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mark sottilaro wrote: > Hey, > > OK, here's the modern excepted definition of fine art: > > Art is human expression which has no use other than to define itself. > Cooking, is not considered a fine art, as it's main function is to > transfer > nutrients from food, to humans. Cooking, is a craft. The different > from art > and craft is in the purpose. Are there aesthetics used in cooking? > Of > course, but the use of aesthetics principals doesn't necessarily > produce fine > art. Of course you pick a pleasant color when you paint your house, > but the > main reason you paint it (or aluminum side it) is to protect the wood > from the > elements. Painting a house is not art, but craft. Painting a mural > on a > house is art because there is no reason to do this, other than to > express an > idea or feeling. Fine art has no other purpose other than to be > itself. > > Oh boy, I bet that I've opened up a can of worms! > > Mark. Right on that. Your reasoning reminds me of the duller art history classes I took in college many years ago. The more interesting classes dealt with paradigms less Euro- and Western Civ-oriented, which noted many fascinating things about how art has been viewed around the world; in Japan, for example, serving a small meal such as tea has attained the status of what "we in the West" would call "Fine Art", in fact, the Japanese tea ceremony is enriched by a depth of cultural association which is likely beyond the comprehension of most Westerners. Likewise, in Bali, there is not even a word for what we call Art, as the indigenous culture there is so pregnant with creative energy it is impossible to ascertain a difference between "Art" and "Non-Art" (Aussie sufers aside). But to bring the argument closer to home, I live in Santa Monica, California; here there is a Museum of Functional Art, which does not discriminate between "craft" and "art"; there is even an art piece masquarading as a "Museum of Jurassic Technology". If you look around the "art world" today, I think you will find these solid demarkations so obvious to you as merely scratches in the dust being rapidly obliterated by the winds of change. Andy Warhol showed us that art is whatever you make it; if there is an artist and an audience (perhaps even just the artist his/herself), then there is art. Cheerio, Lance G. P. S. Yes, there could be art in aluminum siding.