Mirrorglass
Illuminator
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2010
- Messages
- 3,464
I think that's a good idea. Ironically, I don't think the exact definition of "per se" is particularly important, but when pressed ...(!)
What is important, however, is to appreciate that there is a distinction between something constituting "art" (I'll refrain from using "per se", and hope we can dispense with such term on the assumption that it's inferred) and something having a degree of "artistic merit". Trouble is, there's the rub. There are some people who believe (or at least claim to believe) that, at best, virtually everything constitutes art, and at worst at least has artistic merit. I'm not sure there's any mileagle in debating with such people - what could it possibly achieve?!
To use the music analogy, again, whilst "playing around" on a piano, for example (be it child or adult), with no or minimal musical skill, could generate sounds that the more imaginative amongst us might classify as "music" (or at least "musical"), I, personally, set a higher skill threshold for such classification. Again, I struggle to see what possible meaning "music" and "musical" have if everything audible constitutes music. To my mind "music" and "sound" are simply not synonymous, just like "artistic" and "everything visible (and audible?)" aren't.
What I don't understand is where you get your definition. For example, take Andy Warhol and his infamous urinal, can of soup, or short story about buying underwear. The first, at least, fails to satisfy your definition of art in every way, and the two others are questionable. Yet there is consensus that they were art, nonetheless.
The definition of art you propose simply isn't generally accepted today. Historically, you're pretty close to some ancient Greek philosophers and some of the more conservative leaders of the French Academy, but those views are pretty outdated.