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Topic 2.2Philosophy HL32 flashcards

The artist and the artistic process

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Card 1 of 322.2.1
2.2.1
Question

What makes someone an artist — the puzzle?

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All Flashcards in Topic 2.2

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2.2.18 cards

Card 1concept
Question

What makes someone an artist — the puzzle?

Answer

Not what makes something art, but who counts as an artist and who decides: an inborn gift, a status others grant, or a widespread human drive?

Card 2concept
Question

The Romantic 'genius' view of the artist?

Answer

An artist is a rare person born with an inborn creative gift — feeling more deeply and pouring out an inner vision, not made by training.

Card 3concept
Question

The artworld (institutional) view?

Answer

You're an artist when the art world treats you as one — critics review you, galleries show you, museums keep you. A status granted, not a spark.

Card 4concept
Question

Artworld view — one strength, one weakness?

Answer

Strength: explains why the same object is art in a gallery, junk in a skip. Weakness: makes 'artist' a matter of fashion and gatekeeping.

Card 5definition
Question

Outsider art?

Answer

Powerful art by untrained people outside the art world, made because they must — it challenges both the genius and artworld views.

Card 6concept
Question

Is 'the artist' a Western invention?

Answer

Many cultures had no special 'artist' role — people wove, carved and sang as part of ordinary life — hinting 'the artist' is a recent Western idea.

Card 7concept
Question

Are we all born artists?

Answer

If 'the artist' is a spotlight some cultures shine on a few, then making may be an ordinary human drive we all share.

Card 8process
Question

The four answers to 'what is an artist?'

Answer

Born genius · art world status · outsider art (neither) · a Western invention (maybe we're all makers).

2.2.28 cards

Card 9definition
Question

The artistic process?

Answer

The whole activity of making a work, from first idea to finished piece — imagining, trying, choosing and realising.

Card 10comparison
Question

Imagination vs craft in making?

Answer

Imagination = the leap to something new; craft = the trained skill to realise it. Neither alone is enough.

Card 11concept
Question

Why isn't 'spontaneous' art really skill-free?

Answer

Even spontaneous work rests on years of practice that make the spontaneity possible.

Card 12concept
Question

Function, form and content?

Answer

The three choices every maker faces: what the work is for, what shape/medium it takes, and what it is about.

Card 13concept
Question

How does the process differ around the world?

Answer

Some traditions prize originality (say something new); others prize mastery and continuity (get the inherited form exactly right).

Card 14concept
Question

The 'lone genius' myth?

Answer

The picture of one solitary artist creating alone — challenged by films, cathedrals, songs and workshops made by many hands.

Card 15example
Question

Reply to 'but some works are one person's vision'?

Answer

Even those rest on borrowed techniques, teachers and traditions — no one creates from nothing.

Card 16concept
Question

How does the lone genius link to 2.2.1?

Answer

The 'lone genius' process is the twin of the 'born genius' artist — both spotlight one person and hide the web of others.

2.2.38 cards

Card 17concept
Question

How does technology change art (the big claim)?

Answer

Each new tool reopens what art even is, not just how it's made — the camera, film, digital and now AI all move the boundary of art.

Card 18concept
Question

The lesson of the camera?

Answer

Photography 'wasn't art', yet became one and freed painting to explore expression — a new tool moves the boundary of art rather than erasing it.

Card 19example
Question

Reply to 'the camera just records'?

Answer

The photographer chooses what, when, how and why to frame — the choosing is where the art lives.

Card 20definition
Question

AI-generated art?

Answer

Images or music produced by a machine trained on huge amounts of existing work, from a short human prompt.

Card 21concept
Question

The 'less art' worry about AI?

Answer

If a machine did the making, is there any art here — or just a clever output?

Card 22concept
Question

The 'author worry' about AI?

Answer

Who made it — the person who typed the words, the coders, or the countless artists whose work trained the machine?

Card 23concept
Question

Why is AI 'the camera panic returned'?

Answer

The same 'is a machine-made image art?' worry, but sharper — the human has stepped further back from the work.

Card 24concept
Question

Where does art 'relocate' as tools remove skill?

Answer

To what the machine can't do — the choosing, the meaning and the why (the irreducibly human part).

2.2.48 cards

Card 25concept
Question

The artist and society — the core question?

Answer

How free the artist should be and to whom they answer: reflecting a society's values (mirror) or reshaping them (agent of change).

Card 26concept
Question

The artist as a mirror?

Answer

Reflecting a society's existing values back to it — portraits, folk songs, shared stories; the artist expresses society rather than leading it.

Card 27concept
Question

The artist as an agent of change?

Answer

Challenging a society and pushing it to change — naming injustice, imagining what isn't yet, unsettling the comfortable.

Card 28example
Question

Can one work be both mirror and hammer?

Answer

Yes — often holding a mirror up to a society honestly is exactly what forces it to change.

Card 29definition
Question

Creative licence?

Answer

The special freedom art is granted to provoke, offend and imagine the forbidden — more than we'd allow in ordinary speech.

Card 30concept
Question

Why is censorship a real dilemma?

Answer

The freedom that lets art change society is the same freedom the powerful want to control — a line must protect people without silencing dissent.

Card 31concept
Question

What can the artist be accountable to?

Answer

To themselves and their own vision, to a cause they serve, or to moral, political and social ends — the topic's open question.

Card 32process
Question

The topic's arc in one line?

Answer

What is an artist? → how art gets made → how technology reshapes it → what the artist and society owe each other.

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