Question: What is the Definition of Art?
Note: This is a question that pops
up around once a month, typically from a student who is stumped and pressed for
time. My answer, a compilation of replies, is as follows.
Answer:
There are several ways you could go
about defining art, but my suspicion is that one will get you better results
than the others.
I could tell you that art
plays a large part in making our lives infinitely rich. Imagine, just for a
minute, a world without art! (You may think "So what?" but please
consider the impact that lack of graphics would have on your favorite video
game.) Art stimulates different parts of our brains to make us laugh or incite
us to riot, with a whole gamut of emotions in between. Art gives us a way to be
creative and express ourselves. For some people, art is the entire reason they
get out of bed in the morning. You could say "Art is something that makes
us more thoughtful and well-rounded humans."
On the other hand, art is such a
large part of our everyday lives that we may hardly even stop to think about
it. Look at the desk or table where you are, right this minute. Someone
designed that. It is art. Your shoes are art. Your coffee cup is art. All
functional design, well done, is art. So, you could say "Art is something
that is both functional and (hopefully) aesthetically pleasing to our
eyes."
You might say "Art is in a
constant state of change, so nobody can really pin down what it is." The
constant change part is true, but the not pinning it down part is going to get
you a bad grade. It may even raise a comment or two about your being some sort
of wisenheimer. Don't go this route.
You might even say "Art is
subjective, and means something different to every single person on
earth." This, too, is the truth. I would caution against this approach,
however, as it would require a stack of paper from here to the moon to cite all
of your 6.8 billion references.
Now, everything just stated has
elements of truth, but is largely based on opinion. My opinion is, frankly,
useless in your paper-writing endeavor. Form your own opinions (that
should be the reason you are receiving an education, after all), and be sure to
sprinkle them in your answer... which needs a factual basis, so here are the
cold hard facts
Art is form and content.
"Art is form and content"
means: All art consists of these two things.
Form means:
- The elements of art
- the principles of design and
- the actual, physical materials that the artist has used.
Form, in
this context, is concrete and fairly easily described -- no matter which piece
of art is under scrutiny.
Suppose
you've written: "One half of all art is form. Here is how Goya's The
Shootings of May Third, 1808 fits in." You would then go on to provide
details about how Goya used color, value, space and line (elements of art). He
used balance, contrast, emphasis and proportion (principles of design). He
composed the aforementioned elements and principles on canvas, using brushes
and oil paints (the physical materials).
The
example just given employed a work of Western art, and was written in English.
It doesn't take much of a leap in imagination, though, to understand that the
concepts behind "form" could be applied to any piece of art,
created anywhere on earth, at any time, using any language. With that, we have
successfully covered "form."
Content,
now, gets a little more tricky. Content is idea-based and means:
- What the artist meant to portray,
- what the artist actually did portray and
- how we react, as individuals, to both the intended and actual messages.
Additionally,
content includes ways in which a work was influenced -- by religion, or
politics, or society in general, or even the artist's use of hallucinogenic
substances--at the time it was created. All of these factors, together, make up
the content side of art.
Returning
to the Goya example, you might comment on the fact that the shootings were an
actual event. Napoleon had invaded Spain, at the time, and subjected it to six
years of war and revolution (political and social influences). There had been a
revolt by citizens of Madrid, and they were summarily executed (historical
context). Goya, obviously, didn't think this was good and recorded the stark
horror for all posterity. (He was successful at conveying that which he meant
to convey.) We react to the painting in our different ways -- usually with
mixed feeling of revulsion, anger and sorrow.
Again, we
are discussing content using one picture as an example, but the same parameters
apply to any piece of art.
That's my
best reply, then. The first four paragraphs are applicable -- with infinite
variations, up to, and including, "The way my girlfriend puts on her
eyeshadow is art." Just be sure that your main argument includes "Art
is form and content." You can certainly think of some great examples
using works of art that you know and/or enjoy. Now. Go get cracking on that
paper and, next time, don't wait until the last minute.
Reference: http://arthistory.about.com What is Art?
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