The visual arts are art forms such as painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, ceramics, photography, video, filmmaking, design, crafts, and architecture. Many artistic disciplines such as performing arts, conceptual art, and textile arts also involve aspects of visual arts as well as arts of other types. Also included within the visual arts are the applied arts such as industrial design, graphic design, fashion design, interior design and decorative art.
Current usage of the term "visual arts" includes
fine art as well as the applied or decorative arts and crafts, but this was not
always the case. Before the Arts and Crafts Movement in Britain and elsewhere
at the turn of the 20th century, the term 'artist' had for some centuries often
been restricted to a person working in the fine arts (such as painting,
sculpture, or printmaking) and not the decorative arts, craft, or applied
Visual arts media. The distinction was emphasized by artists of the Arts and
Crafts Movement, who valued vernacular art forms as much as high forms. Art
schools made a distinction between the fine arts and the crafts, maintaining
that a craftsperson could not be considered a practitioner of the arts.
The increasing tendency to privilege painting, and to a
lesser degree sculpture, above other arts has been a feature of Western art as
well as East Asian art. In both regions painting has been seen as relying to
the highest degree on the imagination of the artist, and the furthest removed
from manual labour – in Chinese painting the most highly valued styles were
those of "scholar-painting", at least in theory practiced by
gentleman amateurs. The Western hierarchy of genres reflected similar
attitudes.
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