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Creative Art

www.artgallery.co.uk
The place to buy original creative art for your home or office - direct from the artist's studio. Original creative art is now affordable art.

 

Select from a massive range of affordable creative art available today:

  • 5365 original paintings and sculptures
  • 880 limited edition prints
  • 474 open edition prints
  • From 739 UK artists

 

Buy creative art as a gift

Original creative art is the most thoughtful and thrilling gift you can give. There are the following resources help you get it right:
  • Creative art gift vouchers - new!
  • How to buy original creative art as a gift
  • Choosing original creative art for the home
  • You wil be able to see what other customers are buying

 

Sell your creative art online too

Want to join our growing team of artists selling their creative art to the UK?

 

It's completely free of charge to sell your creative art through artgallery.co.uk, and it's simple to get started. Remember - with artgallery.co.uk it's no-sale, no-fee.

Easyart
Is the UK's largest online creative art shop with a range of over 50,000 contemporary and traditional fine art prints, posters, limited editions and photography. Preview custom framing options online - all framing is handmade.

World Gallery
Is a leading online creative art and craft shop, print and poster gallery. Also offers a unique canvas-finishing service for prints. Highly competitive prices on over 50,000 fine art prints. Superb online custom framing.

artrepublic

Creative art prints, limited edition prints & rare creative art posters with free delivery

Find creative art prints & art posters by artist or category, with free delivery worldwide.

 

Artrepublic.com , the creative art lover’s online print & poster gallery. Discover rare, limited edition creative art prints from today’s cutting-edge artists plus thousands of open edition museum prints & poster art by world famous artists. Try our New Arrival section to see our latest creative art releases.

 

We’ve today’s hottest and most collectable creative art prints amongst our range of limited editions and rare posters, many hand-signed by the artist. Our creative art prints often sell-out fast and once sold, they’re gone forever, so be quick!

 

Browse this site for your creative art .

 

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Creative Art

Creative art refers to a diverse range of human activities, creations, and expressions that are appealing to the senses or emotions of a human individual. The words " creative art " may be used to cover all or any of the creative arts , including music, literature and other forms. It is most often used to refer specifically to visual creative art , including media such as painting, sculpture, and printmaking. However it can also be applied to forms of creative art that stimulate the other senses, such as music, an auditory art. Aesthetics is the branch of philosophy which considers creative art .

 

Traditionally the term creative art was used to refer to any skill or mastery, a concept which altered during the Romantic period, when creative art came to be seen as "a special faculty of the human mind to be classified with religion and science". Generally creative art is a product of human activity, made with the intention of stimulating the human senses as well as the human mind; by transmitting emotions and / or ideas. Beyond this description, there is no general agreed-upon definition of creative art . Creative art is also able to illustrate abstract thought and its expressions can elicit previously hidden emotions in its audience.

 

The evaluation of creative art has become especially problematic since the 20th century. Richard Wollheim distinguishes three approaches: the Realist, whereby aesthetic quality is an absolute value independent of any human view; the Objectivist, whereby it is also an absolute value, but is dependent on general human experience; and the Relativist position, whereby it is not an absolute value, but depends on, and varies with, the human experience of different humans. A creative art object may be characterized by the intentions, or lack thereof, of its creator, regardless of its apparent purpose. A cup, which ostensibly can be used as a container, may be considered creative art if intended solely as an ornament, while a painting may be deemed craft if mass-produced.

 

Visual creative art is defined as the arrangement of colors, forms, or other elements "in a manner that affects the sense of beauty, specifically the production of the beautiful in a graphic or plastic medium". The nature of creative art has been described by Wollheim as "one of the most elusive of the traditional problems of human culture". It has been defined as a vehicle for the expression or communication of emotions and ideas, a means for exploring and appreciating formal elements for their own sake, and as mimesis or representation. Leo Tolstoy identified creative art as a use of indirect means to communicate from one person to another. Benedetto Croce and R.G. Collingwood advanced the idealist view that creative art expresses emotions, and that the work of creative art therefore essentially exists in the mind of the creator. Creative art as form has its roots in the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, and was developed in the early twentieth century by Roger Fry and Clive Bell. Creative art as mimesis or representation has deep roots in the philosophy of Aristotle.

 

Usage of creative art

The most common usage of the word " creative art ," which rose to prominence after 1750, is understood to denote skill used to produce an aesthetic result. Britannica Online defines it as "the use of skill and imagination in the creation of aesthetic objects, environments, or experiences that can be shared with others." By any of these definitions of the words creative art, artistic works have existed for almost as long as humankind: from early pre-historic creative art to contemporary creative art . Much has been written about the concept of " creative art ". Where Adorno said in 1970 "It is now taken for granted that nothing which concerns creative art can be taken for granted any more. The first and broadest sense of creative art is the one that has remained closest to the older Latin meaning, which roughly translates to "skill" or "craft," and also from an Indo-European root meaning "arrangement" or "to arrange". In this sense, creative art is whatever is described as having undergone a deliberate process of arrangement by an agent. A few examples where this meaning proves very broad include artifact, artificial, artifice, artillery, medical arts, and military arts. However, there are many other colloquial uses of the words, all with some relation to its etymology.

