is broad enough to capture all art ever made - cave paintings to present.
I wonder what others think of this definition? Can you find fault with it?
Any input would be appreciated. Thanks — Pop
No worries, my response came out more as a rebuttal than was intended.Sorry, I didn’t mean you personally. I was a bit casual about wording my post.
You will only find me raising mystical viewpoints when I am specifically discussing metaphysics. It does'nt apply here.Edit: what I meant was that if someone’s perception of art is from a mystical point of view then there’s nowhere to go after that, because it can’t be proved or disproved.
You are free to find this to much to go along with, I am further along the spectrum than this, the end where far more can be considered for artistic merit. My opinion on this is that organisms by their nature can perform actions equating to the actions of intelligent artists, like the Bower bird, or a spider spinning a web.However, this is just too much to go along with. If everything is art then there is no art.
I don't think it can be answered in a definitive way other than by reference to the idea that it is a phenomena of humans activity emergent from human culture. But this is a vague definition and doesn't answer many questions about art.Edit: and the discussion has to be about more than opinion, don’t you think?
Bottomline, art is about beauty. What is beauty? I haven't the faintest idea. — TheMadFool
You are free to find this to much to go along with, I am further along the spectrum than this, the end where far more can be considered for artistic merit. — Punshhh
Yes, perhaps these are two categories which can be considered when defining art. I have often thought of the artistry in a spider's web. Or the lack of artistry in many pieces produced in the Brit Art movement.I'm open to other intelligent beings creating art and kinds of proto-art. But we should be clear that being "artistic" as in, having art-like qualities, is different from, though overlapping category with "art."
I think the term "aesthetically engaging" is more useful for defining art. There is art that is meant to engage many, even contradictory aesthetic impulses. Like that one with a Jesus statue on a cross in a jar of urine. Or Nabokov's novel Lolita. — Artemis
Is that a statement or question? — Brett
So, if I had thought,"I'm going to do art" the first time and did exactly the same procedure, that first image would have been art? This is a tad more complicated than putting a brush to canvas. In my case the "brush" has a "mind" of its own. — jgill
Right. It's like the difference between accidentally pressing the button on your camera (complicated machine!) and choosing to do so. The camera may be doing much of the "work" (i.e., showing a "mind" of its own), but you're the primary mover.
We have to make that distinction or else you have no way to distinguish art from bird's nests and sunflowers and sunsets. — Artemis
of art, but in an art world in which in theory, anything was art provided an artist said it was Art. — Punshhh
To then say moral goodness is like shackles, holding artists back from revealing beauty in its most magnificent form, is to make a grave mistake - like a person who seeks warmth but turns away from the sun, into the shadows. — TheMadFool
So, from this perspective, how are we to know if the famous bust of Nefertiti is really a work of art? — jgill
Artemis tried to point out that aesthetics can transcend beauty, or rather, our conventional sense of it. — praxis
Does this mean that there is no “art” to be retrieved from that era and that the appearance of “art” only appeared at a particular time in human history and hasn’t always been there. — Brett
of art, but in an art world in which in theory, anything was art provided an artist said it was Art.
— Punshhh
Well, my only slight alteration would be that the artist can't just point and call something art. S/he has to engage in some act of creation. — Artemis
Just pointing can make an otherwise ordinary object art. That sounds pretty creative to me. Anything can be viewed aesthetically. — praxis
I didn't attribute minds to trees and bacteria. I said they may be conscious and that they produce art. — Punshhh
The reason I asked you these questions about animals and plants was to determine what you mean by the word mind. — Punshhh
The object or performance or whatever in question must in some way be changed by the artist in order to move it from the category of "aesthetic object" to "art object." — Artemis
Surely the act of saying something is art is the alteration.Well, my only slight alteration would be that the artist can't just point and call something art. S/he has to engage in some act of creation.
So the definition of a mind, is that which hosts a conscious state. — Punshhh
ust a few more questions to clarify, is a bacteria conscious? — Punshhh
Does a mind require neurons? — Punshhh
What do you call the self aware consciousness found in a human? — Punshhh
You are free to find this to much to go along with, I am further along the spectrum than this, the end where far more can be considered for artistic merit. My opinion on this is that organisms by their nature can perform actions equating to the actions of intelligent artists, like the Bower bird, or a spider spinning a web. — Punshhh
This was part of the conversation about intention being necessary when creating art.
So, from this perspective, how are we to know if the famous bust of Nefertiti is really a work of art? We can't simply gaze at it in admiration, thinking, "What a lovely work of art." What were the intentions of the unknown sculpturer?
I don't agree with this idea. — jgill
I don’t think the Nefertiti bust is a work of art in the sense we see it — Brett
I don't see how that follows from what I said. It just implies that that particular artefact is probably not a work of art (and something produced today that resembles it, is therefore probably not a work of art either as were it to be dug up in a few thousand years it too would be classified as some kind of totem rather than a work of art). — Bartricks
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