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    Even if a museum's primary business is displaying art, it... — Carmelics
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    Supports→The display of an object in a fine arts museum does not constitute strong or definitive evidence that the object is a work of art.

    Even if a museum's primary business is displaying art, it has other functions and justifiably extends its mission in various ways.

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    Fine arts museums display objects for reasons other than their status as art, su...Fine arts museums display working clothes and palettes of artists, which are not...The display of an object in a fine arts museum does not constitute strong or def...

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    Fine arts museums display objects for reasons other than their status ...79%Duchamp's Fountain may be displayed in a museum not because it is a wo...75%Fine arts museums display working clothes and palettes of artists, whi...72%Museums display such objects for reasons other than those objects bein...72%

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    Beardsley never explicitly responded to this objection, but he wouldn’t be fazed. The objection assumes that if an object is displayed in a museum—a fine arts museum, not a history museum or any other sort of museum—or if an art historian or art critic discusses an object, then it must be a work of art, or at least that there’s very strong reason to think that it’s a work of art. That it’s some reason to think so Beardsley wouldn’t deny; but that it’s necessarily a strong or definitive reason he

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