 

The second and more recent sense of the words creative art is as an abbreviation for fine art. Fine art means that a skill is being used to express the artist’s creativity, or to engage the audience’s aesthetic sensibilities, or to draw the audience towards consideration of the finer things. Often, if the skill is being used in a common or practical way, people will consider it a craft instead of creative art . Likewise, if the skill is being used in a commercial or industrial way, it will be considered Commercial art instead of creative art. On the other hand, crafts and design are sometimes considered applied creative art. Some creative art followers have argued that the difference between fine art and applied art has more to do with value judgments made about the creative art than any clear definitional difference. However, even fine art often has goals beyond pure creativity and self-expression. The purpose of works of creative art may be to communicate ideas, such as in politically-, spiritually-, or philosophically-motivated art; to create a sense of beauty; to explore the nature of perception; for pleasure; or to generate strong emotions. The purpose may also be seemingly nonexistent.

 

Creative art is a collection of disciplines that produce artworks that are compelled by a personal drive and echo or reflect a message, mood, or symbolism for the viewer to interpret creative art as experience. Creative art can be defined by purposeful, creative interpretations of limitless concepts or ideas in order to communicate something to another person. Creative art can be explicitly made for this purpose or interpreted based on images or objects. Creative art is something that stimulates an individual's thoughts, emotions, beliefs, or ideas through the senses. It is also an expression of an idea and it can take many different forms and serve many different purposes. Although the application of scientific theories to derive a new scientific theory involves skill and results in the "creation" of something new, this represents science only and is not categorized as Creative art .

 

Theories of creative art

In the nineteenth century, artists were primarily concerned with ideas of truth and beauty. The aesthetic theorist John Ruskin, who championed the raw naturalism of J. M. W. Turner, saw creative art as the communication by artifice of an essential truth that could only be found in nature. The arrival of Modernism in the early twentieth century lead to a radical break in the conception of the function of creative art and then again in the late twentieth century with the advent of postmodernism. Clement Greenberg's 1960 article "Modernist Painting" defines Modern Creative Art as "the use of characteristic methods of a discipline to criticize the discipline itself". Greenberg originally applied this idea to the Abstract Expressionist movement and used it as a way to understand and justify flat abstract painting:

 

Realistic, naturalistic creative art had dissembled the medium, using creative art to conceal creative art ; modernism used creative art to call attention to creative art . The limitations that constitute the medium of painting – the flat surface, the shape of the support, the properties of the pigment — were treated by the Old Masters as negative factors that could be acknowledged only implicitly or indirectly. Under Modernism these same limitations came to be regarded as positive factors, and were acknowledged openly.

 

After Greenberg, several important creative art theorists emerged, such as Michael Fried, T. J. Clark, Rosalind Krauss, Linda Nochlin and Griselda Pollock among others. Though only originally intended as a way of understanding a specific set of artists, Greenberg's definition of Modern Creative Art underlies most of the ideas of creative art within the various creative art movements of the 20th century and early 21st century. The creative art of Marcel Duchamp becomes clear when seen within this context; when submitting a urinal, titled fountain, to the Society of Independent Artists exhibit in 1917 he was critiquing the art exhibition using its own methods.

 

Pop artists like Andy Warhol became both noteworthy and influential through critiquing popular culture, as well as the creative art world, through the language of that popular culture. Certain radical artists of the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s took those ideas further by expanding this technique of self-criticism beyond high creative art to all cultural image-making, including fashion images, comics, billboards and pornography.

 

Utility and Purpose of Creative Art

The purpose of creative art has been discussed throughout the history of philosophy via the concept of beauty. Beauty, in this context, refers to the ability of human beings to experience and appreciate the visible object, regardless of the many different views of what is beautiful. Nearly every major philosopher has commented on creative art , including Aristotle, Plato, Kant, Bertrand Russell, and others. The different purposes of creative art may be grouped according to those which are non-motivated, and those which are motivated.

 

Non-Motivated Functions of Creative Art

The non-motivated purposes of creative art are those which are integral to being human, transcend the individual, or do not fulfill a specific external purpose. Aristotle has said, "Imitation, then, is one instinct of our nature." In this sense, creative art , as creativity, is something which humans must do by their very nature and is therefore beyond utility.

