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A.

IDENTIFICATION
1. Art
2. Humanus
3. Art Appreciation
4. Imagination
5. Creativity
6. Visual Arts
7. Realism
8. Abstraction
9. Distortion
10. Architecture

B. Philosophers and Artist who define Arts.


1. Lisa Morder
2. Amy Lowell
3. Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy
4. Edgar Degas
5. Leonardo da Vinci
6. Plato
7. Aristotle
8. Kant
9. J. V. Estolas
10. A.Tan
11. F. Zulueta
12. Plato
13. Panizo and Rustia

I. ENUMERATION
1-6 Basic Assumptions of arts
1. Art has been created by all people at all times.
2. Art involves experience.
3. Art is not nature; nature is art.
4. Art is cultural.
5. Art is a form of creation.
6. Art is subjective.
7-13 Nature of Arts
7. Art is a diverse range of human activities
8. Art represents reality
9. Art is an expression
10. Art serves as means of communication of emotions
11. Art matters
12. Art is universal
13. Art is creation
14-18 Some sources of art subject
14. Nature
15. History
16. Greek and roman Mythology
17. The Judaeo Christian Tradition
18. Oriental Sacred texts
19. Other work of Arts
19.22 Kind of Subject
19. Still Life
20. Landscapes, Seascape and Cityscapes
21. Animals
22. Portraits
III. ESSAY
Art is whatever you think it is. The key thing is how much you have confidence in
your conviction. Art is a predominantly non-symbolic mode of expression that serves as a
primary counterpoint to language. Although almost any language necessitates extensive training
in the ways in which information is translated into the symbols it employs, art can be
communicated with no prior knowledge. As a result, Art can do something that words can't, such
as connect through language boundaries. This ability to talk without using words often allows
you to experiment with visual-emotional connections.

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