1What is Art?Jeffrey LeMieux and Pamela J. Sachant 1.1 LEARNING OUTCOMES
After completing this chapter, you should be able to: Recognize various historical arguments about the definition of art and who is an artist. Engage arguments that distinguish between art and craft. Critically evaluate claims about whether an object is or is not art from multiple points
of view. Engage questions about who is considered an artist and the role of the viewer. Productively speculate about various reasons why people have made and continue to
make art. Recognize your intuitive understanding of art, and potentially build a broader, more
comprehensive view of the nature and definition of visual art, one which incorporates historically and culturally diverse art objects and answers conceptual challenges.
1.2 INTRODUCTION We live in a rapidly changing world in which images play an important, even central, role. With
widespread use of personal electronics, we instantaneously deliver and receive sound, video, and text messages. Corporations and governments worldwide recognize the power of advertising. Art museums worldwide are putting large parts of their collections online. Today we are seeing the- ater-quality movies made with inexpensive equipment that was unavailable ten years ago. Selfies, personal video, and memes are everywhere. In 1968, artist Andy Warhol (1928-1967, USA) said, In the future everyone will be world-famous for fifteen minutes. (Self Portrait, Andy Warhol: http://art.newcity.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Warhol_SelfPortrait.jpg) We are seeing that prediction come true with the advent of personal electronics that rival the sophistication of the most advanced professional studios of only twenty years ago. We are surrounded by images, but, for all of our clever technical abilities, the fundamental dynamics of visual art remain the same.
ttp://art.newcity.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Warhol_SelfPortrait.jpg
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Take a few minutes to look over the accom- panying image, Blind Homer and His Guide. (Figure 1.1) It was painted in 1875 by a leading member of the French École des Beaux Arts, or School of Fine Arts, William-Adolphe Bou- guereau (1825-1925, France), and serves as a good example of the kinds of paintings made in Europe during that time. We might wonder what a painting made more than 100 years ago in a for- eign country could have to do with us today.
The French Academic artist Bouguereaus painting is more than a literal presentation of a forgotten moment in ancient history. The painting challenges viewers from every age to go deeper, to see the symbolism behind the histo- ry. Homer, who is thought to have lived around 1000 BCE, was the chief poet of the ancient Greeks. Ancient Greek ideas about social roles and the nature of virtue come to us in part from Homers epic poems the Illiad and the Odyssey. In Bouguereaus painting, Homer symbolizes civilization and culture. Homer wanders blindly through a savage wilderness with only a youth to shelter him. In this way, Bouguereau implies that a wilderness can be not only physical but also cultural, and in that sense, all of us wander through a wilderness that threatens the human
spirit found in culture. His painting asks the question, How are cultural values carried forward? In Bouguereaus work, the young man has taken responsibility for protecting Homer, who sym- bolizes the refined wisdom of the past and the foundation of western culture. This image is a call to the youth of Bouguereaus generation (and to ours) to bring precious culture forward safely through an ever-threatening wilderness.
Wherever we find human beings, we find visual art. Works of visual art raise questions not on- ly about our ancestors, but also about the nature of visual art itself. What is art? Who is an artist? Why do artists make art? What is the role of the viewer? Does everything count as art? How have people defined art through time? How do we define art today?
In this chapter, we will examine these questions in more detail. The purpose of this exam- ination is twofold: to increase your awareness of the mechanics of those images and, thus, more effectively understand the visual art that we encounter in our daily lives. Images are powerful. Images are used in our culture in many ways, not all of them benign. When we enhance our visual literacy, we raise our awareness of the powerful images that surround us.
Figure 1.1 | Blind Homer with Guide Artist: Bouguereau Author: User Thebrid Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain
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1.3 WHAT IS VISUAL ART? To explore a subject, we need first to define it. Defining art, however, proves elusive. You may
have heard it said (or even said it yourself) that it might be art, but its not Art, which means, I might not know how to define it, but I know it when I see it.
Everywhere we look, we see images designed to command our attention, including images of desire, images of power, religious images, images meant to recall memories, and images intended to manipulate our appetites. But are they art?
Some languages do not have a separate word for art. In those cultures, objects tend to be util- itarian in purpose but often include in their design the intent to delight, portray a special status, or commemorate an important event or ritual. Thus, while the objects are not considered art, they do have artistic functions.
