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How Are Arts Classified

This document classifies and describes the different types of arts. It discusses fine arts such as painting, sculpture, drawing and printmaking. Visual arts include fine arts as well as new media. Plastic arts involve shaping materials like clay and metal. Decorative arts are functional but ornamental, like ceramics, furniture and stained glass. Performance arts are public events like theatre, opera and dance. Applied arts apply aesthetic designs to everyday objects like architecture, photography and fashion design. The document also discusses debates around distinguishing between arts and crafts.

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Virgilio Biagtan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
235 views3 pages

How Are Arts Classified

This document classifies and describes the different types of arts. It discusses fine arts such as painting, sculpture, drawing and printmaking. Visual arts include fine arts as well as new media. Plastic arts involve shaping materials like clay and metal. Decorative arts are functional but ornamental, like ceramics, furniture and stained glass. Performance arts are public events like theatre, opera and dance. Applied arts apply aesthetic designs to everyday objects like architecture, photography and fashion design. The document also discusses debates around distinguishing between arts and crafts.

Uploaded by

Virgilio Biagtan
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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HOW AR ARTS CLASSIFIED

Traditional and contemporary art encompasses activities as diverse as:

Architecture, music, opera, theatre, dance, painting, sculpture, illustration, drawing, cartoons,
printmaking, ceramics, stained glass, photography, installation, video, film and cinematography, to
name but a few.

All these activities are commonly referred to as "the Arts" and are commonly. classified into several
overlapping categories, such as: fine, visual, plastic, decorative, applied, and performing.

Disagreement persists as to the precise composition of these categories, but here is a generally
accepted classification.

1. Fine Arts

This category includes those artworks that are created primarily for aesthetic reasons ('art for art's
sake') rather than for commercial or functional use. Designed for its uplifting, life-enhancing qualities,
fine art typically denotes the traditional, Western European 'high arts', such as:

• Drawing
Using charcoal, chalk, crayon, pastel or with pencil or pen and ink. Two major applications include:
illuminated manuscripts (c.600-1200) and book illustration.

• Painting
Using oils, watercolour, gouache, acrylics, ink and wash, or the more old-fashioned tempera or encaustic
paints. For an explanation of colourants, see: Colour in Painting and Colour Pigments, Types, History.

• Printmaking
Using simple methods like woodcuts or stencils, the more demanding techniques of engraving, etching
and lithography, or the more modern forms like screen-printing, foil imaging or giclee prints. For a
significant application of printmaking, see: Poster Art.

• Sculpture
In bronze, stone, marble, wood, or clay.

Another type of Western fine art, which originated in China, is calligraphy: the highly complex form of
stylized writing.

The Evolution of Fine Arts

After primitive forms of cave painting, figurine sculptures and other types of ancient art, there occured
the golden era of Greek art and other schools of Classical Antiquity. The sacking of Rome (c.400-450)
introduced the dead period of the Dark Ages (c.450-1000), brightened only by Celtic art and Ultimate La
Tene Celtic designs, after which the history of art in the West is studded with a wide variety of artistic
'styles' or 'movements' - such as: Gothic (c.1100-1300), Renaissance (c.1300-1600), Baroque (17th
century), Neo-Classicism (18th century), Romanticism (18th-19th century), Realism and Impressionism
(19th century), Cubism, Expressionism, Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism and Pop-Art (20th century).

For a brief review of modernism (c.1860-1965), see Modern art movements; for a guide to
postmodernism, (c.1965-present) see our list of the main Contemporary art movements.

The Tradition
Fine art was the traditional type of Academic art taught at the great schools, such as the the Accademia
dell'Arte del Disegno in Florence, the Accademia di San Luca in Rome, the Académie des Beaux-Arts in
Paris, and the Royal Academy in London. One of the key legacies of the academies was their theory of
linear perspective and their ranking of the painting genres, which classified all works into 5 types:
history, portrait, genre-scenes, landscape or still life.

