FUNDAMENTALS OF A PHILOSOPHY OF ART - ON
THE UNDERSTANDING OF ARTISTIC EXPERIENCE
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We are living in a time where it seems more and more not only
that the different creative activities of man are being driven
farther and farther apart but that the need and significance of
some of them for man are actually being questioned. Philosophy,
certainly, seems to have lost the position it held for so long,
and art and the artist, socially speaking, at least, have been
driven from the human community. Only science seems to have strengthened
its position. The strange thing about all this is that it started
at the very moment when it seemed at last that the different creative
abilities of man had a chance really to come into their own, that
they had a chance to free themselves of a certain bondage, so
to speak, that had been placed upon them by the central position
held by religion for so long. Certainly as far as art was concerned,
it seemed that at the very moment when it appeared to come into
its own, the very moment when it no longer existed because of
its function for the church, etc., the very moment when artists
felt free for that first time, that its position steadily worsened--which
brings us to the question: Is there any metaphysical validity
to art when it is not related to the over-all picture of the age?
Can art stand alone? Has art in itself metaphysical significance?
But first let me make clear what I mean by physical and metaphysical.
By physical I mean simply all things that come into being without
the help of man, all things that come into being by themselves--which
would mean that in that sense certain so-called mental phenomena
such as dreams, day-dreams, associations, etc., would also be
physical in that they are occurrences that are not brought consciously
into being by us. By metaphysical I mean anything that is brought
into being by us--that would not be there without us and that
can only be brought into being by us because we are free agents.
So, using metaphysical in this sense, we must now go back to
the question of whether art has any real metaphysical validity
(and if so, what?) because art has been placed in a most peculiar
position: a position on the one hand of being questioned as to
its usefulness at all for human existence and on the other hand
it has been put by a small minority (in a vain effort to assure
the metaphysical validity of art) into the position of being given
qualities that are not within the framework of art--of being put
into the position religion held for so long as a leader in the
metaphysical aspects of human activities. So art has been put
in the uncomfortable position of being denied on the one hand
any real validity at all and on the other hand of being made into
something that it is not at all, For art to be able to be the
leader of the human creative activities of man would it not mean
that art would have to contain truth that could be taken literally
and that could lead human activities and solve human inner situations?
Can art contain truth of that kind and in that sense? Can that
possibly be the role of art and the significance of art for man?
And on the other hand is it Possible that art has no significance
at all for man?
Here philosophy and art touch each other--sharing in common the
fact that both can be questioned as to their significance and
relevance for human life today. Both, it would seem, have been
put into a position in this scientific age where they no longer
have an established and acknowledged place in man’s life.
When philosophy betrayed art with Hegel and his concept that the
arts acquire metaphysical validity and significance by expressing
general content (as a religious belief, a general belief of the
people, etc.), it seems that philosophy too managed to betray
itself and got caught after Hegel in the same corner as art. So
both philosophy and art have to prove again their own metaphysical
relevance and absolute significance for life--which really means
that philosophy (because philosophy is the only creative human
activity of man that can tell the other creative human activities
what they are) has a double task: to prove by philosophy the metaphysical
significance of art in order to put art back into its right place
in human life and also to find its own right place in human life
by finding out what living relevance to life philosophy itself
has. So it becomes even more complicated and we will have to check
and double-check as to metaphysical values.
We have a strange phenomenon in art and one that is curiously
related to the situation of art in our time: art at the time of
the cave man. Hegel felt that art, like religion and philosophy,
was the highest achievement of human civilization and wanted to
prove that a state is an absolute necessity in order to bring
culture into society, in order to produce art. Yet, can this be
so now that we have discovered the cave paintings and see that
there was art at the time of the cave man--and real art--and can
this be so when we see the strange relationship between two extreme
poles in the development of man and his civilization: the relationship
between the age of the cave man and our modern age? There is an
essential similarity in these two extreme ages in human development--for
both are ages where almost every human effort has had to be put
into earning a living. Yet the cave man produced real art with
style, form, and transcendence, and in our age, where almost everything
in our cultural life loses more and more meaning from day to day,
the only ones who maintain their right to produce art and who
produce the only new civilization in our society are the artists.
Hegel believed that style, an over-all style at least, grows only
when a new way of life in a given society is already on the march
and has manifested itself. Where then does this new style of art
we have professing a certain common will come from? How is it
possible? And how does it relate to other dispersed attempts,
as in philosophy for instance, to find a position towards the
world, a new way of civilization? The situation seems to be unique--and
to require unique means.
Now to go back for a moment to our question of the metaphysical
validity of art and what its significance for man might be. Bound
up with this, of course, is the question of what art might actually
be--for we can hardly try to discover the significance of art
without trying to find out first what it might be and what it
might do. Art, according to Hegel, was “formed significance.”
The modern concept has tuned this around to: art is significant
form--with a third concept in the middle of the road: art is symbolic
form. Now what can Hegel’s term “formed significance”
possibly mean? However can significance itself be formed? Something
can be formed into significance, but certainly the term “formed
significance” is meaningless. What about the term “significant
form”? That too is meaningless--for when it is understood
it merely leaves one with banalities and no real meaning at all.
