Sunday, October 31, 2010

Should Art Express Emotion?

Should Art Express Emotion?

One of the most common misconceptions about art today is that the purpose of it is to express emotion. Despite what your teachers, some artist, a philosopher, or anyone else has told you, this is not the case. We can determine what the purpose of art is by looking at reality and history; what other people have said doesn't really matter.

Is it really so hard to believe that art wasn't created so that people could express how they feel at a certain time? Does it really seem important that someone be able to express that they feel sad through a painting? We have to assume that if art is about expressing emotion then it is the artist's emotion we are talking about, so why should I care how an artist felt while making a work of art? Or are artists just expressing random emotions from other people and other times?

The truth is that art is not such an arbitrary thing. Art expresses much more than emotions. After all, emotions come from somewhere; they come from our evaluations of situations and actions, and if you try to divorce emotion from any cause then it becomes meaningless. So to say that art is supposed to directly express emotion is to say that it expresses something meaningless and without reason.

Where people go wrong is thinking that a side effect of art is the purpose. Art should illicit emotion in the beholder, but it's a side effect, not the purpose. Art expresses judgments and evaluations of the artist, if it is art, and these in turn illicit emotions based on what the beholder thinks of those judgments.

This becomes clear when you look at the first works of art: cave paintings. Did the early humans draw pictures on the wall that expressed their emotions? Of course not, what would be the point of that? They didn't paint emotional abstractions, which modern artists always claim to be important. They painted things that were essential to them: animals and themselves hunting animals.

Being able to hunt and eat animals was everything in their world. Their lives depended on it. When they spent the time to paint animals on the wall it was because they were proclaiming them as important; they were judging and evaluating something. Animals were such an important part of their lives, such a constant fixture in their thought, that they were driven to express those ideas. They were not expressing their happiness or sadness; they were expressing their evaluations on what was important in life.

Modern art makes the mistake of holding emotion to be the purpose of art, and because of that you have artists splattering paint on a canvas and calling it art. It is a philosophical misunderstanding that should be corrected. Paint splatter does not express values or judgments, and can never be art. It can only be a pretentious waste, and we need to call it that. Art is too important to let people take over and turn into fashion. We need to reclaim art and tell the modern world that it's not just whatever they want it to be.

More Examples..

Examples :

Detail of a painting by Henri Matisse

Detail of a painting by Henri Matisse

Detail of a painting by Pablo Picasso

Detail of a painting by Pablo Picasso

Detail of a painting by Francis Bacon

Detail of a painting by Francis Bacon

Detail of a painting by Marc Chagall

Detail of a painting by Marc Chagall

figurative abstraction by Dominic

Expressing Emotions Through Sand

A short video clip



Expressing Emotions Through Sand

Sand animator, Kseniya Simonova, moves audiences to tears with her portrayal of life in Ukraine during USSR’s Great Patriotic War against the Third Reich.

Captions

So here are some captions I found related to emotions.

Take it all off - Excitement
Look Sharp Feel Sharp - Confidence
Double your pleasure, double your fun - Joy
Don't Get Mad. Get Glad - Hapiness
Just for the taste of it, Diet Coke. - Suspecious

Defining Emotions

What is emotion?

The word emotion includes a wide range of observable behaviors, expressed feelings, and changes in the body state. This diversity in intended meanings of the word emotion make it hard to study. For many of us emotions are very personal states, difficult to define or to identify except in the most obvious instances. Moreover, many aspects of emotion seem unconscious to us. Even simple emotional states appear to be much more complicated than states as hunger and thirst.


Emotions - How To Understand, Identify Release Your Emotions.

Different people define emotions in different ways. Some make a distinction between emotions and feelings saying that a feeling is the response part of the emotion and that an emotion includes the situation or experience, the interpretation, the perception, and the response or feeling related to the experience of a particular situation. For the purposes of this article, I use the terms interchangeably.

John D. (Jack) Mayer says, “Emotions operate on many levels. They have a physical aspect as well as a psychological aspect. Emotions bridge thought, feeling, and action – they operate in every part of a person, they affect many aspects of a person, and the person affects many aspects of the emotions.”

Dr. Maurice Elias says, “Emotions are human beings’ warning systems as to what is really going on around them. Emotions are our most reliable indicators of how things are going on in our lives. Emotions help keep us on the right track by making sure that we are led by more than the mental/ intellectual faculties of thought, perception, reason, memory.”

Belief Systems

Underlying much of our behavior is what is called a belief system. This system within us filters what we see and hear, affecting how we behave in our daily lives. There are many other elements that affect our lives, including past lives and the core issues we come into this life for resolution, but our belief systems in this life have a major effect on what we think and do.

Your belief system affects your perceptions or how you interpret what you see, hear and feel. For example, a person raised by an angry man or woman will view people in the future with beliefs that anger is bad or that it is something to fear. Another example would be someone who is quite intelligent but who has never been encouraged or honored for their intelligence, this person might believe they are stupid. Men raised in conservative societies might have the belief that women who work outside of the home are not as good as those who do not work outside of the home.

It takes a lot of work to look at yourself and identify the beliefs that are affecting your life in a negative manner. However, knowing your beliefs will give you a sound basis for emotional freedom. I do believe that it’s wise to deal with the belief systems before dealing with the identification and release of emotions. First things first!

Monday, October 25, 2010

Emotions

Emotions I know of.. Ermmmm
  • Joy
  • Trust
  • Fear
  • Surprise
  • Sadness
  • Anger
  • Envy
  • Worry
  • Stress
  • Friendliness
  • Tension
  • Shocked
  • Boredom

From what I could conclude after all the research done. Emotions are basically used in expressing our motive or mood. In other words, Emotion represent us.