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About beauty, art, and fine artbeautyBeauty is the quality present in a thing or person that gives intense pleasure or deep satisfaction to the mind, whether arising from sensory manifestations such as shape, color, or sound, from a design or pattern, or from other sources. Most of all, beauty is something in which high spiritual qualities are manifest. artThen what is art? Art is:
Art is is a field of endeavor, a genre, a practice, a performance, or an object. It is generic and inclusive in that it applies to all the arts—dancing is an art, music is an art, painting is an art. From a qualitative perspective, art is the production, expression, or realm of the beautiful or ugly, appealing or repulsive. Art must attract attention, stir feelings, and stimulate mental and emotional reaction; it must be of more than ordinary significance; and it must be conceived according to aesthetic principles and implemented in a skillful and imaginative manner. Art doesn't have to be good art to be art, but it helps. the visual arts; the Fine artsThe visual arts are a particular set or family of arts that are primarily intended to appeal to the visual faculties. As usually defined in arts circles, the visual arts consist of drawing, graphics, painting, sculpture, and the decorative arts. A fine art is a visual art created primarily for aesthetic rather than practical purposes and judged for beauty and meaningfulness. As usually defined in arts circles, fine arts specifically include painting, sculpture, drawing, watercolor, graphics, and architecture. Commercial or industrial arts are not considered fine art. Because all visual works of art obey the laws of optics and involve human eyesight, they all share a common set of visual aesthetic characteristics—for example, they all produce images that are sensible to the brain; they all deal in color; and they all have a design. Of course, that by itself doesn't make every object that can be seen a visual art object, nor does it disqualify a visible object from being visual art or Fine Art. fine artThe Muse Of Fine Arts uses the term Fine Art in a special way that does not exactly coincide with the standard definitions of either visual art or fine art. According to The Muse, to be Fine Art a work of art or art form must meet two qualifications:
To be art, what counts is whether an object meets the criteria cited above. For example, an automobile must have a practical purpose, but that does not automatically prevent it from being art, or even Fine Art. Case in point: the beautiful designs for some classic cars of the '20s and '30s, for example the Cord and the Duesenberg. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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