Friday, November 15, 2019
Tolstoys Philosophy of Art Essay examples -- Visual Arts Paintings Ar
Tolstoy's Philosophy of Art    Tolstoy approaches art with a very specific and narrow view of what is  real and what is counterfeit in classifying artwork and what makes a  work of art good or bad. Tolstoy believes that a work of art can be  classified as "real" if and only if "one man consciously by means of  certain external signs, hands on to others feelings he has lived  through, and that others are infected by these feelings and also  experience them" (10). He believes that art can only be defined as  real by its ability to make the audience feel what the artist had  intended to convey with his/her artwork. The feelings the artist  intends to convey must also be sincere and true feelings based on  personal experience, expressed to the audience in such a way that the  viewer/listener feels as if the artist is merely expressing something  he/she feels and has always longed to express. To offset this  definition, Tolstoy defines counterfeit art as having "no impression  on anyone" (513). He says that distinguishing real art from  counterfeit art can be done simply by determining the "infectiousness  of art" (514). Tolstoy claims that any piece of art, no matter how  beautiful, intriguing, interesting, poetic, striking, or realistic  cannot be defined as real unless it also maintains this quality of  infectiousness.    After defining the difference between real and counterfeit art,  Tolstoy goes on to relay the difference between what classifies good  and bad art. Tolstoy cl...                      
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