Lesson 1 Overview of Humanities and Art
Lesson 1 Overview of Humanities and Art
Lesson 1 Overview of Humanities and Art
KEY TERMS
Humanities
Arts
Artist
LEARNING OUTCOMES
Nature of Humanities
Importance of Humanities
Division of Art
Language of Art
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INTRODUCTION
With the advent of the computer age, advanced science and technology have
overwhelmed many aspects of our lives, and even our possibilities of survival are
affected. But turning to the humanities where the “world of man’s spirit is evident in
humans”, rather than technical values, we experience a certain degree of relief. The
Lesson 1.1
DEFINITION OF HUMANITIES
The word humanities come from the Latin “humanus”, which means human,
cultured and refined. To be human is to have or show qualities like rationality, kindness
Unlike other subjects, it is not a group of scientific or technical subjects. Thus, the term
humanities refer to the study of the arts - the visual arts such as architecture, painting
and sculpture; music, dance, the theater or drama and literature. They are the branches
of learning concerned with human thought, feelings and relations. The importance of the
human being and his feelings and how he expresses those feelings have always been
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As a study, its material object is “artwork” and its formal object is “creativity and
appreciation.” Every creation around you which is made by human beings represents
someone's humanity. The chair you're sitting in, the clothes you're wearing, the building
you're in, or your home, even the time of day which people created, all are
that human beings have created can be classified as part of the humanities.
Lesson 1.2
NATURE OF HUMANITIES
Social Science: Man, as the focus. Art is the subject matter, but art is created by
Comparison:
Humanities: Man is the source and fountain of all creativity. (Creating Subject)
Contrast:
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Lesson 1.3
IMPORTANCE OF HUMANITIES
Art is very important in our lives. It constitutes one of the oldest and most
important means of expression developed by man. Wherever men have lived together,
art has sprung up among them as a language charged with feeling and significance.
understand the past or history which has significance to the present. It makes us
world cultures.
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Through Humanities, we will be able to build up your career, focus our life,
team.
Lesson 1.4
While new technologies have been largely absent in arts education curriculum,
they offer opportunities to address arts integration, equity, and the technological
prerequisites of an increasingly digital age. The digital age draws upon the emerging
professional field of “media arts” and the ways that youth use new technologies for
It almost goes without saying that youth spend an extraordinary amount of time
reading and writing new media, as evidenced by the proliferation of media texts found
on Instagram, YouTube, or Facebook. Assuming that this is true, arts education, and
more specifically, media arts, has many insights to offer about engaging with this new
“media arts” (also called digital arts or new media) can especially provide insights into
how this could operate in the K-12 schooling curriculum. The professional field of media
arts encompasses all forms of creative practice involving or referring to art that makes
Beyond surface forays with technology (such as typing, word processing, and web
surfing), media art encourages designing, creating, and critiquing genres that connect to
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youth culture and more actively engage youth in the process of learning than what is
notably computers, digital sound and visual image recording, and the Internet - are
Lesson 1.5
ART APPRECIATION
Appreciation of the visual arts goes beyond staring at a painting hanging on the
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wall of a museum; art is in everything and everywhere you look. Opening your eyes to
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the world of art is essential in understanding the world around you. Art is more than
pretentious museums; only a few enter and comprehend. Instead, art appreciation is:
Acquire the art methods and materials to discuss art verbally or by the written
word.
art.
to critically analyze art, art forms, and how cultures used art. All it takes to understand
Art appreciation centers on the ability to view art throughout history, focusing on
the cultures and the people, and how art developed in the specific periods. It is difficult
to understand art without understanding the culture, their use of materials, and a sense
of beauty. Art is conveyed by the simple act of creating art for art's sake. Every person
is born with the innate desire to create art, and similar to other professions, training is
diversity, how people lived in the past, and connect the issues concerning contemporary
The history of the world is similarly the history of art, continually intertwined. For
millions of years, as humans roamed the earth, evolution, and environment shaped
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many different cultures depending on location, weather, natural resources, and food.
These cultures formed the foundation of all art today. Art appreciation analyzes art
using the methods and materials, allowing people to make connections to the context of
art and the interactions of societies. It is difficult to understand the art without
Lesson 1.6
DEFINITION OF ART
There are many definitions of art and every one of them is influenced by a
particular historical, cultural, or aesthetic vision. Like pieces from a gigantic puzzle, each
of these views provides a part of the whole true. Through history, art has been
something is done “the use of skill and imagination in the creation of aesthetic objects,
environments, or experiences that can be shared with others” rather than what it is.
Arts are defined by history and historical process. Art was derived from the
Aryan root word "ar" means to put together, while still another origin of the word art
came from Latin "ars" means ability or skills (corresponding to the Greek “techne” from
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Art is either a concept or a fact. As a concept, it is subject to be understood and
the ideas and emotions of man concretized by means of any sensuous material. But, art
as a fact is observable; is that which is known through the senses. It refers then to any
creative work of an artist that can easily be described upon noticing the different
In the ancient world, a "work of art" was simply any object that required skill or
craft in its production. Only gradually, beginning about the middle of the 17th century,
did work of art mean a work of fine or high art. The artisan or the craftsman is not
expected to be original and he is good at his job to the extent that he can successfully
A work of a craft is good if it matches the appropriate template and performs the
desired function. The artist must be creative and original. Good art cannot be produced
by slavish-rule following and imitation. Great artists are genius whose works transcend
Lesson 1.7
IMPORTANCE OF ART
Art is such a large part of our everyday lives; we hardly even stop to think about
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Art stimulates different parts of our brains to make us laugh.
our eyes.
