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Art: A Beginner's Guide
Art: A Beginner's Guide
Art: A Beginner's Guide
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Art: A Beginner's Guide

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A beautifully crafted overview of Western artistic tradition OR An exhilarating tour through Western artistic tradition

Art has existed for as long as humankind, but defining it is famously difficult. In this whirlwind tour spanning from prehistory up to the present day and beyond, Laurie Schneider Adams explores how art, and our views on it, have evolved. Delving into fascinating issues such as why some artworks can be so controversial, why a forgery can never be as "good" as the original, and what the future of art may hold, this beautifully crafted introduction provides a definitive overview of Western artistic tradition. Also providing a helpful guide to understanding art terminology and to reading artworks for meaning, Art: A Beginner's Guide is an essential tool for every budding art critic.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 1, 2012
ISBN9781780740225
Art: A Beginner's Guide
Author

Laurie Schneider Adams

Laurie Schneider Adams is Professor of Art History at John Jay College, City University of New York. She is the author of A History of Western Art and Looking at Art, and is Editor-in-Chief of the journal Source: Notes in the History of Art.

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    Art - Laurie Schneider Adams

    Art

    A Beginner’s Guide

    ONEWORLD BEGINNER’S GUIDES combine an original, inventive, and engaging approach with expert analysis on subjects ranging from art and history to religion and politics, and everything in between. Innovative and affordable, books in the series are perfect for anyone curious about the way the world works and the big ideas of our time.

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    hinduism

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    literary theory

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    paul

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    postmodernism

    psychology

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    renaissance art

    shakespeare

    the small arms trade

    sufism

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    A Oneworld Paperback Original

    Published by Oneworld Publications 2012

    This ebook edition published 2012

    Copyright © Laurie Schneider Adams 2011

    The moral right of Laurie Schneider Adams to be identified as the Author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

    All rights reserved

    Copyright under Berne Convention

    A CIP record for this title is available from the British Library

    ISBN 978-1-85168-853-1

    Ebook ISBN 978-1-78074-022-5

    Typeset by Glyph International Ltd., Bangalore, India

    Cover design by vaguelymemorable.com

    Oneworld Publications

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    Oxford OX2 7AR

    England

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    Contents

    Acknowledgements

    List of illustrations

    Introduction

    1 What is art?

    2 A brief history of Western art: ideas and themes

    3 Origins of art

    4 Form and meaning

    5 Purposes of art

    6 The power of images: why art creates controversy

    Conclusion: the future of art

    Glossary

    Notes

    Bibliography

    Further reading

    Index

    Acknowledgements

    At Oneworld Publications, I would like to thank Mike Harpley for proposing that I write a beginner’s guide to art, Paul Boone for his skill in obtaining the illustrations, Rachel Beaumont for her careful editing and helpful suggestions, Kirsten Summers, and Kathleen McCully. Prof. Mary Bittner Wiseman has been particularly helpful in matters of philosophy and Prof. Larissa Bonfante came up with a few excellent ideas and was always available to answer questions on antiquity. I am grateful to John Adams and Caroline Adams for reading the entire manuscript and providing many useful editorial comments.

    List of illustrations

    Plates

    Plate 1 Jackson Pollock, Convergence, 1952

    Plate 2 Andy Warhol, Brillo Soap Pads Boxes, 1964

    Plate 3 James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Nocturne in Black and Gold: The Falling Rocket, 1875

    Plate 4 View of the east façade and a south wall of the Parthenon, 447–438 BC

    Plate 5 Court of Justinian, apse mosaic, Church of San Vitale, c.547

    Plate 6 Rose window, north transept, Chartres Cathedral, thirteenth century

    Plate 7 Sandro Botticelli, Birth of Venus, c.1480

    Plate 8 Pieter Bruegel the Elder, The Harvesters, 1565

    Plate 9 Eugène Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People, 1830

    Plate 10 Édouard Manet, Olympia, 1865

    Plate 11 Claude Monet, Impression: Sunrise, 1872

    Plate 12 Vincent van Gogh, Starry Night, 1889

    Plate 13 Paul Cézanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire, c.1900

