Pages

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Question: what is the difference between art and craft?

image: concept art from Guild Wars 2
Concept Art, Guild Wars 2
***
This may seem to be a trivial question to those of you who are marginally interested in art; but a number of philosophers have pondered it. And with video games and MMOs becoming more visually sophisticated, their environs may be added to the mix. Michelle Gaugy--art gallery owner, author, art consultant--says on Quora:
 I recall that 50 years ago, this was a very clearly defined distinction. Craft was defined as objects that had function, and art was aesthetic objects without function. Period.  But since that time, the American Craft movement has advanced dramatically, and craftspeople have been creating many one-off objects that are clearly aesthetic and clearly evoke emotional responses from people in a huge variety of media.
Note that Michelle mentions uniqueness ("one-off objects") and a piece's ability to "evoke emotional responses. There's a good article on Art and Emotion at Wikipedia.
***
image: painting by Vincent Van Gogh, titled "The Starry Night"
Vincent Van Gogh, The Starry Night, Fine Art America
***

Philosopher Dennis Dutton addresses the question directly in The Difference Between Art and Craft on his site. There are links to some interesting pieces on the front page, including an article titled Can video games be art? In his article comparing art to craft, Dutton refers to another philosopher, R.G. Collingwood. Stanford Encyclopedia has an extended entry on Collingwood's Aesthetics that is well worth reading.

Tate Gallery hosts the discussion Tate Debate: When is a craft an art?

Of all the information I browsed, this from a site about ancient Egypt (Pharaonic Egypt) seemed to me most interesting. While we talk about uniqueness and evoking emotion, absolute skill may set a person's work apart as well.
Not always in human history was a distinction made between art and craft or were artists considered a breed apart, but Egyptian artisans - like expert workers anywhere and anytime - were certainly aware of their capabilities and their own worth and proud of it.
Chief of the artisans, the draftsman Irtysen says:
I know the secrets of the hieroglyphs, the way to put together feast offerings. All magic I have prepared . Nothing goes by me unnoticed. Because I am an artisan excellent at my craft, who has become the foremost at what he has learned. I know the ratios of fluids, weigh the amount, reckon, remove, insert the tenon into the mortise so every part will be in its place.
I know how to render the posture of a man's statue, the step of a woman's statue, the wing strength of a dozen birds, the bearing of him who strikes a prisoner, the look an eye casts on someone else and also make fearful the face of the sacrificial victim, the arm of him who hits the hippopotamus, the stance of the runner.
I know how to make pigments and incrustations without letting the fire burn them, with the water being able to wash them away.
None will know this but me and my oldest son. The God has ordained that he shall practice because it is into this he has been initiated.
I have seen with mine eyes what has left his hands when he directed the work, in all precious and exalted stones, from silver and gold to ivory and ebony.

A funerary offering of a thousand loaves of bread, beer, fowl, oxen, clothing, all the good and pure things for the blessed Irtysen, true of voice, brought into the world by Idet, true of voice.
***
image: painting by NC Wyeth, titled "Ore Wagon"
NC Wyeth,, Ore Wagon, Fine Art America-Granger
***

-- Marge


No comments: