Practice Flashcards
Why is 'what is art?' so hard?
Track your progress — Sign up free to save your progress and get smart review reminders based on spaced repetition.
All Flashcards in Topic 2.1
Below are all 40 flashcards for this topic. Sign up free to track your progress and get personalized review schedules.
2.1.18 cards
Why is 'what is art?' so hard?
No single feature — beauty, skill, meaning — is shared by all art and only art; Wollheim called it 'one of the most elusive problems of human culture'.
Aesthetics?
The branch of philosophy about art and beauty.
Why does 'art = beauty' fail?
A deliberately ugly work can still be great art, and a beautiful sunset isn't art — so beauty is neither necessary nor sufficient.
Why does 'art = skill' fail?
A plain shop-bought object placed in a gallery can count as art with no skill on show.
The institutional theory of art?
Art is whatever the artworld (galleries, critics, curators) treats as art — a social status, not a hidden feature.
The artworld?
The community of galleries, critics, curators and artists that grants the status 'art'.
The main problem for the institutional theory?
It struggles to call something art where no artworld existed — e.g. a 40,000-year-old cave painting or non-Western creations.
The two questions inside 'what is art?'
What COUNTS as art? and what MAKES it count? — keep them apart.
2.1.28 cards
Creativity (in art)?
Making something genuinely new AND meaningful, shaped by a maker — not just unusual or different.
Is all art creative?
A live debate: a scribble is new but not creative; a forgery is skilled but not new — so 'creative' needs care as a definition.
Why isn't a sunset art?
It has no maker who intends it — art seems to need someone meaning to create it, not just a beautiful result.
The chimp / AI question?
Their outputs can move us, yet we hesitate to call them art — because a maker's intention and judgement seem missing.
The muse?
Inspiration pictured as coming to the artist from outside — the idea feels 'given' rather than consciously worked out.
If ideas 'come from a muse', is the artist still the creator?
Yes — the artist selects, refines and judges what to keep, so authorship survives; creativity is inspiration plus craft.
The dividing line for AI art (Go further)?
The human judges and takes responsibility for the work; the machine only outputs — judgement, not who first had the idea.
Creativity in one line?
A human maker shaping and judging something new and meaningful, even when the first spark feels like a gift.
2.1.38 cards
The three theories of what art does?
Imitation (copying reality), expression (putting the artist's feeling into a form), creation (making something genuinely new).
Plato on art (imitation)?
Art is a copy of a copy (mimesis), twice removed from truth — suspect, and it can make lies look beautiful.
Why was Plato suspicious of art?
It imitates reality without understanding it, and by stirring feeling it can mislead us.
The Romantic / expression view?
Art expresses the artist's inner feeling rather than copying the outside world.
Tolstoy on art?
Art is the transmission of feeling: the artist feels something, forms it, and the audience catches the same feeling.
Art as creation?
Art brings something genuinely new into the world — a form that copies nothing and isn't just the artist's private feeling.
Why does no single theory of art win?
Each fits some art and misses other art; imitation can't explain music, expression can't explain a cool geometric design.
Plato vs the Romantics — the flip?
Plato looks OUTWARD at what art copies; the Romantics look INWARD at what the artist feels.
2.1.48 cards
Art as a means vs an end?
A means = a tool for a further purpose (message, cause); an end in itself = valuable for its own sake.
The slope of art carrying a message?
Communication → education → propaganda → indoctrination (sharing → teaching → persuading → controlling).
'Art for art's sake'?
Art is valuable in itself, needing no moral, religious or political message; value lies in the work's beauty and form.
Why can a message damage art?
Bending art to a cause can make it preachy, one-sided and dishonest — propaganda may be effective but stops being free, honest art.
Can art ever be fully message-free?
Debatable — even a calm still life may quietly carry values, so art is rarely fully neutral.
The 'which serves which?' test (Go further)?
Judge by direction: a message that SERVES the art deepens it; art that shrinks to serve a message becomes a slogan.
Is art independent of moral or political purpose?
It can be — art needn't carry a message to be valuable — but even 'pure' art may quietly carry values.
Art and its message in one line?
The live question isn't 'message or not' but whether the message serves the art or the art shrinks to the message.
2.1.58 cards
Art as a social construct?
What counts as art depends on human society — history, culture, politics, money — not on the object alone.
How do crafts show art's status is social?
A skilled quilt is ranked below 'art' though it takes huge skill — a social judgement, not a fact about the object.
What does pop art show?
'Low' everyday imagery (a soup-can print) treated AS art deliberately blurs the high/low art line — status is chosen, not fixed.
The museum context?
A gallery setting turns objects into 'art' to be contemplated — a fire extinguisher or ritual mask becomes art by being framed.
The non-Western challenge to 'art'?
Many traditions make masks, chants and cloths for ritual and community, not as 'art' to view in isolation — so the Western 'masterpiece' category is itself a construct.
Why not say art is ENTIRELY a construct?
Real skill and depth in the object aren't invented; society chooses which to CROWN as art — value is partly real, partly conferred.
How is Aesthetics examined?
It's an optional theme → Paper 1 Section B: an essay [25] weighing a CLAIM about the theme (no stimulus).
The topic's arc in one line?
What is art? → what art does (imitation/expression/creation, message or not) → art is largely a social construct.
Topic 2.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for The nature of art
Philosophy exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
Want smart review reminders?
Sign up free to track your progress. Our spaced repetition algorithm will tell you exactly which cards to review and when.
Start Free