Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

What Art Does

View through CrossRef
We derive a great deal of cognitive pleasure from asking what artworks mean. And yet, despite the seriousness with which we approach these questions, they all too often rely on theories of art that fail to adequately explain how art conveys meaning. This book proposes a new theory. In contrast to more conventional definitions of art, What Art Does defends the claim that artworks constitute a class of tool. Like other tools, artworks are objects that have functions and that furnish affordances. However, thanks to the particular social and material facts that underpin the creation of artworks, the functions that artworks have and the affordances they furnish are special. It is thanks to these special functions and affordances that artworks obtain their privileged character and status. Because artworks do things that other tools cannot, we take artworks to be meaning-making objects with something to say.
The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group
Title: What Art Does
Description:
We derive a great deal of cognitive pleasure from asking what artworks mean.
And yet, despite the seriousness with which we approach these questions, they all too often rely on theories of art that fail to adequately explain how art conveys meaning.
This book proposes a new theory.
In contrast to more conventional definitions of art, What Art Does defends the claim that artworks constitute a class of tool.
Like other tools, artworks are objects that have functions and that furnish affordances.
However, thanks to the particular social and material facts that underpin the creation of artworks, the functions that artworks have and the affordances they furnish are special.
It is thanks to these special functions and affordances that artworks obtain their privileged character and status.
Because artworks do things that other tools cannot, we take artworks to be meaning-making objects with something to say.

Related Results

The Art of Looking at Art
The Art of Looking at Art
A readable guide to the art of looking at art. There’s an art to viewing art. A sizable portion of the population regards art with varying degrees of reverence, bewilderm...
Art School
Art School
Leading international artists and art educators consider the challenges of art education in today's dramatically changed art world. The last explosive change in art ...
I'm Not an Artist
I'm Not an Artist
Romanticized notions of how one becomes an “artist” have long been questioned, so why do we still fetishize them in popular culture, turning a blind eye to the politics of exclusio...
Social World of Galleries
Social World of Galleries
This book presents the first detailed study of the place of contemporary art galleries and gallerists, especially within the art markets of Europe and the United States.Based on th...
New Art Museum Library
New Art Museum Library
The New Art Museum Libraryaddresses the issues facing today's art museum libraries through a series of scholarly essays written by top librarians in the field. In 2007, the publica...
The Forms and Fictions of Victorian Art Instruction
The Forms and Fictions of Victorian Art Instruction
Abstract The Victorian period was distinguished by several historical developments that revolutionized art instruction. A growing investment in standardized educatio...
Édouard Vuillard, the Nabis, and the Politics of Domesticity
Édouard Vuillard, the Nabis, and the Politics of Domesticity
This ground-breaking book is the first to address the feminine and feminist politics of Intimiste art - a modernist mode of art making developed in the 1890s by Édouard Vuillard wh...
Invisible Terrain
Invisible Terrain
In his debut collection, Some Trees (1956), John Ashbery poses a question that resonates across his oeuvre and much modern art: “How could he explain to them his prayer / that natu...

Back to Top