When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Material culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Material_culture

    The scholarly analysis of material culture, which can include both human made and natural or altered objects, is called material culture studies. [6] It is an interdisciplinary field and methodology that tells of the relationships between people and their things: the making, history, preservation and interpretation of objects. [ 7 ]

  3. Visual culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_culture

    For the history of art, Svetlana Alpers published a pioneering study on The Art of Describing: Dutch Art in the Seventeenth Century (Chicago 1983) in which she took up an earlier impulse of Michael Baxandall to study the visual culture of a whole region of early-modern Europe in all its facets: landscape painting and perception, optics and ...

  4. Applied arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Applied_arts

    The applied arts are all the arts that apply design and decoration to everyday and essentially practical objects in order to make them aesthetically pleasing. [1] The term is used in distinction to the fine arts, which are those that produce objects with no practical use, whose only purpose is to be beautiful or stimulate the intellect in some way.

  5. Found object - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Found_object

    A specific subgenre of found objects is known as trash art or junk art. [19] These works primarily comprise components that have been discarded. Often they come quite literally from the trash. One example of trash art is trashion, fashion made from trash. Marina DeBris takes trash from the beach and creates dresses, vests, and other clothes ...

  6. Visual communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_communication

    Aldous Huxley is regarded as one of the most prominent explorers of visual communication and sight-related theories. [12] Becoming near-blind in his teen years as the result of an illness influenced his approach, and his work includes important novels on the dehumanizing aspects of scientific progress, most famously Brave New World and The Art of Seeing.

  7. The arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_arts

    The arts or creative arts are a vast range of human practices of creative expression, storytelling, and cultural participation. The arts encompass diverse and plural modes of thinking, doing, and being in an extensive range of media. Both dynamic and a characteristically constant feature of human life have developed into stylized and intricate ...

  8. Art as Experience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_as_Experience

    If art were understood differently by the public, art would gain in public esteem and have wider appeal. The task is to restore continuity between the refined and intensified forms of experience that are works of art and the everyday events, doings, and sufferings that are universally recognized to constitute experience. [7]

  9. Wikipedia:Contents/Culture and the arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Culture_and_the_arts

    The arts are a vast subdivision of culture, composed of many creative endeavors and disciplines. It is a broader term than "art," which as a description of a field usually means only the visual arts. The arts encompasses visual arts, literary arts and the performing arts – music, theatre, dance, spoken word and film, among others.