Human
Critical Thinking in the Arts – A Pocket Guide[footnoteRef:1] [1: By Sam O’Connell, Visual and Performing Arts Department, Worcester State University, 2021]
In my experience, these are the main terms, ideas, concepts, definitions, etc. that will come up in conversation again and again in work as artists and critical thinkers. To that end, here’s a (hopefully) handy pocket guide to keep as a quick reference.
Key Concepts
Don’t forget The Three ‘H’s: Head (Idea), Heart (Emotion), and Hand (Form)
Critical Thinking: A multi-step process made up of observation (description and summary), analysis, interpretation, evaluation, and explanation.
Analysis: The breaking down of a larger thing into its smaller component parts
What are the component parts?
Are there systems/structures by which we can organize them?
Interpretation: The reassembly of those smaller component parts in the pursuit of meaning
Evaluation: A reflection on the success/accuracy/relevance/intuitiveness/etc of the interpretation based on the analysis and observation
Explanation: The communication of the results to others
Creative Thinking: Creative thinking is both the capacity to combine or synthesize existing ideas, images, or expertise in original ways and the experience of thinking, reacting, and working in an imaginative way characterized by a high degree of innovation, divergent thinking, and risk taking.
The Task of Criticism is to identify meaning and explain its mode of embodiment.
Formal and Material Properties
Content
Context
Theory: a framework that provides an orderly explanation of observed phenomenon.
What question is the artist asking? How does the work answer that question?
Discipline Specific Definitions, Terms, and Ideas
Music – Sound that has been organized to stimulate someone
Sound: Notes (loudness, duration, pitch, and timbre) vs. Noise (no pitch)
Pitch: The frequency (repeatable pattern) of a sound wave
Loudness: The strength of the soundwave
Timbre: The unique characteristic of the sound determined, in part, by how the sound is created and what material(s) is producing the sound
Duration: The length of a sound
Some of the tools of organization
Melody
Harmony (a succession of chords [three or more notes played at one time])
Rhythm (tempo [pulse], meter [stress], and rhythm [pattern of notes])
Scales
Keys (Major = Happy, Self-confident / Minor = Sad, emotional)
Modulation: changes between different keys within a song
Visual Art – Visual media that have been organized to stimulate someone
Theatre – A combination of the elements of Actor, Audience, Space, and Story
Other Useful Terms
Line
Color
Gesture
Texture
Space
Composition
Tension
Balance
Embodiment