    Plate 14 Pablo Picasso, The Women of Avignon, 1907

    Plate 15 Nam June Paik, Piano Piece, 1993

    Figures

    Figure 1 René Magritte, The Betrayal of Images, 1928

    Figure 2 Constantin Brancusi, Mlle. Pogany Version I, 1912

    Figure 3 Duane Hanson, Policeman, 1993

    Figure 4 Leonardo da Vinci, La Belle Ferronière, 1490–6

    Figure 5 Constantin Brancusi, Bird in Space, 1924

    Figure 6 Venus of Willendorf, c.25,000 BC

    Figure 7 Stonehenge, c.3000 to 1500 BC

    Figure 8 Gudea with a Vase, c.2029 BC

    Figure 9 Lamassu from the Palace of Assurnasirpal II, 883–859 BC

    Figure 10 View of Khafre’s pyramid with the Great Sphinx in the foreground, 2520–2494 BC

    Figure 11 Egyptian temple interior showing columns and statues of standing pharaohs

    Figure 12 Bull-Leaping (Toreador) Fresco, c.1500 BC

    Figure 13 Lion Gate, c.1250 BC

    Figure 14 Myron, Discus Thrower, c.460 BC

    Figure 15 Labeled diagram of the Doric Order, with the pediment indicated

    Figure 16 Augustus of Prima Porta, early first century AD

    Figure 17 View of the remains of Constantine’s marble statue, AD 313

    Figure 18 Façade of Amiens Cathedral, c.1220–40

    Figure 19 Beau Dieu, trumeau sculpture from the west façade of Amiens Cathedral, c.1225–30

    Figure 20 Michelangelo, David, 1501–4

    Figure 21 Gian Lorenzo Bernini, St Longinus, 1635–8

    Figure 22 Rembrandt, Self-Portrait with Hat and Hand on Hip, 1631–3

    Figure 23 Jacques-Louis David, Oath of the Horatii, c.1785

    Figure 24 Leonardo da Vinci, Cartoon for the Madonna and Christ with St Anne, 1499–1500

    Figure 25 Leonardo da Vinci, Madonna and Child with Saint Anne, c.1503–6

    Figure 26 Andy Goldsworthy, Striding Arch, 2008

    Figure 27 Leonardo da Vinci, Anatomical Studies of the Shoulder, 1510–11

    Figure 28 Praxiteles, Aphrodite of Knidos, c.350 BC

    Figure 29 Honoré Daumier, Past-Present-Future, 9 January 1934

    Figure 30 Richard Serra, Tilted Arc, 1981–9

    Introduction

    Art is one of the most important and useful expressions of human civilization. Works of art reflect the creativity, skill, and talent of individuals and of entire cultures; art provides sources of beauty, of intellectual challenge, of change and development, and of formal, analytic perception. Like the ability to read and write, the arts distinguish the human race from the other species that populate the earth, and the categories of art, as well as the ideas that inspire them, are numerous. This book deals with the major visual arts – pictures, sculptures, and buildings – and more recent art forms such as installation. It also incorporates the ideas of artists, occasionally reinforcing them with direct quotations from artists themselves. Artistic themes, some that are universal and found throughout the world, and others that may be specific to a particular culture or to a particular time in history, are threaded throughout the text.

    Works of art are reflections of the artists who produce works and thus can provide a window onto the character of an individual artist as well as onto the creative process. As a lens through which to view a culture, works of art are invaluable. What, for example, do the cave paintings tell us about prehistoric people? What does a colossal pyramid tell us about ancient Egypt? What do the human scale and idealized forms of most Classical Greek sculptures tell us about fifth-century BC Greece? How did Classical Greece become a foundation of Western civilization? Why does the Classical tradition persist to the present day? Why do some cultures produce portraits, landscapes, and still lifes, whereas others do not? How do works of art reinforce the power of rulers? What do they tell us about the religious beliefs and practices of certain cultures? These and other questions can be raised and often answered by studying art and its history.

