Definition of Popular Art
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Javier Navarro, in Nov. 2015
The concept of popular art is very broad and includes disparate creative activities: literature, music, painting, movie theater, crafts, performing arts, graphic arts and a long list of modalities, genres and subgenres.
General features of popular art
The main characteristic of any popular art is its orientation towards the general public. It could be said that the town is the protagonist of popular art. It must be borne in mind that art has traditionally been linked to social elites and, therefore, with minority sectors and, consequently, it is logical that the people were creating their own forms of expression artistic.
The concept of popular linked to art implies that an artistic manifestation aims to connect with the majority of people. In this way, this art modality is eminently participatory, open and street.
The style of folk art is usually straightforward and affordable. Thus, everything that is sophisticated and enigmatic is far from the spirit of the popular. This does not mean that folk art has a
category inferior but has another language and a different approach. Let's take an illustrative example: classical dance is elitist (it is performed in theaters with a certain luxury and the tickets are usually expensive) but the popular dance or folklore can be danced in a square and in a relaxed atmosphere far away from the formalities. Thus, dancing can be elitist or popular and this difference could be applied to any artistic expression.Some examples
The minstrels of the Middle Ages they recited poems in the streets of the towns and their activity was not normally carried out in luxurious palaces.
If we think of cinema, we find films aimed at the general public, in which the spectator's entertainment is intended.
In the markets there are usually artisans who make objects aimed at the general public.
On the streets of large cities, it is common to find graffiti, which usually presents messages related to the culture of the people.
Poetry is a gender literary that also offers two faces: poems full of symbols and figures clearly popular rhetorics and poems (many traditional songs are inspired by these poems).
Despite the differences between what is popular and what is not, sometimes the border between the two manifestations is blurred. An example would be the serialized novels of the 19th century (they emerged to be read by the general public but with the passage of time have acquired another meaning, as evidenced by the serialized novels of Charles Dickens or Victor Hugo).
Photo: iStock - Jodi Jacobson
Topics in Popular Art