1.3.1 Historic Development of the Idea of Art
The idea of art has developmentally progressed from human prehistory to the present day. Changes to the definition of art over time can be seen as attempts to resolve problems with earlier definitions. The ancient Greeks saw the goal of visual art as copying, or mimesis. Nineteenth-cen- tury art theorists promoted the idea that art is communication: it produces feelings in the viewer. In the early twentieth century, the idea of significant form, the quality shared by aesthetically pleasing objects, was proposed as a definition of art. Today, many artists and thinkers agree with the institutional theory of art, which shifts focus from the work of art itself to who has the power to decide what is and is not art. While this progression of definitions of art is not exhaustive, it is instructive.
1.3.1.1 Mimesis The ancient Greek definition of art
as mimesis, or imitation of the real world, appears in the myth of Zeux- is and Parhassios, rival painters from ancient Greece in the late fifth cen- tury BCE who competed for the title of greatest artist. (Figure 1.2) Zeuxis painted a bowl of grapes that was so lifelike that birds came down to peck at the image of fruit. Parhassios was unimpressed with this achievement. When viewing Parhassioss work, Ze- uxis, on his part, asked that the cur- tain over the painting be drawn back so he could see his rivals work more
Figure 1.2 | Zeuxis conceding defeat: I have deceived the birds, but Parhassios has deceived Zeuxis. Artist: Joachim von Sandrart; engraving by Johann Jakob von Sandrart Author: User Fae Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain
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clearly. Parhassios declared himself the victor because the curtain was the painting, and while Zeuxis fooled the birds with his work, Parhassios fooled a thinking human beinga much more difficult feat.
The ancient Greeks felt that the visual artists goal was to copy visual experience. This ap- proach appears in the realism of ancient Greek sculpture and pottery. We must sadly note that, due to the action of time and weather, no paintings from ancient Greek artists exist today. We can only surmise their quality based on tales such as that of Zeuxis and Parhassios, the obvious skill in ancient Greek sculpture, and in drawings that survive on ancient Greek pottery.
This definition of art as copy- ing reality has a problem, though. Jackson Pollock (1912-1956, USA), a leader in the New York School of the 1950s, intentionally did not copy existing objects in his art. (Figure 1.3) While painting these works, Pollock and his fellow artists would consciously avoid making marks or passages that resembled recognizable objects. They succeeded at making art- work that did not copy anything, thus demonstrating that the an- cient Greek view of art as mime- sissimple copyingdoes not suf- ficiently define art.
1.3.1.2 Communication A later attempt at defining art comes from the nineteenth-century Russian author Leo Tolstoy.
Tolstoy wrote on many subjects, and is the author of the great novel War and Peace (1869). He was also an art theorist. He proposed that art is the communication of feeling, stating, Art is a human activity consisting in this, that one man consciously by means of certain external signs, hands on to others feelings he has lived through, and that others are infected by these feelings and also experience them.1
This definition does not succeed because it is impossible to confirm that the feelings of the art- ist have been successfully conveyed to another person. Further, suppose an artist created a work of art that no one else ever saw. Since no feeling had been communicated through it, would it still be a work of art? The work did not hand on to others anything at all because it was never seen. Therefore, it would fail as art according to Tolstoys definition.
1 Leo Tolstoy, What is Art? And Essays on Art, trans. Aylmer Maude (London: Oxford University Press, 1932), 123.
Figure 1.3 | Left: The She-Wolf; Right: Gothic Artist: Jackson Pollock Author: Gorup de Besanez Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 4.0
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1.3.1.3 Significant Form To address these limitations of existing definitions of art, in 1913 English art critic Clive Bell
proposed that art is significant form, or the quality that brings us aesthetic pleasure. Bell stat- ed, to appreciate a work of art we need bring with us nothing but a sense of form and colour.2 In Bells view, the term form simply means line, shape, mass, as well as color. Significant form is the collection of those elements that rises to the level of your awareness and gives you noticeable pleasure in its beauty. Unfortunately, aesthetics, pleasure in the beauty and appreciation of art, are impossible to measure or reliably define. What brings aesthetic pleasure to one person may not affect another. Aesthetic pleasure exists only in the viewer, not in the object. Thus significant form is purely subjective. While Clive Bell did advance the debate about art by moving it away from requiring strict representation, his definition gets us no closer to understanding what does or does not qualify as an art object.
1.3.1.4 Artworld One definition of art widely held today was first promoted in the 1960s by American philoso-
phers George Dickie and Arthur Danto, and is called the institutional theory of art, or the Art- world theory. In the simplest version of this theory, art is an object or set of conditions that has been designated as art by a person or persons acting on behalf of the artworld, and the artworld is a complex field of forces that determine what is and is not art.3 Unfortunately, this definition gets us no further along because it is not about art at all! Instead, it is about who has the power to define art, which is a political issue, not an aesthetic one.
