Lonergan and Sontag on Art A Study of Aesthetic Conversion.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Michael Lacewing The value of art Michael Lacewing © Michael Lacewing.
Advertisements

Art Fundamentals Theory and Practice
THEORIES ON ART &BEAUTY
Bell's Theory of Art Bell’s requirements for constructing a Theory of Art The ability to think clearly. The possession of an artistic sensibility. (the.
Part 1. Why study the history of ART? To learn about creative expressions, past and present creative expressions, past and present.
The Flat Shape “Everything around us is shaped”. The flat shapes are visual elements that are used to create images. The simple flat shapes are triangle,
Water Based Oil Paints. What is Non-objective Art?  Visual art that does not represent a subject  Not a picture of something  Colors and forms compose.
Idealism.
Art History Using Art History Art Criticism Aesthetics
1. Develops ideas, plans, and produces original paintings from these content areas: observation experiences, imagination, and emotions.
Plato BC The Republic Updated, 10/3/07.
Kant, Transcendental Aesthetic
Plato and the Forms According to Plato, common sense is wrong. We do not sense the world as it really is. The senses present the world in a confused way.
" Aestheticism is a search after the signs of the beautiful. It is the science of the beautiful through which men seek the correlation of the arts.
Results from Meditation 2
Good Morning… Ms. Krall Room 347. First Things First… Are you in the right class? Are you in the right class? Welcome to Philosophy and Ethics! Welcome.
4 Theories of Art.
© Michael Lacewing Representation Michael Lacewing
Introduction to Art Part One: What is Art? Part Two: Art Criticism and Aesthetic Judgment Part Three: Aesthetic Theories.
What is Art? Fountain - Art can be anything – Marcel Duchamp Mother & Child – Cows in Formaldehyde, Damien Hirst An Impression of Sunset – Claude Monet.
Welcome to Philosophy and Ethics! Ms. Krall Room 347.
WE THINK WE KNOW IT ALL, BECAUSE WE’VE SEEN SO MUCH. Design and visual literacy.
Looking at the Roots of Philosophy
Disciplines of the Humanities Arts Disciplines Visual art- drawing, painting, printmaking, sculpture, photography Performing art- music, theatre, dance,
What is Art? Tell me. What is Art? Form of expression with aesthetic –Aesthetic – Values that allow the viewer to judge art as satisfying. –Beauty is.
Vocabulary for Chapter 1
Shakespearean Sonnets Group Work. Sub-divide your group so that everyone has a job… Requirements: (Must be completed today) The actors or singers in your.
Art Criticism and Critique Unit 2. Aesthetic experience -personal interaction with a work of art.
Vocabulary for Chapter 2
Representational Abstract Non-objective by: Colleen O’Donnell
Theories of Perception: Empirical Theory of Perception Berkeley’s Theory of Reality Direct Realism Moderate Thomistic Realism.
Metaphysics.
As you enter today… In your sketchbook, answer the following: How do you know a drawing / artwork is successful? What is Art? What are the Elements of.
Art Criticism and Aesthetic Judgment Have you ever been so involved in watching a movie that you react emotionally or feel a part of the action?
Mr. Green ANALYZING ART.  Responding to, interpreting meaning, and making critical judgments about specific works of art  Art critics help viewers perceive,
UNIT 1 ENGLISH DISCOURSE ANALYSIS (an Introduction)
Journal Writing. “I hope that I shall be able to confide in you completely, as I have never been able to do in anyone before, and I hope that you will.
INTRODUCTION: REVIEW. What is Art?  Form of expression with aesthetic  Organize perception  A work of art is the visual expression of an idea or experience.
Abstract Art.  Abstract art uses form, color and line to create a composition that does not represent anything realistic in the world.
The Turn to the Science The problem with substance dualism is that, given what we know about how the world works, it is hard to take it seriously as a.
Humanities Bellwork: 9/23/ What do artists use to express “reality”? 2.What role does graphic design play in consumers' choices? 3.What are formal.
Purposes of Art Theory of Knowledge.
Descates Meditations II A starting point for reconstructing the world.
Idealism PowerPoint. What is Idealism??? Some philosophers hold that if we push our investigation of matter far enough, we end up with only a mental world.
My experimental work. My research on square shape took me to the artist Malevich who worked on abstract art focused on basic geometric forms, painted.
Elements of Art Seven Elements of Art: Knowing the basics of the elements of art can help any artist to create a well- balanced and beautiful work of.
Review Writing Opinión Writing.
Introduction to Art.
 Developed by the German school called Gestalt Psychology The relation between the figure and the background Termination or closure principle Other perceptive.
Writing an Essay. Reading a Primary Source: Step 1 Who wrote this document? In the first place, you need to know how this document came to be created.
BC The Republic is one of Plato’s longer works (more than 450 pages in length). It is written in dialogue form (as are most of Plato’s books),
Principles and Elements Putting Knowledge to Practice.
What is ?.
The Philosophy of Art What the philosophers had to say.
Critical Thinking Topic: “Your Topic” College Prep
Arttalk Review for Chapter 2
Developing a Way to Talk About Art. We are surrounded by images, but how do we read visual information? It is impossible to recognize, understand, or.
ART I. A B A B A B AB B A AB Everyone’s definition and perception of what is beautiful or pleasing to the eye is different… What one person believes.
ART I. A B A B A B AB B A AB Everyone’s definition and perception of what is beautiful or pleasing to the eye is different… What one person believes.
Art is among the highest expressions of culture, embodying its ideals and aspirations, challenging its assumptions and beliefs, and creating new possibilities.
High School English Reading and Writing Reading 구문 해설 Lesson 6 A New Perspective 교과서 pp. 128~132 1.
UNDERSTANDING ART THIS PROGRAM IS DESIGNED TO HELP YOU UNDERSTAND SOME OF THE TYPES OF ART THAT WILL BE COVERED THIS YEAR. IT IS TO BE USED WHEN STUDYING.
 Art can be beautiful  Art can be frightening  Art can be provocative, inflammatory, or offensive  Art can be soothing and joyful. Art can change.
ART EXPRESSION INFORMS FORM
The Nature of Art and Creativity
Developing a Quality Critique
Survey of Knowledge Base Content
Do we directly perceive objects? (25 marks)
Abstract and nonrepresentational art
Presentation transcript:

