1) Over the past few decades, the philosophy of art has experienced a revival as more studies explore philosophical questions about the meaning of art.
2) Modern art movements challenging norms have pushed boundaries and necessitated theoretical discourse to justify new concepts of art, leading to increased importance of art philosophy.
3) Artists have sometimes seen philosophy and conceptual art as intertwined, further explaining the growing significance of art philosophy for art's development.
1) Over the past few decades, the philosophy of art has experienced a revival as more studies explore philosophical questions about the meaning of art.
2) Modern art movements challenging norms have pushed boundaries and necessitated theoretical discourse to justify new concepts of art, leading to increased importance of art philosophy.
3) Artists have sometimes seen philosophy and conceptual art as intertwined, further explaining the growing significance of art philosophy for art's development.
1) Over the past few decades, the philosophy of art has experienced a revival as more studies explore philosophical questions about the meaning of art.
2) Modern art movements challenging norms have pushed boundaries and necessitated theoretical discourse to justify new concepts of art, leading to increased importance of art philosophy.
3) Artists have sometimes seen philosophy and conceptual art as intertwined, further explaining the growing significance of art philosophy for art's development.
1) Over the past few decades, the philosophy of art has experienced a revival as more studies explore philosophical questions about the meaning of art.
2) Modern art movements challenging norms have pushed boundaries and necessitated theoretical discourse to justify new concepts of art, leading to increased importance of art philosophy.
3) Artists have sometimes seen philosophy and conceptual art as intertwined, further explaining the growing significance of art philosophy for art's development.
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Art as viewed by Philosophy
Over the past few decades, the philosophy of art
has enjoyed a remarkable revival. More and more studies are being devoted to the philosophical or theoretical probing into questions about the meaning of art. This gradual but steady expansion in the field also suggests a broadening group of potential readers. Indeed, the present situation may perhaps be characterized as not simply a revival but as an unprecedented breakthrough. There are three major developments that help explain this. Firstly, today's increased importance of philosophy of art is due to modern art itself. Revolutionary avant-garde movements, attempting to transcend existing norms in art as early as around 1910, unleashed a process that has challenged any supposedly self-evident notions of art ever since. This process still continues today. Modern art is constantly pushing the boundaries of the “artistic”, seeking and providing new answers to the question of what art really is. Not surprisingly, every new movement is accompanied by a theoretical discourse to justify its premises. In the art world, the permanent drive for renewal has urged more and more artists to turn to philosophy to support their concepts of art. Artists have sometimes taken this approach to such extremes as to identify thinking about art with art itself, as has happened in conceptual art. In any case, this explains the growing significance of art philosophy to the development of art. – Art is an imitation for Plato, the work of the artisan is to copy or imitate the idea, eternal, immutable, for one thing. The artist proceeds by imitation but also what copy is the sensible thing is to say an already imperfect reproduction of the Idea. Instead of approaching the truth, it increases the distance that separates her.
– The Judgement of Taste: Kant, is the art of reflective judgment
opposing the ruling factor. The latter is used in scientific discourse and is to apply concepts (universal) prior to singular objects. Reflective Judgement (eg, “How beautiful”) may instead assume universality. The beautiful is disinterested (the utility and fun do not take part) it pleases universally without a concept (universal subjective) well, it’s a finality without end (it shows in order, a plan, but does nothing beyond itself) – The Science of Art: Hegel criticizes Kant for having retained a subjective point of view on art. But a science of art is possible in that art is a production of the spirit (Geist), it is not unlike the individual consciousness. The science of art is historical, because the idea of art unfolds itself in history until the modern era that marks the end of art.
– The powers of the imagination: Delacroix and Baudelaire asserts the
primacy of the imagination (constructive) in art. The primary subject of art is not nature but the artist himself, the depths of his soul, emotions, etc.. Alain critique this view by stating that the imagination is an illusion and that nothing is given, in the human psyche, an emotional disorder. Art is the externalization, the act of ordering and discipline of the passions. – The artist as a work of art: For Nietzsche, the aesthetic categories are metaphysical categories. The figure of Dionysus, which is essential to tragedy, is what is terrifying to disproportionate in nature. Nature, only an artistic vision can support and embellish, is the power of metamorphosis, becoming, creation and destruction. The artist, one man (or superman) is the one that truly manages to order the chaos of impulses that inhabit it. Aesthetics is an “Applied Physiology”.
– Art and technology: The question of the future of art in an age
where technology acquires a dominant position is essential. Benjamin shows as well as the reproducibility of art (photography, for example), they tend to lose their aura, their sacred nature. – The work of art and the tool: For Heidegger the traditional conception of the natural thing, the tool and the work of art as composed of matter and form comes from human activity in manufacturing which a material is worked to fit a function, and thus becomes a tool. But daily use tools mask their being, their truth because the tool is effective only in strict as it is forgotten. The work of art is what reveals the being of the tool, membership in a human world and a primitive nature (the Earth).
Zahavi, Dan - Siderits, Mark - Thompson, Evan - Self, No Self - Perspectives From Analytical, Phenomenological, and Indian Traditions (2010, Oxford University Press)