Do all the arts have features in common? What might these be?

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Ismael Abdala LBA                                                                        06.07.05

Do all the arts have features in common? What might these be?

                Six are the features all of the arts have in common and six is the number of different types of arts I’m going to use in order to prove these characteristics are shared. A certain level of skill, conveying an emotion, being human made, intention, being original and interplaying between what is real and what is illusion are the six qualities all the arts have in common. I’ve chosen to find one of the qualities in different types of art such as painting, performance arts, graffiti art, sculpture, music and literature respectively. Although there are different subcategories inside each of the seven chosen arts, I’m going to try to work with classic and well-known examples of each because the idea of this essay is not to discuss whether they can or cannot be considered art, but what has made them be socially accepted as art.

                The first feature all of the arts have in common is that they all need a certain level of skill to manage to create it. This is indeed one of the characteristics that distinguish an artist from a lawyer, for example. The artists have either been born or developed an artistic skill that enables them to produce a piece of art that reflects their ability whereas the lawyer would have the skill to find the alibi in order to prevent his client to be declared guilty. A kind of art that usually reflects the artist’s skill is painting; lets take for example La Gioconda from Leonardo da Vinci. An art expert will have no doubt in affirming it is a work of art because of the way the artist has combined the colours, used shadows and drawing a perfectly symmetrical face. He definitely needed a good level of skill in order to paint that portrait. A common criticism to modern art is saying that a ‘five-year old kid could have painted that’. If we take for example one work of art from Bo von Hohenlohe, lots of people might say it is not art because you don’t need a great level of skill to put some circles and lines in a paper. However, as Mark Rothko says “I’m not interesetd in the relationship of colour or form or anything else, I’m only interested in expressing human emotions” hence, in this case, his artistic skill is not used to find perfect dimensions but to try and express emotions.

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                Mark Rothko’s quote leads us to the second feature all arts have in common, transmitting a feeling from the artist to the observer. As Leon Tolstoy says, “the activity of art is based in the capacity of man to receive another man’s expression of feeling and experience those feelings himself”. This implies that the artist has to transmit certain feeling when creating his work of art and the observer can only say he undesrtands the piece of art if he gets the emotion. In other words, by transmitting emotions, the artist is looking for a reaction in the audience. The ...

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