So, in the majority of interested posters:
1) Art has intent.
2) Art comes from the human creative soul, imagination, or simple creative impulses. There is disagreement between those who advocate a spiritual human being and those who advocate a simple genetic computer: an animal human. However, art is human.
3) There is good art and bad art, but the quality itself doesn't determine whether something is "Art".
I agree to one degree or another with all of these. However, I would like to posit that art is and must always exist subjectively. Art to one will not always be art to another. Obvious as this seems, I would like to emphasize that this includes things widely considered to be art. I'll throw out the Mona Lisa as an example: Yes, it's extremely famous, but to me it's just a picture of a woman rendered in paint. I can appreciate its value, and its significance as art to others, but I wouldn't want to hang it up in my house. I don't really like that kind of thing, and so I can understand that it
is art, and due to is fame and extremely widespread critical approval that it is a good example of what the general populace considers high-quality art... but it's not appreciable by
me.
I also feel that a piece of art's meaning is equally subjective. If a person finds value in something even if the creator did not intend for there to be value in it, or to give off that specific vibe, that does not devalue the observer's feelings. Therefore there cannot be one single meaning to any work of art. Even a cave painting showing stick people killing another stick person, personal meaning is varied. One person could find the intended meaning, which would be the caveman artist saying to the world "Dude, we killed this guy." Another person might find the medium or the historical value the most meaningful part of it. Another person might not give a crap and attribute no meaning to it. The author's intent is only valuable if the individual observer decides it is.
I suppose all this is saying that to me, the value of any piece of art cannot be transferred from person to person, nor can its meaning, or even whether or not it
should be considered art. To me, art is a personal experience, a one-on-one relationship between the art and the observer.