Art & Society

© Mary Rayme

How To Look At Art

  1. mimi804


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1.   Dec 1, 2006 12:17 PM

» mimi804 - another opinion


Mary,
Your article is really about the definition of art. I, an art lover but by no means an art neophyte, define art by the standard of Leo, Count Tolstoy: "Art is a human activity having for its purpose the transmission to others of the highest and best feelings to which men have risen". By this meaning Cage's 4'33" of musical silence and Pollack's drip paintings are not art simply because they do not inspire and require little effort or talent to execute. Art should be more than just what ordinary people could do every day. It should convey thought, effort, talent, discipline and skill that rises above the ordinary. People realize this instinctively, as your mother did, when they look at modern or non-representational art. Whether art expert, art appreciator, or art neophyte, we are all capable of deciding for ourselves what pleases us in art.
A composer begins with silence and produces a symphony of sounds that delights and uplifts us. Ambient silence or sounds surround us and can be appreciated at whim. To purchase a ticket and transport oneself to a venue to hear the sounds of silence is to me an inanity to be avoided. I plan to soon attend a performance of Handel's Messiah where I expect to be delighted by a thrilling spectacle that typifies the accomplishment of western art. Why would anyone prefer ambient silence to such a tour de force?
Shape and color can be interesting and pleasing to look at and Pollock's "Autumn Rhythm", an energenic work, would no doubt enhance someone's living room. Compare this work with the intricate lace, soft velvet, crisp taffeta and delicate features rendered in works by Titian or Crivelli. In my opinion, these works of art inspire awe in the onlooker for the talent, training, and effort by the artist which rises above the ordinary. That Pollock's drip paintings sometimes have cigarettes embedded in them degrades them, in my humble opinion, to non-art.
Realize that when some people regard modern art with disdain it because they have well-formed and well-considered opinions. We do not like it, not all of us are art neophytes, and in our judgment, it is not art. Why is this? Because it doesn't offer us the pleasure of "the highest and best feelings to which men have risen". This is, in my humble opinion, the hallmark of art.
Mimi, an art lover

-- posted by mimi804


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