Subject in Art na may halong Ethics Flashcards
refers to any person, object, scene, or event described or presented in a work of art
SUBJECT IN ART
can also be categorized as representational abstraction and non-representational abstraction
SUBJECT IN ART
also known as figurative art
representational
aims to depict objects, events, or subjects from the real world in a recognizable and realistic manner
representational
easily identifiable to the viewer
representational
artist attempts to create an accurate representation of the subject matter
representational
also known as non-objective art
non-representational
completely departs from the representation of reality
non-representational
does not aim to depict recognizable objects, people, or landscapes
non-representational
focuses on shapes, colors, lines
non-representational
conveys *emotions, concepts, or purely aesthetic experiences
non-representational
indicates a departure from reality in the depiction of imagery art
abstraction
can formally refer to compositions that are derived from a figurative or other natural source
abstraction
can also refer to non-representational and non-objective art that has no derivation from figure or objects
abstraction
depicted in the way they would normally appear
realism
depicts what the eyes can see, what the ear can hear, what the sense faculty may receive
realism
artists systematically use symbols to concentrate or intensify meaning, which makes the art **more subjective and conventional
symbolism๐๐๐
an artistic movement of the last art of the 19th century
fauvism
emphasized spontaneity and use of extremely bright colors
fauvism
Hedonism : Greek : **** = pleasure
- hedone *
what is the highest good
PLEASURE!!!!!!!!
founder of utilitarianism
Jeremy Bentham :p
a method to calculate pleasure and pain
FELICIFIC CALCULUS
a way to quantify moral decisions
FELICIFIC CALCULUS!!!!!!!!!!!
strength of pleasure or pain
INTENSITY
length of pleasure or pain
DURATION
likelihood of occurrence
CERTAINTY
timeliness of occurrence
PROPINQUITY
potential for leading to further pleasure or pain
FECUNDITY
how unmixed the pleasure or pain is
PURITY
those affected by the pleasure or pain
EXTENT
differentiated higher and lower pleasures as well as pains
John Stuart Mill
HIGHER PLEASURES
- Intellectual Faculties
- Moral Faculties
LOWER PLEASURES
- Immediate Physical Sensations
- Immediate Emotional Responses
HIGHER PAINS
- intellectual, emotional, or moral suffering
- leads to personal growth
LOWER PAINS
- immediate physical discomforts
- immediate emotional distress
THREE types of Consequentialism
- egoism
- altruism
- utilitarianism
self interest; self first
EGOISM
selflessness; others first
ALTRUISM
maximize pleasure; for the many
UTILITARIANISM