Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - What does literature and art include?

What does literature and art include?

Art includes plastic arts, performing arts, comprehensive arts and language arts.

1 refers to the visual static spatial image created by a certain material (such as paint, ink, silk, cloth, paper, board, etc.). , wood, stone, mud, glass, metal, etc. Used in sculptures and handicrafts, as well as various building materials. ) to reflect social life and express the artist's thoughts and feelings.

2. Performing arts are performed by performing artists and directly appeal to people's vision and hearing. Generally refers to the art forms that must be completed through performance, such as music performance, singing, dancing, folk art and so on. In particular, it refers to the performance of actors in shaping roles in movies, TV dramas and dramas.

3. Comprehensive art generally refers to art composed of various artistic elements. For example, songs combine poetry and music, architecture combines painting and sculpture, and drama combines literature, performance, music, art and dance. Usually refers to drama, film, TV series, dance and other forms.

4. Language art is an art form that uses language to create aesthetic images. Including drama sketches, broadcast hosting, speeches, debates and other art forms. Its expression can be breathing, speaking speed, single person, multiple people, mixed voice and other forms.

Extended data:

Primitive art is blunt, naive, sensitive and wild, not only because the primitive value relationship is usually low-level, shallow, simple, direct and instinctive, but also because people's cognitive ability was very limited at that time, and they could only use shallow, simple, direct and mechanical art forms to reflect and describe the objective things around them.

Modern art is advanced, exquisite, complex and rational, not only because modern value relations are usually advanced, profound and complex, but also because people's cognitive ability is constantly improving, so advanced, profound, complex and dialectical art forms can be used to reflect and describe the objective things around them.

Artists in the early Renaissance and its heyday developed their typical styles from natural observation and careful study of pattern science. When the stylism matured in 1520 (the year of Raphael's death), all the problems of the figurative school had been solved. A series of knowledge relearning. Stylistic artists regard art as their teacher rather than nature. On the one hand, Renaissance artists seek their own styles from nature; On the other hand, stylism seeks a style and a method for the first time.

References:

Baidu encyclopedia-art