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Art & Creativity Quote by Aristotle

"The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance"

About this Quote

Art, for Aristotle, isn’t a mirror; it’s an X-ray. The line kicks against the naive demand that a painting, a poem, or a play should simply reproduce what the eye already sees. If art only duplicated surfaces, it would be redundant. Its real job is to translate the messy flux of life into something legible: character, motive, cause-and-effect, the shape of a human dilemma.

That intent sits squarely inside Aristotle’s larger project in the Poetics, where mimesis (imitation) isn’t copy-paste realism but a patterned re-creation of action. “Inward significance” is the why beneath the what: the ethical pressure inside a choice, the fear that powers a tragedy, the desire that turns a person into their own antagonist. A stage murder matters less as spectacle than as revelation of a soul under strain. The famous Aristotelian preference for the “probable impossibility” over the “improbable possibility” is lurking here too: art can bend facts if it lands closer to the truth of experience.

Subtext: Aristotle is drawing a boundary between craftsmanship and mere trickery. Decorative verisimilitude can impress, but it doesn’t necessarily educate, clarify, or move. He’s also defending art against Plato’s suspicion that it’s just illusion twice removed from reality. Aristotle counters: good art doesn’t drag us away from truth; it distills it.

In a culture saturated with high-resolution images and low-resolution meaning, the quote still stings. It demands that representation earn its keep by revealing what’s actually at stake.

Quote Details

TopicArt
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Aristotle. (2026, January 14). The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-aim-of-art-is-to-represent-not-the-outward-33018/

Chicago Style
Aristotle. "The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance." FixQuotes. January 14, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-aim-of-art-is-to-represent-not-the-outward-33018/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance." FixQuotes, 14 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-aim-of-art-is-to-represent-not-the-outward-33018/. Accessed 9 Feb. 2026.

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Aristotle

Aristotle (384 BC - 322 BC) was a Philosopher from Greece.

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