English edit

Etymology edit

un- +‎ artistic

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Adjective edit

unartistic (comparative more unartistic, superlative most unartistic)

  1. Not artistic.
    • 1942, Mildred Graves Ryan, Your Clothes and Personality[1], D. Appleton, pages 107–8:
      If you have never had it, and you are devoid of an interest in what is truly beautiful, then you will belong to the unartistic group of people.
    • 1990, Patricia Leighten, “The White Pearl and L’Art nègre : Politics, Primitivism, and Anticolonialism”, in The Art Bulletin, volume 74, number 4, →DOI, page 623+:
      If such works—altered by ritual use, incorporating the most “unartistic” materials from the traditional Western viewpoint, and as far from illusionistic in style as Picasso could ever have seen—can appear “reasonable” to a Western artist, that artist has performed an almost magical act of projection and inversion of the ordinary meaning of the work as “rational.”
    • 1993 October 24, Jennifer Dunning, quoting Paul Taylor, “Paul Taylor Hates Ballet. (Want to Bet?)”, in The New York Times[2], Arts & Leisure, page 1:
      They've gotten their foot up that high, and they want to show it off. Well, that's an unartistic idea about dancing. It's a plebeian, low-class idea.

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