Lesson 1.8
DIVISIONS OF ART
cartoons, printmaking, ceramics, stained glass, photography, installation, video, film and
cinematography, to name but a few. All these activities are commonly classified into
several overlapping categories such as: fine, visual, plastic, decorative, applied, and
performing.
1. Fine Arts: This category includes those artworks that are created primarily for
aesthetic reasons ('art for art's sake') rather than for commercial or functional
use. Designed for its uplifting, life-enhancing qualities, fine art typically denotes
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Drawing
Using charcoal, chalk, crayon, pastel or with pencil or pen and ink. Two major
Painting
Using oils, watercolor, gouache, acrylics, ink and wash, or the more old-
Sculpture
Printmaking
Using simple methods like woodcuts or stencils, the more demanding techniques
of engraving, etching and lithography, or the more modern forms like screen-
Giclee is the first and only fine art print to be made with an ink jet printer.
2. Visual Arts: Visual art includes all the fine arts as well as new media and
like video art and animation, or any combination thereof. Another type, often
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3. Plastic Arts: The term plastic art typically denotes three-dimensional works
some way: such as, clay, plaster, stone, metals, wood (sculpture), paper
art forms, such as works in glass, clay, wood, metal, or textile fabric. This
includes all forms of jewelry and mosaic art, as well as ceramics, (exemplified by
art also includes any activity in which the artist's physical presence acts as the
medium. Thus it encompasses, mime, face or body painting, and the like. A
6. Applied Arts: This category encompasses all activities involving the application
intellectual stimulation to the viewer, applied art creates utilitarian items (a cup, a
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couch or sofa, a clock, a chair or table) using aesthetic principles in their design.
Folk art is predominantly involved with this type of creative activity. Applied art
Lesson 1.9
LANGUAGE OF ART
The language of art has no words. Yet, it has the power to communicate feelings
and moods. An artist’s success in communicating depends on his or her skill at this
language.
Primary Language: It is built into us as a part of our human heritage. This is the
language of arts to which we are all heirs and can respond, given the chance and
language of the art consists of the "cultivation of the arts in an education of the
sensibilities" he added, "when there is no will to creation, the death instinct takes
styles, which have accumulated over the ages. The greater the number of works
conventions.
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Third Language: It is the language in which this and other books on the arts are
written. It deals with the ability to talk about the arts meaningfully and
expressively.
You may have heard the expression that a picture is worth a thousand words.
When it comes to art, this saying certainly holds true. To see the relationship between
words and pictures, look at the painting and read the passage below:
“Tommy was waiting for his big brother to meet him. The street was deserted.
Everyone else had gone home, and Tommy was getting nervous. The wind blew the
trash along the sidewalk, and Tommy was getting cold. The tall, new skyscraper
towered over this old building in his neighborhood. He noticed how the stucco had
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peeled off the building’s surface to reveal the bare bricks. The shadow of the skyscraper
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fell on the condemned building. Tommy took out his flute. Music always made him feel
better. He made up a tune to push away the fear. He continued playing and the
environment became his rhythm section. The wire around the column rattled like
castanets and the broken doors slammed a steady beat. The trash brushing along the
sidewalk became the rustling of snare drums. He didn’t care how long it took his brother
to finish practice. Tommy wasn’t nervous anymore as he waited for his brother. He had
Notice how the boy in this painting stands alone playing his flute. What mood has
the artist created? Compare the image it depicts with the description you just read. You
will probably agree that what took the writer many words to describe, the artist depicted
in a single painting.
Lesson 1.10
Characteristics of Experience:
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It must be personal and individual. It must not exactly be the same as that of any
other person.
Lesson 1.11
There are some artists who would use the natural objects as they are without
changing them in levying or carrying their art work. Take for example, a landscape.
Artists charged with the task of landscaping would have to use the stones and other
natural materials without even deforming their shape, form and organization. This is the
principle of non-transformation.
Under the “Principle of Transformation”, the artists have the necessarily alter
the natural objects in carrying their art work because by so doing the idea of the artist,
the purpose of the art, and the circumstances surrounding the art can properly be
served.
The following are the arguments that would separate each other from a single
category:
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Works of art is like sentences, but unlike natural objects that can mean
something. This point can perhaps be better put another way: works of art, like
Take for example, reading a poem. Through it, we are presumably entitled to
ask, "What is trying to say?" We are certainly not entitled to ask such a question
Works of art can imitate nature (and can be applauded for doing so), but nature
Lesson 1.12
There is a wide range of factors affecting the work of an artist, as you can find
to practice will definitely influence their creative output. Creative artists often,
there is a childlike, totally immersed obsession with their art which is a key driver,
Very individualistic artists will have a vision which some feel comes entirely from
those people’s own way of looking at the world. Even the quirkiest artist is
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influenced to a degree by their environment, people around
work.
artists can influence their output, as with film, music, and so on.
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