Lonergan and Sontag on Art A Study of Aesthetic Conversion

A Schema You Know Naïve realism Idealism Critical Realism (“to the left of idealism”)

A Confusing Passage “the validation of the artistic idea is the artistic deed” (Insight 208).

Conversion as an Answer? 1.Analogues for the Counter-Positions a.Naïve realism as the ossified mimetic theory b.Idealism as the slide into Camp 2.Possible Unpackings of Meaning 3.An Example of Conversion?

COUNTERPOSITIONS

AOTNR Art 1/2 The earliest theory of art, that of the Greek philosophers, proposed that art was mimesis, imitation of reality…Aristotle’s arguments in defense of art do not really challenge Plato’s view that all art is an elaborate trompe l’oeil, and therefore a lie, but…lie or no, art has a certain value according to Aristotle because it is a form of therapy (Sontag).

AOTNR Art 2/2 When you go out to paint, try to forget what objects you have before you—a tree, a house, a field, or whatever. Merely think, here is a little square of blue, here an oblong of pink, here a streak of yellow, and paint it just as it looks to you, the exact color and shape, until it gives your own naïve impression of the scene before you (Monet).

Idealism 0 In order to approach the spiritual in art, one employs reality as little as possible…This explains logically why primary forms are employed. Since these forms are abstract, an abstract art comes into being (Mondrian).

Flight from Realism 1/2 Even in modern times, when most artists and critics have discarded the theory of art as representation of an outer reality in favor of the theory of art as subjective expression, the main feature of the mimetic theory persists. Whether we conceive of the work of art on the model of a picture (art as a picture of reality) or on the model of a statement (art as the statement of the artist), content still comes first (Sontag).

Flight from Realism 2/2 Duchamp’s FountainModern Theatre

Sontag on Camp 1/2 Defined sees everything in quotation marks…To perceive Camp in objects and persons is to understand Being- as-Playing-a-Role. It is the farthest extension, in sensibility, of the metaphor of life as theater Camp is a vision of the world in terms of style—but a particular kind of style. It is the love of the exaggerated, the ‘off,’ of things- being-what-they-are-not The essence of Camp is its love of the unnatural: of artifice and exaggeration. And Camp is esoteric—something of a private code Examplars Stag movies seen without lust the haunting androgynous vacancy behind the perfect beauty of Greta Garbo

Sontag on Camp 2/2 Greta Garbo in lieu of StagThe Pit of the Stomach strongly drawn to Camp, and almost as strongly offended by it One is drawn to Camp when one realizes that ‘sincerity’ is not enough. Sincerity can be a simple philistinism, intellectual narrowness To emphasize style is to slight content

THE AESTHETIC PATTERN

Art as Insight 1/3 If you see a color, you do not see non-being, but a being; but the being that you see, you see not under the formality of being, but under the formality of color; for being…is not found by taking a look with one’s eyes but by making a rational judgment…Again, vision of a color is true, since between color and vision there is that correspondence in which truth essentially consists. But this correspondence is not discerned by the eyes, since formally truth is found only in the intellect’s act of judging (Lonergan).

Art as Insight 2/3 The fact that for a long time Cubism has not been understood and that even today there are people who cannot see anything in it, means nothing. I do not read English, an English book is a blank book to me. This does not mean that the English language does not exist (Picasso) To see is itself a creative operation, requiring an effort (Matisse)

Art as Insight 3/3 Stripe PaintingSontag “art is the discovery of what is necessary—of that and nothing more” “What is needed is more attention to form in art…One of the difficulties is that our idea of form is spatial”

Deed as Validation 1/3 “the validation of the artistic idea is the artistic deed” (Insight 208) art “seeks to mean, to convey, to impart…through a participation, and in some fashion a reenactment of the artist’s inspiration and intention” (Insight 208)

Deed as Validation 2/3 Painting isn’t just the visual thing that reaches your retina—it’s what is behind it and in it…I paint this way because I can keep putting more things in it—drama, anger, pain, love,…my ideas about space. Through your eyes it again becomes an emotion or an idea. It doesn’t matter if it is different from mine as long as it comes from the painting which has its own integrity and intensity (de Kooning).

Deed as Validation 3/3 A postmodern artist or writer is in the position of a philosopher: the text he writes, the work he produces are not in principle governed by preestablished rules, and they cannot be judged according to a determining judgment, by applying categories to the text or to the work. Those rules and categories are what the work of art itself is looking for. The artist and the writer, then, are working without rules in order to formulate the rules of what will have been done (Lyotard).

POSTMODERNISM: A NEW HOPE

Theory 1/3 Avante-Garde on the RunSteadfast in Hope

Theory 2/3

Theory 3/3 Situated in an imaginative world Continually aware of itself as performance Unavailability for re-presentation

Practice: Gatz The PlayThe Times “Gatz” is the least literally interactive…it does not seek to destroy physically the wall between audience and actors, as “Sleep” and “Donkey” do. Yet for me “Gatz” was the most transporting, traveling to an ineffable place that theater is not expected to inhabit: the corridor between written words and a reader’s perception of them.