Wednesday, November 25, 2009

The term Anti-art refers to art which presents a challenge to the currently existing definition of art. It is a term that by wide consensus seems to have been coined by Marcel Duchamp. This would have been around the time that he began making readymades around 1913. Some still regard the readymades as being anti-art, for instance the Stuckist group of artists. Duchamp's Fountain is highly noteworthy. Anti-art is associated with Dada, an art movement founded in 1916 in Zurich, with which Duchamp is also importantly associated. Many more art movements have over time taken a position in relation to anti-art.

Anti-art is a loosely-used term applied to an array of concepts and attitudes that reject prior definitions of art and question art in general. Anti-art tends to conduct this questioning and rejection from the vantage point of art. An expression of anti-art can take the form of art or not. In general, anti-art rejects only some aspects of art. Depending on the case, "anti-artworks" may reject conventional artistic standards.

Anti-artworks may also reject the art market, and high art. Anti-artworks may reject individualism in art. Anti-art may reject "universality" as an accepted factor in art, and some forms of anti-art reject art entirely. Depending on the case, anti-art artworks may reject art as a separate realm or as a specialization.

Anti-art artworks may reject art based upon a consideration of art as being oppressive of a segment of the population.


THAT'S WHAT I MEANT, STUPID SCRIPTING ANG MOH!

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