1.3.2 Definition of Art
We each perceive the world from our own position or per- spective and from that percep- tion we make a mental image of the world. Science is the process of turning perceptions into a coherent mental picture of the universe through testing and observation. (Figure 1.4) Sci- ence moves concepts from the world into the mind. Science is vitally important because it al- lows us to understand how the world works and to use that un- derstanding to make good pre- dictions. Art is the other side of 2 Clive Bell, Art and Significant Form, in Art (New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company, 1913), 2 3 George Dickie, Art and the Aesthetic: An Institutional Analysis (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1974), 464.
Figure 1.4 | Perception: Art and Science Author: Jeffrey LeMieux Source: Original Work License: CC BY-SA 4.0
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our experience with the world. Art moves ideas from the mind into the world.
We need both art and science to exist in the world. From our earliest age, we both observe the world and do things to change it. We are all both scientists and artists. Every human activity has both a science (observation) and an art (expression) to it. Anyone who has participated in the disci- pline of Yoga, for example, can see that even something as simple as breathing has both an art and a science to it.
This definition of art covers the wide variety of objects that we see in museums, on social media, or even in our daily walk to work. But this definition of art is not enough. The bigger question is: what art is worthy of our attention, and how do we know when we have found it? Ultimately, each of us must answer that question for ourselves.
But we do have help if we want it. People who have made a disciplined study of art can offer ideas about what art is im- portant and why. In the course of this text, we will examine some of those ideas about art. Due to the importance of re- specting the individual, the decision about what art is best must belong to the individual. We ask only that the student understand the ideas as presented.
When challenged with a question or problem about what is best, we first ask, What do I personally know about it? When we realize our personal resources are limited, we might ask friends, neighbors, and relatives what they know. In addition to these important resources, the edu- cated person can refer to a larger body of possible solutions drawn from a study of the history of literature, philosophy, and art: What did the English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley say about truth in his essay Defense of Poetry (1840)? (Fig- ure 1.5) What did the French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau claim about human nature in his treatise Emile or On Education (1762)? (Figure 1.6) What did Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675, Netherlands) show us about the quiet dignity of the domestic space in his painting Woman Hold- ing a Balance? (Figure 1.7) Through experiencing these works of art and literature, our ideas about such things can be tested and validated or found wanting.
We will examine works of visual art from a diverse range of cultures and periods. The challenge for you as the reader
Figure 1.5 | Portrait of Percy Bysshe Shelley Artist: Alfred Clint Author: User Dcoetzee Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain
Figure 1.6 | Portrait of Jean-Jacques Rousseau Artist: Maurice Quentin de La Tour Author: User Maarten van Vliet Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain
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is to increase your ability to interpret works of art through the use of context, visual dynamics, and introspection, and to integrate them into a coher- ent worldview. The best outcome of an encounter with art is an awakening of the mind and spirit to a new point of view. A mind stretched beyond itself never returns to its original dimension.
1.3.3 The Distinction of Fine Art
From our definition of art proposed above, it would seem that craft and fine art are indistin- guishable as both come from the mind into the world. But the distinction between craft and art is real and important. This distinction is most com- monly understood as one based on the use or end purpose of an object, or as an effect of the ma- terial used. Clay, textiles, glass, and jewelry were long considered the province of craft, not art. If an objects intended use was a part of daily living, then it was generally thought to be the product of craft, not fine art. But many objects originally intended to be functional, such as quilts, are now thought to qualify as fine art. (Figure 1.8)
So what could be the difference between art and craft? Anyone who has been exposed to training in a craft such as carpentry or plumbing recognizes that craft follows a formula, that is, a set of rules that govern not only how the work is to be conducted but also what the outcome of that work must be. The level of craft is judged by how closely the end product matches the pre-determined outcome. We want our houses to stand and water to flow when we turn on our faucets. Fine art, on the other hand, results from a free and open-ended exploration that does not depend on a pre-determined formula for its out- come or validity. Its outcome is surprising and original. Almost all fine art objects are a com- bination of some level both of craft and art. Art stands on craft, but goes beyond it.
Figure 1.7 | Woman Holding a Balance Artist: Johannes Vermeer Author: User DcoetzeeBot Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain
Figure 1.8 | Quilt Artist: Lucy Mingo Author: User Billvolckening Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 4.0
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1.3.4 Why Art Matters
American physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer is considered a father of the atomic bomb for the role he played in de- veloping nuclear weapons as part of the Manhattan Project during World War II (1939-1945). (Figure 1.9) Upon comple- tion of the project, quoting from the Hindu epic tale Bhaga- vad Gita, he stated, Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds. Clearly, Oppenheimer had read more than physics texts in his education, which fit him well for his important role during World War II.
