why humans make art to survive loneliness
Art exists because something inside humans refuses to stay silent. Nowadays, people are lonely not because they don’t have others around them, but because they lack a sense of identity within themselves. The fear of not finding who you truly are is far more terrifying than dying. That’s why humans create art. Art doesn’t mean making something that doesn’t exist; it’s always about experience and the expression of emotions.
Things like poetry don’t help humans sustain life, but they help us live. They give us the ability to reflect our emotions on paper. Art is a part of our lives—it hurts us, and it heals us. You can find art in everything around you.
Think about an animated movie you once watched. Ask yourself why that moving drawing affected you so deeply, why it stayed with you. It wasn’t just because of a great story or high-quality dialogue, but because it taught us emotions through non-living characters. That’s why art is wonderful.
The human race has been creating art since the beginning of civilization—temples, architecture, paintings, poetry, stories, songs—all of it exists to express human emotion. And that’s the same reason you should create art: not for fame or money, but for experience, to touch the peak of life and make it truly worth living.
Art can take any form. You can write your emotions, draw them, sing them, or capture them. And honestly, if you want, you can change things through your art. Maybe you won’t change the world—but you can change the way you see it.
Why is art important to humans?
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