I don't mean to suggest that art has no value since we can just do it on our own anyway. What I do mean is that our experiences can have aesthetic qualities if we are in the right mindset. What is unique about art galleries is that they force you to look at certain objects in this aesthetic mode. Art invites and indeed demands that we view the artwork with a critical eye and opens the floor for a never-ending discussion regarding the work's meaning.
Many of us go through the motions of everyday life and seek that which gives us pleasure or increases the potential of achieving some future pleasure and sometimes forget just how amazing our experience really is. This might seem to be a cliche observation but it seems very true to me. In fact, I actually tried looking at the dusty steps of Wheeler hall as I was walking up them and glean some scintilla of aesthetic quality in them as my feet slowly raised me closer and closer to the second floor. Surely there couldn't be anything aesthetic in them. But then I started realizing that the experience of them was quite amazing because experience itself is amazing. It is amazing that the stairs show up for me, that I can navigate them so easily, even the fact that I could have gone my entire life without thinking twice about these steps. Of course, the stairs in Wheeler hall is most definitely not art. Why? Because they didn't force me to think about them, I went looking for any trace of aesthetic quality that they could show me. Also, I did not find them beautiful, in fact, I think that even I could design a more aesthetically pleasing flight of stairs. I think Professor Noe puts it quite well when he says that "art is something we do." I am starting to feel that art was never in the objects that we see in the galleries but is in the effect it produces in us.
Maybe I'll try expanding this post in the future but for now I should really get to writing my legal studies paper.