artwork , artwork , artwork , artwork or art are items physical aesthetics or artistic creations. Regardless of the "work of art", which can be used for any work deemed to be art in the broadest sense, including works of literature and music, these terms apply primarily to real and portable forms of visual art:
- Examples of fine art, such as paintings or sculptures
- An object that has been specially designed for aesthetic appeal, such as a piece of jewelry
- An object that has been designed for aesthetic appeal as well as functional purposes, such as in interior design and many folk arts
- An object made for a principally or wholly functional, religious or other aesthetic principle that has been respected as art (often later, or by an outsider)
- Nonfemeral photo, movie, or computer program, such as video games or computer animation
- Installation artwork or conceptual art.
Widely used, this term is less commonly applied to:
- Nice architecture or landscape design
- Production of live performances, such as theater, ballet, opera, performing arts, music concerts, and other performing arts, as well as other unreal tortuous creations.
This article deals with the terms and concepts used and applied to the visual arts, although other areas such as aural-music and written literature have similar problems and philosophies. The term objet d'art is reserved to describe artwork that is not painting, prints, drawings or sculptures large or medium, or architecture (eg household items, statues, etc., some purely aesthetic , some are also practical). The term oeuvre is used to describe the overall work completed by an artist throughout the career.
Video Work of art
Definisi
artwork in the visual arts is a physically determined two or three dimensional object or which is considered to fulfill a major independent aesthetic function. A single art object is often seen in the context of a larger art movement or artistic era, such as genres, aesthetic conventions, cultures, or regional-national differences. It can also be seen as an item in the artist's "work agency" or oeuvre . The term is commonly used by: museums and curators of cultural heritage, interested communities, the art community of private art collectors, and art galleries.
Physical objects documenting immaterial or conceptual artwork, but not in accordance with artistic conventions can be redefined and reclassified as art objects. Some conceptual and ready-made works of Chest and Neo-Dada have received inclusions later. Also, some architectural rendering and unbuilt project models, such as Vitruvius, Leonardo da Vinci, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Frank Gehry, are another example.
Environmental design products, depending on intent and implementation, can be "artwork" and include: land art, site-specific art, architecture, parks, landscape architecture, installation art, rock art, and megalithic monuments.
The legal definition of "artwork" is used in copyright law; see Visual Art Ã,çÃ, USA about definition of copyright visual art .
Maps Work of art
Theory
Marcel Duchamp criticized the idea that artwork should be a unique product of artist workers, a representation of their technical skills or artistic caprice. Theorists argue that things and people do not have a constant meaning, but their meaning is made by humans in their cultural context, because they have the ability to make something meaningful or signify something.
Artist Michael Craig-Martin, the creator of Oak Tree , said of his work - "It's not a symbol I've changed the physical substance of a glass of water into an oak tree" I did not change his appearance. The oak tree is actually present physically, but in the form of a glass of water. "
Distinctions
Some theorists and art writers have long made a distinction between the physical qualities of an art object and its identity status as a work of art. For example, Rembrandt's paintings have a physical existence as "oil paintings on canvas" separate from their identity as "artwork" or magnum opus artists. Many works of art were initially denied "museum quality" or artistic, and then became accepted and appreciated in museums and private collections. Works by abstract Impressionist and non-representational artists are examples. Some, such as Marcel Duchamp's "Readymades" include his famous urinal
There is an unlimited difference, for aesthetic goods today or history: between "art" art objects made by "artists"; and works of folk art, crafts, or "applied art" objects created by first, second, or third designers, craftsmen, and craftsmen. Contemporary indigenous art and archeology, industrial design goods in limited or mass production, and the places created by environmental designers and cultural landscapes, are a few examples. This term is consistently available for debate, review, and redefinition.
See also
- Anti-art
- Artistic media
- Cultural artifacts
- Opus Number (used in music)
- Aesthetic outline
- Art Work in the Mechanical Reproduction Age
- Western Canon
References
Further reading
Richard Wollheim, Art and Object, 2nd ed., 1980, Cambridge University Press, ISBN: 0-521-29706-0. A classic philosophical investigation of what art.External links
- Media related to Art on Wikimedia Commons
Source of the article : Wikipedia