2. so what makes art art and other things not art? in the
simplest of terms, either intent OR general[informed] assessment
and preferably both. with regards to intent, this is often what
separates craft from art: is the utilitarian pupose of the object
'foregrounded' or the aethetic issues? imagine a typical shovel.
clearly a mere tool. now imagine a silver plated, beautifully hand
engraved shovel used for a cermonial pupose. the difference is
plain. it should also be plain that there's a contnuum involved
here, and that things get tricky in the middle. objects like
duchamp's readymades were 'created' NOT to thumb a nose at the
viewing public, but partly[only partly] to make one THINK about
these very issues. yes, some art's main purpose is not sensual
pleasure but a launching point for thought.
we also have numerous examples, particularly among ritual objects,
where the object was not intended as art by the maker, but has been
absorbed into the art milieu by general assent inasmuch as they are
cultural artifacts that carry a significant 'load' of aesthetic
information/underpinnings. think african or south pacific masks
and ritual objects[among examples too numerous to count!], or even
a great many archaeological artifacts from virtually all cultures.
so, there's acouple of quick points for :
THINKING !