Why Everyday Objects Can Be Beautiful: The African Aesthetic Where Use and Art Are One
Many people think of art and everyday objects as separate things. A painting hangs on a wall. A sculpture stands in a museum. Meanwhile, a bowl, basket, or stool serves a practical purpose. Western design history often reinforces this divide. Art belongs in galleries, while useful objects belong in kitchens or workshops. Yet many African craft traditions do not follow this separation. In these traditions, the everyday object can also be art . This difference reflects two different ways of thinking about beauty. Western aesthetic theory often separates function from artistic value. Philosopher Immanuel Kant , writing in the eighteenth century, argued that people judge beauty through “disinterested pleasure.” In other words, a viewer appreciates beauty without thinking about usefulness. A beautiful object stands apart from practical needs. Museums later reinforced this idea. European museums displayed paintings and sculptures as pure aesthetic objects. Visitors came to observe...