Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781538167328 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

What Art Does

Using Philosophy of Technology to Talk about Art
Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Google
Preview
The real pleasure derived from asking what artworks mean drives us to expend so much cognitive energy analysing and discussing cultural artefacts: not just the paintings, sculptures, and installations one might encounter in mainstream galleries, but also novels, films, music, video games, poems, graffiti, comic books, theatre shows, dance performances, and whatever else. Despite both that pleasure and the seriousness with which we take that pleasure, the definition of artistic meaning is often unclear. Consequently, philosophers of art and philosophers of language tend to use a variety of non-overlapping definitions for meaning: as a matter of authorial intention, as the opinions of artworld publics, or as private exegesis. This book takes a different approach. Rather than working from within philosophy of art or philosophy of language, this book begins with the claim that artworks constitute a special class of tool. Like other tools, artworks are objects that have functions and that furnish affordances. Unlike other tools, though, the functions artworks have and the affordances they furnish are a consequence of a rich-and surprisingly recent-historical and material tradition: a tradition wherein we take artworks as meaning-making things with something to say.
Ryan Wittingslow is an assistant professor at the University of Groningen, a senior Humboldt fellow at TU Darmstadt, and a research affiliate of the University of Sydney. Most of his research sits at the meeting ground between aesthetics, philosophy of design, philosophy of technology, and political philosophy.
Introduction Chapter 1. Conditions Chapter 2. Functions Chapter 3. Affordances Chapter 4. Artworlds Chapter 5. Artworks References About the Author
Google Preview content