Ch. 1: What Are the Arts and How Do We Respond to Them?
I. Art is not like science.
A. New forms do not invalidate previous ones or reduce them to obsolescence.
B. Regardless of the age of the work of art, the viewer always encounters it in the here and now.
II. Sporre: The Concerns of Art.
A. Creativity.
1. Form/cosmos out of formlessness/chaos.
a. The organizing of "experience."
b. John Dewey: "Art as Experience."
2. The artist's medium.
a. Durable arts.
b. Ephemeral arts.
3. Can any physical form live up to its "idea?" cf. Plato.
B. Communication.
1. Is an audience necessary? What about the self alone?
2. "Aesthetic" vs. "Anaesthetic."
C. Symbol (see previous webpage material on sign and symbol).
D. Fine, Applied, and Decorative Arts.
III. Sporre: Five Functions of Art.
A. Enjoyment/escape.
B. Socio-political commentary.
1. The Vietnam War Memorial.
2. Media: socio-political satire.
3. Grant Wood: American Gothic (1930).
C. Therapy.
1. Creative activity as stress management, as healing process.
D. Artifact.
1. Reflections and records of past cultures/civilizations.
2. The cave paintings of Lascaux (ca. 15K-10K BCE)
E. Ritual.
1. The spirituality of the creative process.
2. The spirituality of the encounter with the object.
IV. Art Criticism.
A. Criticism is not criticizing; criticism is analysis and interpretation.
1. Formal (textual).
2. Historical (contextual).
3. As outlined previously, both of these utilized and interrelated in order to develop an interpretation (subtextual).
V. Convention and Style.
A. Convention is determined by culture.
1. Does the work affirm or challenge cultural convention?
B. Style is reflective of culture, but also of a particular artist or movement.
C. Stylistic exercise in line, palette, and brushstroke.
1. Corot: A View Near Volterra.
2. Picasso: Guernica.
3. Van Gogh: The Starry Night.