Here's something that confuses most people: a conceptual artist might spend six months on a piece and never touch a paintbrush, chisel, or camera. The "work" happens entirely in their head.
That chair you're sitting on? A conceptual artist once put one in a gallery next to a photo of a chair and a dictionary page defining "chair." Nothing was painted. Nothing was sculpted. Joseph Kosuth's "One and Three Chairs" from 1965 just asked: which of these three things is actually the chair? The physical object, its image, or the definition?
That's conceptual art. The mental puzzle matters more than making beautiful things. While a traditional painter obsesses over getting the light just right, a conceptual artist obsesses over whether the entire idea of "getting the light right" still means anything.
This challenged everything. Art dealers prefer selling objects—how do you sell a thought? Museums want things to display behind glass—where do you put an idea? The entire system got uncomfortable, which was precisely the point.
Think of conceptual art this way: the artwork lives in your brain, not on the wall.
Traditional definitions talk about "prioritizing concept over execution," but that's textbook language. Really, it means the artist considers their job done once they've worked out the idea. Everything after that—painting it, photographing it, performing it—is just showing their homework.
Lucy Lippard and John Chandler noticed this in 1968. ...