What Is Art? Essay

Submitted By berneciab90
Words: 762
Pages: 4

WHAT IS ART?

What is Art? This phenomena art can be defined in many ways, some define it as a portrait, music, sketches, architecture, collages,photography and the list could go on. However what is the true meaning of art? We can sit, we can ponder, we can conduct researches even turn to a dictionary for the "politically correct definition" but can a book or any number of research really tell us what art is? I say no according to an art critic Jerry Saltz "Art is a way of thinking a way of knowing ourself." Therefore you define what art is, how it makes you feel what is convicted in you by the piece, art expresses you. Hence, I agree with Jerry Saltz on what he says about art and art criticism. Criticism can be defined as one of the most negative things in society. Why? because people never take time out to truly understand this term. According the oxford dictionary "criticism is the practice of judging the the merits and faults of something or someone in an intelligible/articulate manner." Everyday we engage in some form of criticism whether its about fashion, hairstyle, language, etc. we always critique. So why is something that we engage in on a daily basis deemed as negative? Persons are afraid to be told the truth about their shortcomings, critiques are not only tools of destruction but correction. Criticism allows us to improve on our faults not only in the perspective of art but also our day to day living. Like many terminologies one can be described as a radical and the other as a norm. Jerry Saltz considers a true art critic as a "radical", he feels that is a talent and compares seeing art to having an ear for music, it is developed but was placed in you from birth. Can a true critic use his ability to bring down a piece without stating its pros. Absolutely "there is nothing wrong with criticizing weak work but one must state the flaws.Obviously, critics can't just hysterically love or hate things, or assert that certain types of art or media are inherently bad (e.g., no one has actually believed that painting is dead since the Nixon administration, yet writers regularly beat this dead horse). Critics must connect their opinions to a larger set of circumstances; present cogent arguments; show how work does or doesn't seem relevant, is or isn't derivative; explain why an artist is or isn't growing. As with Melville's ideas about art, criticism should have: "Humility—yet pride and scorn/Instinct and study; love and hate/Audacity and reverence." Good criticism should be vulnerable, chancy, candid, and nervy. It should give permission, have attitude, maybe a touch of rebellion, never be sanctimonious or dull, and be written in a distinctive, readable way. Good critics should be willing to go on intuition and be unafraid to