When we train in mathematics and the sciences, for ex- ample, we become very powerful. Power can be used well or badly. Where in our schools is the coursework on how to use power wisely? Today a liberal arts college education requires students to survey the arts and history of human cultures in order to examine a wide range of ideas about wisdom and to humanize the powerful. With that in mind, in every course taken in the university, it is hoped that you will recognize the need to couple your increasing intellectual power with a study of what is thought to be wisdom, and to view each educational experience in the humanities as part of the search for what is better in ourselves and our communities.
This text is not intended to determine what is or is not good art and why it matters. Rather, the point of this text is to equip you with intellectual tools that will enable you to analyze, decipher, and interpret works of art as bearers of meaning, to make your own decisions about the merit of those works, and then usefully to integrate those decisions into your daily lives.
1.4 WHO IS CONSIDERED AN ARTIST? WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE AN ARTIST?
In much of the world today, an artist is considered to be a person with the talent and the skills to conceptualize and make creative works. Such persons are singled out and prized for their ar- tistic and original ideas. Their art works can take many forms and fit into numerous categories, such as architecture, ceramics, digital art, drawings, mixed media, paintings, photographs, prints, sculpture, and textiles. Of greater importance, artists are the individuals who have the desire and ability to envision, design, and fabricate the images, objects, and structures we all encounter, use, occupy, and enjoy every day of our lives.
Today, as has been the case throughout history and across cultures, there are different titles for those who make and build. An artisan or craftsperson, for example, may produce decorative or utilitarian arts, such as quilts or baskets. Often, an artisan or craftsperson is a skilled worker, but not the inventor of the original idea or form. An artisan or craftsperson can also be someone
Figure 1.9 | J. Robert Oppenheimer Author: Los Alamos National Laboratory Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain
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who creates their own designs, but does not work in art forms or with materials traditionally asso- ciated with the so-called Fine Arts, such as painting and sculpture. A craftsperson might instead fashion jewelry, forge iron, or blow glass into patterns and objects of their own devising. Such inventive and skilled pieces are often categorized today as Fine Craft or Craft Art.
In many cultures throughout much of history, those who produced, embellished, painted, and built were not considered to be artists as we think of them now. They were artisans and craftspeople, and their role was to make the objects and build the structures for which they were hired, according to the design (their own or anothers) agreed upon with those for whom they were working. That is not to say they were untrained. In Medieval Europe, or the Middle Ages (fifth-fifteenth centuries), for example, an artisan generally began around the age of twelve as an apprentice, that is, a student who learned all aspects of a profession from a master who had their own workshop. Apprenticeships lasted five to nine years or more, and included learning trades ranging from painting to baking, and masonry to candle making. At the end of that period, an apprentice became a journeyman and was allowed to become a member of the craft guild that su- pervised training and standards for those working in that trade. To achieve full status in the guild, a journeyman had to complete their masterpiece, demonstrating sufficient skill and craftsman- ship to be named a master.
We have little information about how artists trained in numerous other time peri- ods and cultures, but we can gain some un- derstanding of what it meant to be an artist by looking at examples of art work that were produced. Seated Statue of Gudea depicts the ruler of the state of Lagash in Southern Mesopotamia, today Iraq, during his reign, c. 2144-2124 BCE. (Figure 1.10)
Gudea is known for building temples, many in the kingdoms main city of Girsu (today Telloh, Iraq), with statues portraying himself in them. In these works, he is seat- ed or standing with wide, staring eyes but otherwise a calm expression on his face and his hands folded in a gesture of prayer and greeting. Many of the statues, including the one pictured here, are carved from diorite, a very hard stone favored by rulers in ancient Egypt and the Near East for its rarity and the fine lines that can be cut into it. The ability to cut such precise lines allowed the craftsper- son who carved this work to distinguish be- tween and emphasize each finger in Gudeas
Figure 1.10 | Gudea Source: Met Museum License: OASC
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clasped hands as well as the circular patterns on his stylized shepherds hat, both of which indi- cate the leaders dedication to the well-being and safety of his people.
