Abstract
In this chapter, the author begins with Arthur Danto's reflections upon art and evolution in his 1985 David and Marianne Mandel Lecture in Aesthetics presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Aesthetics. “Primitive” artifacts influenced modernist artists because the “conceptual complexity and aesthetic subtlety” of such artifacts revealed to them artistic possibilities that transcended the “prevailing aesthetic canons” of late nineteenth‐century European art. Danto's argument has drawn widespread criticism, many of his critics, including Vogel herself, questioning the role played in that argument by the anthropological thought experiment. Danto might be more sympathetic to Gell, who prefaces his own proposal by rebuking anthropologists of art for remaining in the thralls of a “reactionary” aesthetic conception of art.