To find the key to the riddle, we will have to use a key that
is in itself a riddle. Heraclitus in speaking of Apollon and his
Oracle at Delphi--putting his words also in the form of an oracle--said:
“The lord whose Oracle is that at Delphi neither speaks
nor conceals, but shows.” Now the Greek oracles of Delphi
were metaphysical riddles whose deep meaning could only be experienced
in the flesh: that is, only after the event had taken place and
had made the wisdom of the oracle clear to everyone. Taken in
this light, what could these words of Heraclitus mean? The original
word translated in this saying of Heraclitus can have many shades
of meaning: to show, to signify, to indicate, to give a sign,
to confront with meaning--or in other words: Apollon puts you
before the experience. This contains the key to the riddle of
what art might be and what art might do and it will be our key
to try to come to the heart of the matter--and one to which we
shall return again and again in order to check and double-check
ourselves.
Now the most difficult thing in an inquiry of this kind is not
to find an answer to our questions, but to put the question itself--to
put a question that goes to the heart of the matter and that makes
possible a preliminary answer to enable us to once more put a
question. We have found in this spying of Heraclitus what we think
is the key to our riddle--a key which is bound to Apollon. Could
it not be that the figure of Apollon himself might not give us
further insight into the problem we are pursuing here? For instance:
could it be entirely by accident that the Greeks made the god
of art also the god of prophets and seers? Could it not be that
there is a relationship between the human capability of prophecy
and the human capability of making art?
Now keeping those words of Heraclitus in mind--“The lord
whose oracle is that at Delphi neither speaks nor conceals, but
shows.”--let’s see what light they might throw on
a phenomenon that unfortunately is very indicative of our time
and one that greatly complicates the position of the modern artist:
the phenomenon of kitsch. What is kitsch? For one thing, it appeals
to sentiment instead of to the mind and heart. In kitsch the human
being’s god-given ability to create forms of man, to create
out of mere things, things of us, is used in order to make things
that have nothing to do with art, to create so-called art objects
or things that have the opposite meaning to things intended by
art. Artists never before were up against this phenomenon in the
sense that they were in direct competition with the creators of
anti-art, with the creators of kitsch--which in the meantime had
been turned from non-art into anti-art. How did it come about?
How did it start? When was art first “used” and how
was it turned into anti-art?
Some critics believe that Michelangelo’s “Moses,”
which was supposed to be a compliment to Pope Julius II, and representational
art contain the beginnings of kitsch--but the beginnings of kitsch
cannot be found in so-called representational art or in the fact
that things, so to speak, are represented since every work of
art is representative at least in the sense that it represents
human artistic experience of the world. And certainly as far as
Michelangelo’s “Moses” is concerned, one must
ask whether Michelangelo made a statue in order to show Pope Julius
II himself as the power of the law-giver incarnate or whether
he created a statue to give one artistic experience: that of the
tremendous possibilities of law-giving contained by man. Technically
speaking, we might say that the lesser artists of the Renaissance
and later, who tried only to give sensual impressions of things
without a real experience of feeling, did perfect a skill that
later served kitsch very well; but while their work had only attraction
instead of feeling, a non-artistic event still was needed to utilize
this skill against art and to make out of it first non-artistic
kitsch and finally anti-artistic kitsch.
The non-artistic event that brought this about was the work of
the Jesuits who, in a time when religious experience was no longer
a metaphysical experience taken for granted, founded the first
psychological method--that of talking one’s self back into
belief. They discovered the possibility to change men by mobilizing
and by disciplining the imagination--and they found that one of
the best means to influence people shaky in belief was to show
them very realistic scenes from the life of Christ and from the
Bible. The real founders of kitsch were the “employees”
of the Jesuits who provided those scenes for them (--although
later, certain artists themselves came to utilize the power of
art for non-artistic means. Wagner, for example, attempted to
show that art could redeem mankind, that art was metaphysical,
and thereby started the destruction of art itself because of the
means necessary to prove his point--the necessity to appeal to
the nerves directly, so to speak, to overwhelm, to blot out all
controls, and to completely tyrannize in the way only music can.)
and we find with them already the great distinction between art
and kitsch--the distinction which lies in the way the artist utilizes
the means of art and the resulting effect upon the beholder.
When art is used by artists who are not representational but
fictional, by artists who replace reality with what could be reality,
by artists who suggest reality, it means that certain possibilities
of pure suggestion in art are being used--and being used for a
non-artistic purpose. It means that the artist does not create
in you, the beholder, an atmosphere of receptivity where meaningful
thinking and feeling starts, where you are free, enriched, and
taken into an experience of a great soul able to transmit experience
to you, but rather that you are mobilized in order to induce an
opinion in you. A real work of art not only leaves you free, enriched
and makes it possible for you in a way to become a creator, but
in addition nothing is asked of you; in kitsch, on the other hand,
you are asked--you are asked to believe something. A work
of art does not tell you a truth--it only puts you before an experience
which contains truth only in the sense of the words of Heraclitus
(“...neither reveals nor conceals, but shows [signifies]”).
Kitsch not only tries to tell you something--but it tells you
a lie. It commits the crime of violating the free spirit of the
individual, trying to introduce in you and to employ you for an
opinion. A work of art, on the other hand, by never pretending
to give you a picture of reality, gives you, the beholder, a safeguard
against just that.
So the words of Heraclitus gain deeper meaning from our Own experiences
with kitsch and from the words of Heraclitus we gain a deeper
insight into what art--and thus anti-art too--might be. It is
a strange back-and-forth procedure of enriching, a strange back-and
forth movement in the continuity of the human mind.
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