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Art

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Title: Art


1
Art
  • An area of knowledge

2
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
3
Carl Jung
  • The supreme goal of man is to fulfill himself as
    a creative, unique individual according to his
    own unique potentialities and within the limits
    of reality

4
John Adams
  • I must study politics and war so that my sons may
    have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy.
    My sons ought to study mathematics, philosophy,
    geography, naval architecture, navigation,
    commerce and agriculture in order to give their
    children a right to study painting, poetry music,
    architecture, statuary, tapestry and porcelain.

5
The Role of Art
  • The desire to create some sort of art seems to be
    a universal (some have argued defining) human
    trait, and the artistic impulse may be among the
    loftiest of human drives.

6
  • A Do you -think that the notion of a hierarchy of
    needs is meaningful? If so, is Maslow's model the
    correct one? If not, why not - surely we all have
    biological needs that we must satisfy before
    other needs can be met?
  • B What is the role of the arts in the hierarchy
    that Maslow has identified? Is this role
    universal across different cultures?
  • C if you accept Maslow's hierarchy, which is more
    Important - the lowest level of the pyramid or
    the top level? Construct arguments to support
    both views.

7
What is Art?
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10
Guernica Testimony of War
It is modern art's most powerful antiwar statement... created by the twentieth century's most well-known and least understood artist. But the mural called Guernica is not at all what Pablo Picasso has in mind when he agrees to paint the centerpiece for the Spanish Pavilion of the 1937 World's Fair.
11
Fabergé EggsMementos of aDoomed Dynasty

12
Taj Mahal Memorial to Love
13
Tracey Irwin Unmade Bed
14
Is photography Art?
15
SCENE I. A lane by the wall of Capulet's
orchard. Enter ROMEO ROMEO Can I go forward
when my heart is here?Turn back, dull earth, and
find thy centre out. He climbs the wall, and
leaps down within it Enter BENVOLIO and
MERCUTIO BENVOLIO Romeo! my cousin
Romeo!MERCUTIO He is wiseAnd, on my lie, hath
stol'n him home to bed.
16
Great Expectations 
Hard Times
Martin Chuzzlewit
Oliver Twist
A Tale of Two Cities
Charles Dickens
17
"I WANDERED LONELY AS A CLOUD" I WANDERED
lonely as a cloud That floats on high o'er vales
and hills, When all at once I saw a crowd, A
host, of golden daffodils Beside the lake,
beneath the trees, Fluttering and dancing in the
breeze. Continuous as the stars that shine.
William Wordsworth
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20
What is Art?
  • Sunflowers by Vincent van Gogh.
  • A mass-produced urinal entitled fountain, chosen
    and displayed, but not designed or created, by
    Marcel Duchamp.
  • An untitled white piece of canvas.
  • A superb rock concert.
  • The song Happy Birthday.
  • A superb sportsman running 100 m.
  • A perfect copy of Sunflowers sold for 3 in a
    market.
  • A beautiful mountain
  • An white piece of canvas entitled Hiroshima

value creativity truth Intention enlightenment
splendour reality perspective accuracy elegance
form realism novelty empathy beauty emotion
passion wisdom Interpretation education wonder awe
21
What is Art?
  • A poem generated by a computer.
  • Einstein's general theory of relativity.
  • A white piece of canvas entitled A Foggy day
  • An extremely funny cartoon.
  • Mozart's Clarinet Concerto.
  • A perfect copy of Sunflowers hung In a gallery
    and called The Perfect Copy.
  • King Lear by William Shakespeare.
  • The Taj Mahal In Agra, India.
  • A sheep cut in two and preserved in a glass
    container.

value creativity truth Intention enlightenment
splendour reality perspective accuracy elegance
form realism novelty empathy beauty emotion
passion wisdom interpretation education wonder awe
22
Prescriptive or Descriptive?
  • When we ask what art is, we need to be clear
    about what sort of answer we are hoping to find.
    If we mean 'What sort of things are called art?'
    then we have an empirical issue - the question is
    about how and in what contexts people use the
    word 'art'. In this sense, the answer will be
    descriptive of how the world is. On the other
    hand, and perhaps far more interestingly, if we
    mean 'What sort of things should we call art?'
    then we have entered a different area for this
    question cannot be answered purely by reference
    to a description of the world. In order to answer
    the question in this sense we a re required to
    make a judgement, and the answer will indicate
    how we think the world should be.

