اطلبي نسختك وتوصلك للبيت

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اطلبي نسختك وتوصلك للبيت

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Transcription:

Arch. Rania Obead

اطلبي نسختك وتوصلك للبيت

The sculptor Constantin Brancusi spent his life searching for forms as simple and pure as words forms that seem to have existed forever, outside of time. Born a peasant in a remote village in Romania, he Spent most of his adult life in Paris, where he lived in a single small room adjoining a skylight studio. Upon his death in 1957, Brancusi willed the contents Of his studio to the French government, which eventually re-created the studio itself in a museum.

Brancusi museum

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* Living with art, Brancusi s photographs show us, is making art live by letting it engage our attention, our imagination, our intelligence. * Few of us, of course, can live with art the way Brancusi did. * Yet we can choose to seek out encounters with art, to make it a matter for thought and enjoyment, and to let it live in our imagination.

* Aesthetics is the branch of philosophy concerned with the feelings aroused in us by sensory experiences experiences we have through sight, hearing, taste, touch, and smell. * Aesthetics concerns itself with our responses to the natural world and to the world we make, especially the world of art. * What art is, how and why it affects us these are some of the issues that aesthetics addresses.

* No society that we know of, for as far back in human history as we have been able to penetrate, has lived without some form of art. * When we looking at some of the oldest works yet discovered, images and artifacts dating from the Stone Ages, near the beginning of the human experience.

More than three hundred images as they eventually found depicting rhinoceroses, horses, bears, reindeer, lions, bison, mammoths, and others, as well as numerous outlines of human hands, in southeastern France, it made about 30,000 B.C.E.

* Pigments of red and yellow ochre, a natural earth substance, along with black charcoal, could have been mixed with animal fat and painted onto the walls with a reed brush. * In powdered form, the same materials probably were mouth-blown onto the surface through hollow reeds. * Many of the images are engraved, or scratched, into the rock.

* Our experience of the images we make is not the same. * We know that a drawing is just markings on a surface, a newspaper photograph merely dots, yet we recognize them as images that reflect our world, and we identify with them. *The experience was the same for Paleolithic image-makers as it is for us. All images may Not be art, but our ability to make them is one place where art begins.

* The structure in the south of England known as Stonehenge today much ruined through time and vandalism, Stonehenge at its height consisted of several concentric circles of megaliths, very large stones, surrounded in turn by a circular ditch. * It was built in several phases over many centuries, beginning around 3100 B.C.E. * The tallest circle, visible in the photograph here, originally consisted of thirty gigantic upright stones capped with a continuous ring of horizontal stones. * Weighing some 50 tons each, the stones were quarried many miles away, hauled to the site, and laboriously shaped by blows from stone hammers until they fit together.

* Many theories have been advanced about why Stonehenge was built and what purpose it served. Recent archaeological research has confirmed that the monument marks a graveyard, perhaps that of a ruling dynasty. * The cremated remains of up to 240 people appear to have been buried there over a span of some five hundred years, from the earliest development of the site until the time when the great stones were erected. * Other findings suggest that the monument did not stand alone but was part of a larger complex, perhaps a religious complex used for funerary rituals. * What is certain is that Stonehenge held meaning for the Neolithic community that built it. * For us, It stands as a compelling example of how old and how basic is our urge to create meaningful order and form, to structure our world so that it reflects our ideas. This is another place where art begins.

First, artists create places for some human purpose. Maya Lin created the Vietnam Veterans Memorial as a place for contemplation and remembrance.

A second task artists perform is to create extraordinary versions of ordinary objects. Kente cloth, from Ghana. Asante, mid 20th century.

A third important task for artists has been to record and commemorate. Manohar. Jahangir Receives a Cup from Khusrau.

A fourth task for artists is to give tangible form to the unknown. They portray what cannot be seen with the eyes or events that can only be imagined. Shiva Nataraja. India, 10th century C.E. Bronze

A fifth function artists perform is to give tangible form to feelings and ideas. Vincent van Gogh. The Starry Night.

Finally, artists refresh our vision and help us see the world in new ways. Habit dulls our senses. What we see every day we no longer marvel at, because it has become familiar. Through art we can see the world through someone else s eyes and recover the intensity of looking for the first time.

Although the exact nature of creativity remains elusive, there is general agreement that creative people tend to possess certain traits, including: 1/ Sensitivity: heightened awareness of what one sees, hears, and touches, as well as responsiveness to other people and their feelings. 2/ Flexibility: an ability to adapt to new situations and to see their possibilities, willingness to find innovative relationships. 3/ Originality: uncommon responses to situations and to solving problems. 4/ Playfulness: a sense of humor and an ability to experiment freely.

5/Productivity: the ability to generate ideas easily and frequently, and to follow through on those ideas. 6/Fluency: a readiness to allow the free flow of ideas. 7/ Analytical skill: a talent for exploring problems, taking them apart, and finding out how things work. 8/ Organizational skill: ability to put things back together in a coherent order.

* Science tells us that seeing is a mode of perception, which is the recognition and interpretation of sensory data. * In visual perception, our eyes take in information in the form of light patterns; the brain processes these patterns to give them meaning.

One reason for differences in perception is the immense amount of detail available for our attention at any given moment. To navigate efficiently through daily life, we practice what is called selective perception, focusing on the visual information we need for the task at hand and relegating everything else to the background. But other factors are in play as well. Our mood influences what we notice and how we interpret it, as does the whole of our prior experience the culture we grew up in, relationships we have had, places we have seen, knowledge we have accumulated.