 

  • Basic human instinct for harmony, balance, rhythm.
    Creative art at this level is not an action or an object, but an internal appreciation of balance and harmony (beauty), and therefore an aspect of being human beyond utility.
    "Imitation, then, is one instinct of our nature. Next, there is the instinct for 'harmony' and rhythm, meters being manifestly sections of rhythm. Persons, therefore, starting with this natural gift developed by degrees their special aptitudes, till their rude improvisations gave birth to Poetry." - Aristotle
  • Experience of the mysterious.
    Creative art provides us with a way to experience ourselves in relation to the universe. This experience may often come unmotivated, as we appreciate creative art , music or poetry.
    "The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science." - Albert Einstein
  • Expression of the imagination with Creative Art.
    Creative art provides a means to express the imagination in non-grammatic ways that are not tied to the formality of spoken or written language. Unlike words, which come in sequences and each of which have a definite meaning, creative art provides a range of forms, symbols and ideas with meanings that are maleable.
    "Jupiter's eagle is not like logical aesthetic attributes of an object, the concept of the sublimity and majesty of creation, but rather something else - something that gives the imagination an incentive to spread its flight over a whole host of kindred representations that provoke more thought than admits of expression in a concept determined by words. They furnish an aesthetic idea, which serves the above rational idea as a substitute for logical presentation, but with the proper function, however, of animating the mind by opening out for it a prospect into a field of kindred representations stretching beyond its ken." - Immanuel Kant
  • Universal communication with Creative Art.
    Creative art allows the individual to express things toward the world as a whole. Earth Artists often creative art in remote locations that will never be experienced by another person. The practice of placing a cairn, or pile of stones at the top of a mountain, is an example. Creative art created in this way is a form of communication between the individual and the world as a whole. Ritualistic and symbolic functions. In many cultures, creative art is used in rituals, performances and dances as a decoration or symbol. While these often have no specific utilitarian purpose, anthropologists know that they often serve a purpose at the level of meaning within a particular culture. This meaning is not furnished by any one individual, but is often the result of many generations of change, and of a cosmological relationship within the culture.
    "Most scholars who deal with rock paintings or objects recovered from prehistoric contexts that cannot be explained in utilitarian terms and are thus categorized as decorative, ritual or symbolic, are aware of the trap posed by the term '
    '." - Silva Tomaskova

 

Motivated Functions of Creative Art

The purposes of creative art which are motivated refer to intentional, conscious actions on the part of the artists or creator. These may be to bring about political change, to comment on an aspect of society, to convey a specific emotion or mood, to address personal psychology, to illustrate another discipline, to (with commercial arts) to sell a product, or simply as a form of communication.

 

  • Communication with Creative art
    Creative art , at its simplest, is a form of communication. As most forms of communication have an intent or goal directed toward another individual, this is a motivated purpose. Illustrative arts, such as scientific illustration, are a form of creative art as communication. Maps are another example. However, the content need not be scientific. Emotions, moods and feelings are also communicated through creative art .
    "Art is a set of artefacts or images with symbolic meanings as a means of communication." - Steve Mithen
  • Creative art as Entertainment.
    Creative art may seek to bring about a particular emotion or mood, for the purpose of relaxing or entertaining the viewer. This is often the function of the creative art industries of Motion Pictures and Video Games. The Avante-Garde. Creative art for political change. One of the defining functions of early twentieth century creative art has been to use visual images to bring about political change. The creative art movements which had this goal - Dadaism, Surrealism, Russian Constructivism, and Abstract Expressionism, among others - are collectively referred to as the avante-garde arts.
    "By contrast, the realistic attitude, inspired by positivism, from Saint Thomas Aquinas to Anatole France, clearly seems to me to be hostile to any intellectual or moral advancement. I loathe it, for it is made up of mediocrity, hate, and dull conceit. It is this attitude which today gives birth to these ridiculous books, these insulting plays. It constantly feeds on and derives strength from the newspapers and stultifies both science and creative art by assiduously flattering the lowest of tastes; clarity bordering on stupidity, a dog’s life." - Andre Breton (Surrealism)
  • Creative Art for psychological and healing purposes.
    Creative Art is also used by art therapists, psychotherapists and clinical psychologists as art therapy. The Rorschach inkblot test, for example, is used to determine the personality and emotional functioning of a patient. The end product is not the principal goal in this case, but rather a process of healing, through creative art acts, is sought. The resultant piece of artwork may also offer insight into the troubles experienced by the subject and may suggest suitable approaches to be used in more conventional forms of psychiatric therapy.
  • Creative Art for social inquiry, subversion and / or anarchy.
    While similar to creative art for political change, subversive or deconstructivist art may seek to question aspects of society without any specific political goal. In this case, the function of creative art may be simply to criticize some aspect of society. Graffiti creative art and other types of street creative art are graphics and images that are spray-painted or stencilled on publicly viewable walls, buildings, buses, trains, and bridges, usually without permission. Certain creative art forms, such as graffiti, may also be illegal when they break laws (in this case vandalism).
  • Creative Art for propaganda, or commercialism.
    Creative art is often utilized as a form of propaganda, and thus can be used to subtly influence popular conceptions or mood. In a similar way, creative art which seeks to sell a product also influences mood and emotion. In both cases, the purpose of creative art here is to subtly manipulate the viewer into a particular emotional or psychological response toward a particular idea or object.

 

The functions of creative art described above are not mutually exclusive, as many of them may overlap. For example, creative art for the purpose of entertainment may also seek to sell a product, i.e. the movie or video game. One of the central challenges of post-modern creative art (after the 1970s), is that as the world becomes increasingly utilitarian, functional, and market-driven, the presence of the non-motivated arts, or creative art which is ritualistic or symbolic, becomes increasingly rare.



 

 

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