Post Number:#107
October 16th, 2010, 11:34 pm
Well, art isn't something that really needs to be "satisfied," is it? Art isn't a conscious existence. However, people are. And depending on the scale and ability of one's consciousness may determine how something is considered art as such. And, aforesaid, what it is to be art is something without consideration of the human perception; rather what it is to be art is a matter of the qualities and characteristics of the object in question.
The problem we have in aesthetics, as far as I know, is that there has been no definite discovery defining the main qualities and characteristics which might find an object as art as such. So the simplest, and least deserving, solution is often to consider that all is art, and all isn't art - such is the nature of the contradictory force of subjectivity.
Anything applied to one's creativity may tell a story; some things are more vividly relatable than others. But the ability of an object to tell a story is, I don't think, a qualifier for discerning what objects are "art." I could imagine a paper-clip: it reminds of that time I had to sit at a table and paper-clip 400 pamphlets - it brings back a memory; or perhaps I am bored and look at a paper-clip and think of a whole world of paper-clip people - the Paper-Cliperans. Thus, in two different scenarios this paper-clip has been "telling" me a story. But I would hardly consider a paper-clip a piece of legitimate art; rather it is an object like any other which, under the right circumstances, induces levels of creativity which permit such mental whimsies as creating worlds which no other person perfectly relate to. (I would imagine this as being a rudimentary cause of the individuating feeling one may get from art, and the subjective state of mind which may follow.) And by this one may reject the qualifier that an object must induce creative thoughts in order to be art.
"Live slow, die eventually, leave an indifferently attractive corpse. That's my motto." - David Mitchell
"By a sarcasm of law and phrase they were freemen." - Mark Twain