429,125 views
42 votes
42 votes
Discussion Topic

Using complete sentences post a detailed response to the following.

What inspires you to create art? Feelings? Experiences? Things that you see in your daily life? People? Discuss where you get your art inspiration and how different things influence and inspire your art.


THIS IS THE ANSWER IF NEEDED! This isn't a question, sorry. :)

The things that inspire me to create art are my thoughts, surroundings, and conceptions that come to mind. Feelings also can inspire what I create. For example, drawing a person in the rain can make people assume I am sad, or a drawing of a person outside laughing can make people suppose I am delighted. It all depends on how I feel, see, and think when I draw; The surroundings have an impact on what people draw because the outside can inspire dozens of people due to how beautiful and unique it is. A book or a song can also help me presume how I feel or see something. An art museum can also help with how you see things. These incredible artists on those walls show different perspectives from what they see and can courage you to decline or agree with them. Drawings are a passion of mind and can take time to get the right idea for the fitting drawing, but it depends on you. Even if you don't think you have an imaginative mindful set in art, you do if you bore the time to focus. Art doesn't only open your mind but can reduce stress and could even find a new passion for it.

User Biberman
by
3.2k points

2 Answers

14 votes
14 votes

Art and Emotion

It is widely thought that the capacity of artworks to arouse emotions in audiences is a perfectly natural and unproblemmatic fact. It just seems obvious that we can feel sadness or pity for fictional characters, fear at the view of threatening monsters on the movie screen, and joy upon listening to upbeat, happy songs. This may be why so many of us are consumers of art in the first place. Good art, many of us tend to think, should not leave us cold.

These common thoughts, however natural they are become problematic once we start to make explicit other common ideas about both emotion and our relationship with artworks. If some emotions, such as pity, require that the object of the emotion be believed to exist, even though it actually doesn’t, how would it then be possible to feel pity for a fictional character that we all know does not exist? A task of fundamental importance, therefore, is to explain the possibility of emotion in the context of our dealings with various kinds of artworks.

How are we motivated to pursue, and find value in, an emotional engagement with artworks when much of this includes affective states that we generally count as negative or even painful (fear, sadness, anger, and so on)? If we would rather avoid feeling these emotions in real life, how are we to explain cases where we pursue activities, such as watching films, that we know may arouse similar feelings? Alternatively, why are so many people eager to listen to seemingly deeply distressing musical works when they would not want to feel this way in other contexts? Are most of us guilty of irrational pleasure in liking what makes us feel bad? Answering these and related questions is of prime importance if we wish to vindicate the thought that emotion in response to art is not only a good thing to have, but also valuable in enabling us to appreciate artworks.

User Arup Rakshit
by
2.8k points
29 votes
29 votes
I love art! Nice description. The art l like is still life art in that we have to draw whatever we see in front of us.Well u are right art is the way to express our feelings. It can also help to cope with anger by drawing how u feel.
User Touko
by
2.9k points