23
The Worlds Most Wanted and Least Wanted
Paintings
Visit the website Click here
Survey Result
  • Preferred A predominance of blue and a pastoral
    scene with a stretch of water.
  • Least liked Modern abstract painting with a
    predominance of red

24
So, is there GOOD art and BAD Art?
  • What are the criteria we would use to judge?

25
Weekly Telegraph September 2003
26
The Arts are a way of expressing emotion
  • Think of several pieces of art in different media
    (for example, architecture, music, painting,
    poetry, plays, sculpture), good and bad, which
    evoke emotion.
  • lf the purpose of art is to evoke emotion,- then
    what are the best forms of art?
  • Would this definition of the purpose of art
    include things which we would not wish to
    include, or exclude things we would not wish to
    exclude?
  • In light of this, to what extent is communication
    of emotion a useful characterisation of art?

27
The Arts imitate nature or the world the
mimetic theory
28
Art teaches us what is right
Guernica Testimony of War
29
The Arts offer an insight into the human
condition ie more than just a moral statement
  • Perhaps this explanation allows us to see why the
    arts are regarded as a mark of civilisation, why
    they offer something glorious and profound. If
    they offer us a way to make sense of what is a
    confusing natural world, a way to interpret our
    emotions and those of others, or a guide to the
    nature of morality, then they are indeed to be
    valued! This characterisation of the arts seems
    to encompass the others so far suggested.
  • Perhaps other disciplines give us 'knowledge' but
    we turn to the arts to broaden our emotional and
    intellectual boundaries.Look at the examples of
    Art you have seen. What do they tell you about
    the human condition?

30
The Human Condition
  • Look at the examples of Art you have seen. What
    do they tell you about the human condition?
  • Describe some Art that has moved you profoundly
    in some way.
  • According to this model, what are the highest and
    lowest forms of Art?

31
Does it all come down to opinion?
  • Beauty is in the eye of the beholder
  • Beauty is no quality in things themselves it
    merely exists in the mind that contemplates them.
    i.e perception
  • Is Art and Beauty necessarily connected?

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Personal Opinions If the arts are about personal
opinions then why do we, as a society, rate some
art as much better than others? Why are some
pieces that were created centuries ago still well
known today? Could the sound of my pet dog
vomiting really be great art? Objective
Standards If there are objective standards by
which to measure the arts, then what are they?
Do you think your standards are universally
applicable? What is the basis for your choice
of those particular standards?
34
  • Are the arts Important? If so, is this despite or
    because of the problem of finding the standards
    by which to judge them?
  • What place does rationality have in the arts?
  • What are the standards of artistic judgement?
  • Which people are best qualified to judge the
    arts? What qualities should they possess?

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36
The arts, experience, and the nature of artistic
truth.
  • a work of art is not necessarily the worse for
    the fact that ... it is ... literally false ...
    If the author writes nonsense, it is because he
    considers it most suitable for bringing about the
    effects for which his writing is designed A J
    Ayer (philosopher)
  • 'Art is a lie that gives us the truth, at least
    the truth we are given to understand.' Pablo
    Picasso

37
Literature
  • A tragic ending for Verona lovebirds after
    mistakenly thinking his sweetheart dead, a young
    man took his life. Having discovered the fate of
    her lover, the woman killed herself in turn.
  • Its a hard life on the streets of London A
    young orphan runs away to London where he falls
    in with thieves led by a wily Jew. He eventually
    rises above all this and discovers his real
    origins.
  • A poor but noble young hero falls in love with a
    rich heroine on board ship They struggle against
    social pressures and intend to make a life
    together, but disaster strikes and the hero dies.
    The heroine goes on to live a happy life but she
    never forgets.

38
So, where does that leave us?
  • The arts have proven to be at least as slippery
    as the sciences! As we were hoping to use them to
    fill the gaps left by the sciences, this is
    probably no bad thing. As to whether or not we
    have succeeded in doing so, that's up to you.
  • However, we cannot deny that the arts offer us
    something different to science. They seem to
    connect with us, and to allow us to connect to
    each other in a very human way. This benefit has,
    however, come with a cost - we have lost much of
    any objective claim to certainty that we may once
    have had. What can we do about this? Probably
    little, as far as the arts go, but perhaps we
    should look elsewhere. If it is certainty we seek
    in our quest for truth, what things are most
    certain?

39
Louis Armstrong
  • If you gotta ask you aint never gonna know!!
  • Writing about arts is like dancing about
    architecture
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