Ways of Defining Art

Woman looking at paintings in an art museum

ThoughtCo / Kaley McKean

Key Takeaways

  • Art is a creative way to make something beautiful or meaningful with skill and imagination.
  • Art can be seen as copying beauty, showing emotions, or focusing on form and design.
  • The idea of what art is changes over time and can be different across cultures.

There's no universal definition of visual art, though a consensus has emerged that art is the conscious creation of something beautiful or meaningful using skill and imagination. The definition and perceived value of works of art have changed throughout history and in different cultures. For example, The Jean Basquiat painting that sold for $110.5 million at Sotheby’s auction in May 2017 would, no doubt, have had trouble finding an audience in Renaissance Italy. 

Etymology

The term “art” is related to the Latin word “ars” meaning, art, skill, or craft. The first known use of the word art is revealed in 13th-century manuscripts. However, the word and its many variants (artem, eart, etc.) have probably existed since the founding of Rome.

Philosophy of Art

The definition of art has been debated for centuries among philosophers. "What is art?” is the most basic question in the philosophy of aesthetics, which essentially means, “How do we determine what is defined as art?” This implies two subtexts: the essential nature of art and its social importance (or lack thereof). Art's definition generally falls into three categories: representation, expression, and form.

  • Art as Representation or Mimesis. Plato first developed the idea of art as “mimesis,” which, in Greek, means copying or imitation. For this reason, the primary meaning of art was, for centuries, defined as the representation or replication of something beautiful or meaningful. Until roughly the end of the eighteenth century, a work of art was valued based on how faithfully it replicated its subject. This definition of "good art" has had a profound impact on modern and contemporary artists; as Gordon Graham writes, “It leads people to place a high value on very lifelike portraits such as those by the great masters—Michelangelo, Rubens, Velásquez, and so on—and to raise questions about the value of ‘modern’ art—the cubist distortions of Picasso, the surrealist figures of Jan Miro, the abstracts of Kandinsky or the ‘action’ paintings of Jackson Pollock.” While representational art still exists today, it's no longer the only measure of value.
  • Art as Expression of Emotional Content. Expression became important during the Romantic movement with artwork expressing a definite feeling, as in the sublime or dramatic. Audience response was important—the artwork was intended to evoke an emotional response. This definition holds true today, as artists look to connect with and evoke responses from their viewers.
  • Art as Form.  Immanuel Kant (1724–1804) was one of the most influential early art theorists toward the end of the 18th century. He believed that art shouldn't have a concept but instead find merit only in its formal qualities because the content of a work of art isn't of aesthetic interest. Formal qualities became particularly important when art moved into abstraction in the 20th century, and the principles of art and design (balance, rhythm, harmony, unity) were used to define and assess art.

Today, all three categories come into play in determining art's definition and value, depending on the artwork.

History of How Art Is Defined

According to H.W Janson, author of the classic art textbook, The History of Art, “...we cannot escape viewing works of art in the context of time and circumstance, whether past or present. How indeed could it be otherwise, so long as art is still being created all around us, opening our eyes almost daily to new experiences and thus forcing us to adjust our sights?”

Throughout the centuries in Western culture—from the 11th century through the end of the 17th century—people defined art as anything done with skill as the result of knowledge and practice. This meant that artists honed their craft, learning to replicate their subjects skillfully. The epitome of this occurred during the Dutch Golden Age when artists were free to paint in all sorts of genres and made a living off their art in the robust economic and cultural climate of 17th-century Netherlands.

During the Romantic period of the 18th century, as a reaction to the Enlightenment and its emphasis on science, empirical evidence, and rational thought, art began to be described as not just being something done with skill, but something also created in the pursuit of beauty and to express the artist’s emotions. Nature was glorified, and spirituality and free expression were celebrated. Artists achieved a level of notoriety and were often guests of the aristocracy.

The Avant-garde art movement began in the 1850s with the realism of Gustave Courbet. Avante-garde was followed by other modern art movements such as cubism, futurism, and surrealism, in which the artist pushed the boundaries of ideas and creativity. These represented innovative approaches to art-making and the definition expanded to include the idea of the originality of vision.

The idea of originality in art persists, leading to more genres and manifestations of art, such as digital art, performance art, conceptual art, environmental art, electronic art, etc.

Art-Related Quotes

There are as many ways to define art as there are people in the universe, and each definition is influenced by the unique perspective of that person, as well as by their personality and character.

For example: 

"Art evokes the mystery without which the world would not exist." - Rene Magritte

"Art is a discovery and development of elementary principles of nature into beautiful forms suitable for human use." - Frank Lloyd Wright

"Art enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time." - Thomas Merton

"The purpose of art is washing the dust of daily life off our souls." - Pablo Picasso

"All art is but imitation of nature." Lucius Annaeus Seneca

"Art is not what you see, but what you make others see." - Edgar Degas

"Art is the signature of civilizations." - Jean Sibelius

"Art is a human activity consisting in this, that 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." - Leo Tolstoy

Conclusion

Today we consider the earliest symbolic scribblings of mankind to be art. As Chip Walter, of National Geographic, writes about these ancient paintings, “Their beauty whipsaws your sense of time. One moment you are anchored in the present, observing coolly. The next you are seeing the paintings as if all other art—all civilization—has yet to exist...creating a simple shape that stands for something else—a symbol, made by one mind, that can be shared with others—is obvious only after the fact. Even more than the cave art, these first concrete expressions of consciousness represent a leap from our animal past toward what we are today—a species awash in symbols, from the signs that guide your progress down the highway to the wedding ring on your finger and the icons on your iPhone.”

Archaeologist Nicholas Conard posited that the people who created these images “possessed minds as fully modern as ours and, like us, sought in ritual and myth answers to life’s mysteries, especially in the face of an uncertain world. Who governs the migration of the herds, grows the trees, shapes the moon, turns on the stars? Why must we die, and where do we go afterward? They wanted answers but they didn’t have any science-based explanations for the world around them.”

We can think of art as a symbol of what it means to be human, manifested physically for others to see and interpret. Art can serve as a symbol for something tangible, or for a thought, an emotion, a feeling, or a concept. Through peaceful means, art can convey the full spectrum of the human experience. Perhaps that's why it's so important.

Sources

  • Graham, Gordon, Philosophy of the Arts, An Introduction to Aesthetics, Third Edition,Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group, New York. 
  • Janson, H. W., History of Art, Harry Abrams, Inc. New York, 1974.
  • Walter, Chip, First artists, National Geographic. January 2015.
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Marder, Lisa. "Ways of Defining Art." ThoughtCo, Apr. 30, 2025, thoughtco.com/what-is-the-definition-of-art-182707. Marder, Lisa. (2025, April 30). Ways of Defining Art. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/what-is-the-definition-of-art-182707 Marder, Lisa. "Ways of Defining Art." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/what-is-the-definition-of-art-182707 (accessed November 24, 2025).