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Creative Expression: Anthropology and the Arts

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Title: Creative Expression: Anthropology and the Arts


1
Chapter 15
  • Creative Expression Anthropology and the Arts

2
Chapter Outline
  • Some Characteristics of Art
  • Some Functions of Art
  • The Arts and the Expression of Cultural and
    Personal Identity
  • The Artist in Society Artists and Their
    Audiences
  • Marketing Cultural Identities Through the Arts

3
Art
  • Universal means of expressing the identity of a
    culture.
  • Evidence of art appears early in the human fossil
    record.
  • There is no known culture without art.

4
Understanding Art in Culture
  • In most societies, art is inseparable from other
    activities.
  • Separation of art from social behavior is
    characteristic of modern society.
  • In non-industrial societies, art is embedded in
    all aspects of culture.

5
Question
  • Emphasis upon both the ways in which non-Western
    art is produced and is viewed within a culture
  • is a major focus of art historians' approach to
    non-Western art.
  • is considered by anthropologists to be essential
    for understanding the meanings of all forms of
    artistic expression.
  • is traditionally an important aspect of museum
    displays prepared by art historians.
  • is central to approaches of both art historians
    and anthropologists.

6
Answer b
  • Emphasis upon both the ways in which non-Western
    art is produced and is viewed within a culture is
    considered by anthropologists to be essential for
    understanding the meanings of all forms of
    artistic expression.

7
Five Types of Arts
  • Graphic and plastic arts
  • Music
  • Dance
  • Folklore
  • Sports and games

8
Functions of Art
  • Communication with and control over nature and
    the supernatural.
  • Display of cultural themes.
  • Cultural and social integration.
  • Express cultural identity and history.

9
Communication With Natural World
  • Cave paintings represent the restoration to
    nature of the animals that are killed.
  • Ritual art, dedicated to the spirits who protect
    life, lessens danger.
  • Dance movements imitating animals are believed to
    exert control over animals.

10
Question
  • Prehistoric cave paintings of an animal's image
    or contemporary hunter and gatherer's dance
    movements that imitate the movements of animals
    illustrate all except which of the following
    statements?
  • Hunter-gatherers primarily created art and dance
    for its own sake.
  • Art was used as a protection from danger.
  • Art styles reflect a cosmology that included an
    active and personal force of nature.
  • Art had a central function as part of ritual acts
    to maintain or control the relationship with
    nature.

11
Answer a
  • Prehistoric cave paintings of an animal's image
    or contemporary hunter and gatherer's dance
    movements that imitate the movements of animals
    do not illustrate the following statements
  • Hunter-gatherers primarily created art and dance
    for its own sake.

12
Symbolic Communication
  • Symbolic elements in art are culturally specific
  • In Western culture, the phrase once upon a time
    is a signal for a fairy tale.
  • Totem poles reflect the social hierarchy in their
    societies.

13
Foster Harmony in Society
  • The arts make dominant cultural themes visible,
    tangible, and more real.
  • The arts give voice to disunity and conflict
    within a society.

14
Express Cultural Identity and History
  • In many cultures, the most important artistic
    efforts represent ancestors.
  • In Imperial China, the arts were central in
    legitimizing the emperor.

15
Deep Play Balinese Cockfight
  • Symbolic contest between male egos.
  • Expresses Balinese social hierarchy.

16
Question
  • Which of the following does not illustrate ways
    in which art conveys important information about
    the social hierarchy?
  • portraits of Inca kings commissioned by Inca
    royalty after the Spanish conquest
  • totem poles of the Northwest Coast Native
    Americans
  • memory boards of the Luba of Zaire
  • Balinese cockfights
  • paleolithic cave paintings

17
Answer e
  • Paleolithic cave paintings do not illustrate ways
    in which art conveys important information about
    the social hierarchy.

18
Ledger Drawings
  • Drawings, in ledger books, made by some Native
    American peoples to record personal and
    historical events.

19
Types of Art
  • Body Art
  • Marking and adorning the body as an expression of
    cultural and personal identity, or which serves
    other functions.
  • Orientalism
  • Scholarship and art generated by Europeans
    focusing on the Middle East.
  • Primitive Art
  • The term used by the Western art world for the
    art of non-Western, tribal societies.

20
Quick Quiz
21
  • 1. From the broad anthropological perspective
    taken in this chapter's discussion and analysis
    of art and artistic expression, it appears that
  • what is "art" can be determined by universal
    standards.
  • the phrase "art for art's sake" is the most
    useful way to understand the place of artistic
    expression within diverse cultures.
  • art is inseparable from other activities in most
    non-Western societies, and is not produced or
    performed solely for giving pleasure.
  • art and artistic expression must be viewed as
    outside of its specific cultural context.

22
Answer c
  • From the broad anthropological perspective taken
    in this chapter's discussion and analysis of art
    and artistic expression, it appears that art is
    inseparable from other activities in most
    non-Western societies, and is not produced or
    performed solely for giving pleasure.

23
  • 2. Creative acts such as dancing, weaving,
    singing, or playing a musical instrument in
    non-Western societies
  • do not necessarily occur as an 'art form' or
    'artistic performance' in itself.
  • are generally expected to adhere to tradition, a
    high value being placed upon following or
    repeating the traditional form
  • are characterized by innovations or new designs
    or movements.
  • reflect their culture's expectation that artistic
    expression be unique and original.
  • rest upon the reputation and recognized skill of
    the individual artist/performer.

24
Answer b
  • Creative acts such as dancing, weaving, singing,
    or playing a musical instrument in non-Western
    societies are generally expected to adhere to
    tradition, a high value being placed upon
    following or repeating the traditional form.

25
  • 3. Changes in artistic style, along with
    innovations in technique, appear
  • in cultures where artistic production is not
    generally valued.
  • to increase when art is not primarily associated
    with religion.
  • to have been much more significant in prehistoric
    times, as documented by archaeologists.
  • in all cultures at approximately the same rate.
  • to be more frequent in sedentary agricultural
    societies, where there is more time for creative
    expression.

26
Answer b
  • Changes in artistic style, along with innovations
    in technique, appear to increase when art is not
    primarily associated with religion.
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