GEC 07 Module Lec 1.1 PDF
GEC 07 Module Lec 1.1 PDF
GEC 07 Module Lec 1.1 PDF
ART APPRECIATION
Lecture 1
Art and Humanities
The art and humanities aren’t just there to be consumed when we have a free moment.
We need them as medicine. They help us live.
- Barrack Obama
Objectives:
At the end of the lecture, students are expected to:
Distinguish the humanities and the sciences as fields of learning.
Understand the Filipino notion of personhood or pagkatao.
Examine the history of art as a humanistic discipline.
Compare and contrast the concepts of art according to Western thought and
Filipino thought.
Discover the Filipino identity through the arts.
Apply the Filipino sense of art in the process of appreciating art.
Lectures
1.1. Art as a Humanistic Discipline
1.2. The Humanities and the Filipino Personhood (Pagkatao)
1.3. The Filipino Concept of Art
Videos:
“Laura Morelli (2014). “Is there a difference between art and craft?” In https://www.you
tube.com/watch? v=tVdw60eCnJI
“Xiao Time: Damian Domingo, Ama ng PHL Painting at unang pormal na gurong Filipino
ng sining sa Pinas” (2014) in https://www.you tube.com/watch?v=3i8muLe9vss.
ANC-NCCA (2015). “Dayaw: Inukit, Hinulma, Nilikha (Iconic Symbols of the Indigenous)”
Episodes 3. In https://www.you tube.com/wat ch?v=8KlO 6_Jpd-4.
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Lecture 1.1
Art as a Humanistic Discipline
Nine days before his death, Immanuel Kant was visited by his physician. Old, ill and nearly
blind, he rose from his chair and stood trembling with weakness and muttering unintelligible words.
Finally his faithful companion realized that he would not sit down again until the visitor had taken a
seat. This he did, and Kant then permitted himself to be helped to his chair and, after having
regained some of his strength, said, “The sense of humanity has not yet left me” The two men
were moved to tears. (Panofsky, 1955)
Paradigm of Learning
What is Art?
According to Estolas, Javier and Payno (2011), art is derived from the Latin word,
ars, meaning ability or skill. In this sense, art is used in many varied ways. It covers those
areas of artistic creativity that seek to communicate beauty primarily through the senses.
Then, for Brommer (1997), art is difficult to define. He added that unlike light, though,
art isn’t one thing or single phenomenon. People create it, and that’s enough to make it
complicated and subject to many definitions. Furthermore, he said that art can be
personal, art call for social change, and art can portray human emotions as well as evoke
them. It can express harmony or disharmony, show simple and everyday in unfamiliar
ways, or be monumental, mysterious, and fantastic. Art is perhaps humanity’s most
essential universal language. While art uses visual images to communicate its messages,
we use words to describe the images, reactions and feelings we have about objects of
art.
Moreover, Martin and Jacobus (2008) defined art as something that brings us into
direct communication with others and reveals the essence of our existence. Also,
Sanchez, et al., 2012) viewed art as very important in our lives. They explained
that art constitutes one of the oldest and most important means of expression developed
by man. In this sense, Leano and Agtani (2018) also agreed to the idea that art helps us
make sense of our world, and it broadens our experience and understanding. The arts
enable us to imagine the unimaginable, and to connect us to the past, the present,
sometimes simultaneously. Then, it confirms to the idea of Sanchez et al. (2012) that
wherever men have lived together, art has sprung up among them as a language
charged with feeling and significance. The desire to to create this language appears to e
universal. As a cultural force, it is pervasive and potent. It shows itself even in primitive
societies.
ASSUMPTIONS OF ART
Panisan, Bongabong, Boongaling & Trinidad (2018) gave three assumptions
about art; art is universal, art is not nature, and art involves experience. Below is
their explanation about the assumptions of art.
There are principles and bases of appreciating a work of art since it is in art
that man can communicate one’s individuality and way of life.
Art is Universal
Art is everywhere; wherever men have lived together, art has sprung up
among them as a language charged with feelings and significance. The desire to
create this language appears to be general, and art as a cultural force can be
pervasive and potent. Art has no limit, and it rises above cultures, races, and
civilization. It is timeless because it goes beyond the time of our own existence.
One cannot conceive of a society without art, for art is closely related to every
aspect of social life. Social functions of art are those that go beyond personal
intrinsic value to art’s social benefits. Individuals and their society are dynamically
related. Art communicates. Most often it is constructed with the intention of
sharing responses to and opinions about life with others. Art enriches, informs,
and questions world. When highly values, it can be both social and financial asset.
Art can have powerful transformattive and restorative effects within a society as
well.
The physical functions of art are often the easiest to understand. Works of art
that are created to perform some service have physical functions.
2. Architecture
The design of the building is determined primarily by its operational
function. What is the building for? Who are going to use it? How many are
they? The design that a building takes is also adapted to the climate of the
region. The architect must take the physical, psychological, and spiritual
needs of the family into account when he designs a house.
3. Community Planning
A community is more than just a group of buildings. It is a group of
individuals and families living in a particular locality because of common
interest and needs. Community planning involves the efficient organization of
buildings, roads, and spaces so that they meet the physical and aesthetic
needs of the community.
According to Flores (1998), humanities as it deals with the arts has to identify key
areas.
At the vital center of the Humanities is how the social person (not man or individual
or human being) encounters the world through emotion, thought, and action. No amount
of emperical natural and social science could make us abandon the wisdom that to
encounter the world is to encounter it multidimensionally and never in fragmented ways,
but always through a specific perspective. While there are distinctions built into the
relationship among the spheres of human emotions, thought, and action, we need not
delink the performative chain to celebrate false harmony. We only have to realize that, as
playwright Bertolt Brecht puts it, “to think feelings and feel thoughtfully” is to apprehend
the world in moments of contradiction and re-creation. The world in this encounter both
embedded and embodied in the body politic in the process of performance.
The concept of this encounter compels us to come to grips with the aesthetic
experience, or the manner in which makes sense of the world as we see, touch, hear,
taste, feel and intuit it. In the process, we discern the modes by which the world is
constituted and how we are constituted in relation to it, as well as the strategies by which
people transform nature or familiar convention into something different, into form which
transcends the tedium of structure. And the thorny issue here is that the transcendence
need not be solely ascribed to artistic practice. In other words, everyday life which
supposedly lies outside the domains of the art world is very much governed by aesthetic
logic.
Gabelo (2018) identified what is an artist and an artisan. For her, artist is a person
who exhibits exceptional skills in the visual and/or
the performing arts. Unlike other people, artists are more sensitive, very perceptive and
more creative. They have the knack of interpreting ideas into an artistic form using as
their medium the words, pigments, clay, stone, musical notes or any combination that
may be best represent his image. Then, an artisan, on the other hand, is a person who is
skilled trade that involves making things by hands. He is a craftsworker who makes or
creates objects of great beauty by just using their hands. His creations may be functional
or decorative like an earthen pot or “palayok” for cooking or vase for decoration.
In the Western art, there are two classifications; major art and minor art. The former
is made by artists and primarily concerned with the form of beauty while the latter is
made by artisans and concerned with functionality and usefulness of human-made
objects. According to Leano and Agtani (2018), an artist is dedicated only to creative side,
making visually pleasing work for only for the enjoyment. And appreciation of the viewer
but with no functional value.Then, an artisan is essentially a manual worker who makes
items with his or her hands, and who through skill, experience. And talent can create
things of great beauty as well as being functional.
Aside from visual arts, music, dance drama and literature are also part of the
major Western art.