Although the sculpture of Gudea was clearly carved by a skilled artisan, we have no record of that person, or of the vast majority of the artisans and builders who worked in the ancient world. Who they worked for and what they created are the records of their lives and artistry. Artisans were not valued for taking an original approach and setting themselves apart when creating a statue of a ruler such as Gudea: their success was based on their ability to work within standards of how the human form was depicted and specifically how a leader should look within that culture at that time. The large, almond-shaped eyes and compact, block-like shape of the figure, for ex- ample, are typical of sculpture from that period. This sculpture is not intended to be an individual likeness of Gudea; rather, it is a depiction of the characteristic features, pose, and proportions found in all art of that time and place.
Objects made out of clay were far more common in the ancient world than those made of met- al or stone, such as the Seated Statue of Gudea, which were far more costly, time-consuming, and difficult to make. Human figures modeled in clay dating back as far as 29,000-25,000 BCE have been found in Europe, and the earliest known pottery, found in Jiangxi Province, China, dates to c. 18,000 BCE. Vessels made of clay and baked in ovens were first made in the Near East c. 8,000 BCE, nearly 6,000 years before the Seated Statue of Gudea was carved. Ceramic (clay hardened by heat) pots were used for storage and numerous everyday needs. They were utilitarian objects made by anonymous artisans.
Among the ancient Greeks, however, pottery rose to the level of an art form. But, the status of the individuals who cre- ated and painted the pots did not. Although their work may have been sought after, these potters and painters were still considered artisans. The origins of pottery that can be de- scribed as distinctively Greek dates to c. 1,000 BCE, in what is known as the Proto-geometric period. Over the next several hundred years, the shapes of the vessels and the types of deco- rative motifs and subjects painted on them became associated with the city where they were produced, and then specifically with the individuals who made and decorated the pots. The types of pots signed by the potter and the painter were general- ly large, elaborately decorated or otherwise specialized vessels that were used for ritual or ceremonial purposes.
That is the case with the Panathenaic Prize Amphora, 363-362 BCE, signed by Nikodemos, the potter, and attributed to the Painter of the Wedding Procession, whose name is not known but is identified through similarities to other painted pots. (Figure 1.11) The Panathenaia was a festival held every four years in honor of Athena, the patron goddess of Athens, Greece, who is depicted on the amphora, a tall, two-handled
Figure 1.11 | Panathenaic Prize Amphora with Lid Artist: Nikodemos Source: The J. Paul Getty Museum License: Open Content
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jar with a narrow neck. On the other side of the storage jar, Nike, the goddess of victory, crowns the winner of the boxing competition for which this potcontaining precious olive oil from Athenas sa- cred treeswas awarded by the city of Athens. Only the best potters and painters were hired to make pots that were part of such an important ceremony and holding such a significant prize. While the vast majority of artisans never identified themselves on their work, these noteworthy individuals were set apart and acknowledged by name. The makers signatures demonstrated the citys desire to give an award of the highest quality; they acted as promotion for the potter and painter at that time, and they have immortalized them since. It must not be forgotten, however, that the prize inside the pot was considered far more important than the vessel or the skilled artisans who created it.
China was united and ruled by Mongols from the north, first under Kublai Kahn, in the period known as the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368). The hand scroll painting Pear Blossoms was created with ink and colors on paper around 1280 by Qian Xuan (c. 1235-before 1307, China). (Figure 1.12) After the establishment of the Mongolian government, Qian Xuan abandoned his goal of obtaining a po- sition as a scholar-official, as the highly educated bureaucrats who governed China were known, and turned to painting. He was part of a group of artists known as scholar-painters, or literati. The work of scholar-painters was desirable to many admirers of art because it was considered more personal, expressive, and spontaneous than the uniform and realistic paintings by professional, trained art- ists. The scholar-painters sophisticated and deep knowledge of philosophy, culture, and the arts including calligraphymade them welcome among fellow scholars and at court. They were part of the elite class of leaders, who followed the long and noble traditions within Confucian teachings of expressing oneself with wisdom and grace, especially in the art of poetry.
Figure 1.12 | Pear Blossoms Artist: Qian Xuan Source: Met Museum License: OASC
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Qian Xuan was one of the first scholar-painters to unite painting and poetry, as he does in Pear Blossoms:
All alone by the veranda railing, teardrops drenching the branches, Although her face is unadorned, her old charms remain; Behind the locked gate, on a rainy night, how she is filled with sadness. How differently she looked bathed in golden waves of moonlight, before the darkness fell.
The poem is not meant to illustrate or describe his paint- ing of the branch with its delicate, young foliage and flow- ers; rather, the swaying, irregular lines of the leaves and the gently unfurling curves of the blossoms are meant to suggest comparisons to how quickly time passesdelicate blooms will soon fadeand evoke
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