First, I think we should concentrate on Art as such, because pretty much the same "rules" (I put quotation marks because we haven't yet discussed the term in relation to Arts) apply to everything - I mean, there is some kind of a general idea on what Art is supposed to represent (which Nighthawk put into a definition above). However, we should mention the application of the mentioned in all fields, to see similarities, differences and in the end the one common thing/area that connects it all into one.
As evident from Lava's post, there exist alternative definitions that clash with my definition. Do they?
Second, art as uniform, or layered? I think both.
Uniform but layered? So, it's layered
High art/low art? Where would you draw a line? What would you avoid in trying to create high art, and what would you purposely do if you wanted to your art to be considered low art?
Aaah, yes. The skill involved? The sophistication of the ideas presented?
Art is by it's nature elitistic. It's not something that everyone can enjoy - you can acknowledge it's worth, grab a bit of the joy it brings, but to fully understand what you're supposed to fully understand takes time, effort, a solid education and the intellectual and emotional capacity to grasp what you're being offered.
Mayhap low art would have the bar lowered. The requirements would be less difficult to fulfill.
Intellectual, Emotional and Aesthetic Experience Lite
Do artists even create like this, or is their work determined by the culture they're part of, their way of life, views?
They don't have to necessarily want to create a certain kind of artistic piece, but it would just end up as such. Maybe because they had a different goal, a different approach or because they just didn't care to make it any more complex than they did.
A lot of questions; could they be answered by one general answer, or is it all only subjective?
Seeing as I come from a philosophical background, I'll go with "one general answer for 500", Alex
For me art is the expression of the essence of one being, one thing, one thought, one feeling in a sound form, graphic form, movement form, etc. For me it is impossible to say something is high or low art, good or bad art. I only see there is art I like, and there is art i don´t like, but it does not mean is it good or bad.
When you say "the expression of the essence of one being, one thing, one thought, one feeling", do you mean to say that it's that one thing expressing itself, or that the author is expressing (or trying to express) the essence of, etc?
For me one characteristic of art is that has no temporal time or space to be considerated: art was, art is and art will be.
That's a bit... esoteric
Art is a human creation, ergo art was
created. It had an origin point. I cannot agree that it'll live on, regardless of the state of human civilization. That's a nifty platonic notion, the objectivity of the idea of Art, but unacceptable to a materialist.
Was that even what you meant or did I misunderstand you?
I like your attempt at a definition, but I feel that something is lacking, too. I find it too purposeful. Does art always have to strive at explaining something? Isn't it art when a piece is just plain beautiful? Isn't it enough when a piece provokes certain reactions and emotions?
While I do think something is lacking, it's not the extreme purposefulness.
Yes, I do believe art should strive to explain something. If there's no intellectual pursuit, if there's no design behind it, it's just something pretty. Bear in mind that I'm not talking about the need for Art to convey essays. It just needs to stimulate, intellectually, emotionally and esthetically. If it stimulates just intellectually, then it's part of academia. If it stimulates emotionally, it could be anything from a soccer match to your third date with that cute girl from down the street. Esthetically? You're witnessing the beauties of nature, a forest in fall. It's beautiful, but not art.
Just to nip a potential argument in the bud: no, Nature has nothing to do with Art
Art's a human thing, it requires an artist (or artists). Colloquially, "wow, that's art" is applied to anything that strikes us as particularly beautiful or skillfully done, though the object in question (or scene in question) isn't necessarily Art. We're not trying to speak colloquially here, but academically.