Patrons

Ever since the advent of Christianity, the largest and most significant sponsor of fine art has been the
Christian Church. Not surprisingly therefore, the largest body of painting and/or sculpture has been
religious art, as has other specific forms like icons and altarpiece art.

2. Visual Arts

Visual art includes all the fine arts as well as new media and contemporary forms of expression such as
Assemblage, Collage, Conceptual, Installation and Performance art, as well as Photography, (see also: Is
Photography Art?) and film-based forms like Video Art and Animation, or any combination thereof.
Another type, often created on a monumental scale is the new environmental land art.

3. Plastic Arts

The term plastic art typically denotes three-dimensional works employing materials that can be
moulded, shaped or manipulated (plasticized) in some way: such as, clay, plaster, stone, metals, wood
(sculpture), paper (origami) and so on. For three-dimensional artworks made from everyday materials
and "found objects", including Marcel Duchamp's "readymades" (1913-21), please see: Junk art.

4. Decorative Arts

This category traditionally denotes functional but ornamental art forms, such as works in glass, clay,
wood, metal, or textile fabric. This includes all forms of jewellery and mosaic art, as well as ceramics,
(exemplified by beautifully decorated styles of ancient pottery notably Chinese and Greek Pottery)
furniture, furnishings, stained glass and tapestry art. Noted styles of decorative art include: Rococo Art
(1700-1800), Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (fl. 1848-55), Japonism (c.1854-1900), Art Nouveau (c.1890-
1914), Art Deco (c.1925-40), Edwardian, and Retro.

Arguably the greatest period of decorative or applied art in Europe occurred during the 17th/18th
centuries at the French Royal Court. For more, see: French Decorative Arts (c.1640-1792); French
Designers (c.1640-1792); and French Furniture (c.1640-1792).

5. Performance Arts

This type refers to public performance events. Traditional varieties include, theatre, opera, music, and
ballet. Contemporary performance art also includes any activity in which the artist's physical presence
acts as the medium. Thus it encompasses, mime, face or body painting, and the like. A hyper-modern
type of performance art is known as Happenings.

6. Applied Arts

This category encompasses all activities involving the application of aesthetic designs to everyday
functional objects. While fine art provides intellectual stimulation to the viewer, applied art creates
utilitarian items (a cup, a couch or sofa, a clock, a chair or table) using aesthetic principles in their
design. Folk art is predominantly involved with this type of creative activity. Applied art includes
architecture, computer art, photography, industrial design, graphic design, fashion design, interior
design, as well as all decorative arts. Noted styles include, Bauhaus Design School, as well as Art
Nouveau, and Art Deco. One of the most important forms of 20th applied art is architecture, notably
supertall skyscraper architecture, which dominates the urban environment in New York, Chicago, Hong
Kong and many other cities around the world. For a review of this type of public art, see: American
Archit
ecture (1600-present).
The 'Arts Versus Crafts' Debate

According to the traditional theory of art, there is a basic difference between an 'art' and a 'craft'. Put
simply, although both activities involve creative skills, the former involves a higher degree of intellectual
involvement. Under this analysis, a basket-weaver (say) would be considered a craftsperson, while a
bag-designer would be considered an artist. In this rather artificial distinction between arts and crafts,
functionality is a key factor. Thus, a jeweller who designs and makes non-functional items like rings or
necklaces would be considered an artist, while a watchmaker would be a craftsperson; someone who
makes glass might be a craftsman, but a person who makes stained glass is an artist. The idea is that
artists are somehow superior because they 'create' things of beauty, while craftsmen perform repetitive
or purely functional actions. There may be some truth behind this theory, but many types of
craftsmanship seem no different to genuine art. An example perhaps, is a cartoonist-animator, exployed
to draw thousands of similar pictures of a cartoon character like 'Charlie Brown'. True, his 'art' is purely
functional and hi//ghly commercial, but no one could deny he was an artist. N

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