Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 136
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-5381-6732-8 • Hardback • October 2023 • $90.00 • (£69.00)
978-1-5381-6733-5 • eBook • October 2023 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Ryan Wittingslow is associate professor of philosophy at the University of Groningen, a Humboldt research fellow at TU Darmstadt, and a research affiliate in Media Studies at the University of Sydney. Most of his research sits at the meeting ground between aesthetics, philosophy of design, philosophy of technology, and political philosophy.
Introduction
Chapter 1. Conditions
Chapter 2. Functions
Chapter 3. Affordances
Chapter 4. Artworlds
Chapter 5. Artworks
References
About the Author
The work is a bold and original contribution to Anglophone philosophy of art. Integrating seldom considered reflections on knowledge, artifacts, and technology, Wittingslow sets aside old arguments about representation and meaning to ask instead, what does the work of art enable us to do that we could not do as well without it?
— Barry Allen, Distinguished University Professor, McMaster University
Wittingslow’s engaging and beautifully written book presents art as a tool adept for meaning-making more broadly than what is commonly thought. The ambitious aim is enhanced by an in-depth understanding of contemporary and topical perspectives in fields as rich and diverse as philosophy of art and philosophy of technology. Anyone interested in broadening their understanding of how art works and why it is indispensable to us in the first place will find this book a valuable resource.
— Sanna Lehtinen, research fellow, Aalto School of Arts, Design and Architecture
In What Art Does, Ryan Wittingslow approaches the big question of the meaning of art from a surprising and interesting angle by concentrating on what artworks afford us to do. The author leads us on a philosophical journey away from the beaten tracks without ever losing sight of his destination.
— Ralf Cox, senior researcher in art psychology, University of Groningen
It was about time that someone wrote this book, and we can count ourselves lucky that Ryan Wittingslow took on the task. Wittingslow builds on a thorough knowledge of the philosophy of technology to carefully develop a theory of tools. He combines this theory with a nuanced institutional view on the artistic, providing an elegantly written argument in favor of approaching artworks as tools for meaning-making. What Art Does: Using Philosophy of Technology to Talk about Art takes an important step toward a sophisticated and up-to-date understanding of art.
— Barend van Heusden, professor of culture and cognition, University of Groningen