    In a beginner’s guide, it is possible to cover only a few of the ways in which viewers can approach the vast subject of art, and what they can teach us about ourselves, our history, and our culture. The creation of art, like new scientific inventions, requires analytic independent thinking and foresight, and so it is often the case that artists sense certain truths before they become clear to most people. For example, the imagery of many German artists working between 1900 and 1939 indicates that they understood the inevitability of World War I and World War II before the general public realized what would happen.

    Since the greatest works of art often reflect the fact that an artist may be more attuned to his or her cultural ambience (the zeitgeist) than the viewing public, they have frequently aroused controversy. In so doing, reactions to works of art are sometimes heated, ranging from perplexity and outright rage to acts of vandalism. The proverbial ‘my six-year-old could paint that’ reflects a misunderstanding of what is new and unfamiliar, especially as regards abstraction; but objections to imagery can also be aroused for political, religious, and even delusional reasons. Since imagery can exert a powerful force on viewers, whether it evokes appreciation, misunderstanding, or rage, it is important to know how to read an image as well as how to evaluate one’s response to it.

    The visual arts constitute a kind of language, a means of communicating within generations as well as between the past and the present. Understanding that language requires several levels of approach to a work of art. One can approach an image, a building, or an installation formally – that is, in terms of its formal elements: line, shape, space, color, light, and dark – and consider its aesthetic impact on the viewer. Formal elements constitute style, which consists of similarities that make up a distinct group of works. The narrative meaning contained in a work can be discerned from its context and history, as well as by grasping the message contained within it. Being able to ‘read’ and interpret the imagery of a work can reveal its meaning on more than one level; it can provide us with the underlying symbolic message that the artist is trying to convey. Reinforcing the various levels of meaning in a work is the process by which a work is made and what it is made of; sometimes the very material of a work contributes to its meaning. For example, in the ancient world stone denoted power and stability because it was likely to last longer than lighter-weight materials, and as a result, stone was often the preferred material for representing royal figures and gods. But in the case of the twentieth- and twenty-first-century temporary environmental installations of Christo and Jeanne-Claude, the materials are recyclable and the sites are always returned to their original condition.

    All major civilizations have produced a history of art, in which form and content evolve over time. This book will focus on only one art-historical narrative, that of Western art – though by no means is it the only narrative. At some points in Western history art has been influenced by the art of other cultures, especially as the result of travel, trade, and diplomatic contact between nations. When these cross-cultural influences can be demonstrated, they are briefly described to remind readers that other art-historical narratives do exist.

    Philosophers, critics, artists, poets, historians, and others have tried over the centuries to define art. But despite the crucial importance of works of art in the history of human civilization, it has proved difficult to produce a consensus on just what art is. Attempts to define art, from Plato to the present, are influenced by the personal bias, aesthetic preference, and cultural context of the viewer. Perhaps all would agree, however, that works of art are created to express something, whether one likes it or not, and that such expression contributes to our understanding of ourselves and our history.

    1

    What is art?

    The answer to the question ‘What is art?’ is both simple and complex. As we will see, attempts to define traditional art have been difficult enough, but today’s discussions also have to deal with the enormous variety of new art categories. Traditional categories include pictures (two-dimensional images), sculptures (three-dimensional images), and architecture (the art and science of building for human use). More recent categories, beginning in the twentieth century, include ‘found objects’, performance art, environmental art, earth art, body art, video and digital art, and in our rapidly changing world newer categories are continually being developed. There are also many subcategories of art – children’s art, outsider art, graffiti art, folk art, naïve and self-taught art, good art and bad art, offensive art, beautiful art, challenging art, frightening art, religious art, political art. When someone asks ‘But is it art?’ he or she usually means ‘Is it good art?’ or ‘Is it great art?’ Such questions raise the issue of aesthetics, that is, the quality of beauty conveyed by a work of art.

    The nature of art has been a vexing question for centuries, and it has been discussed by artists, poets, philosophers, and others. Their views have given us insight into the creative process, but they have not produced a universally accepted definition of art. In nineteenth-century France, the poet and critic Charles Baudelaire proposed the following definition of artistic genius: ‘childhood recovered at will – a childhood now equipped for self-expression, with manhood’s capacities and a power of analysis that enables it to order the mass of raw material that it has involuntarily accumulated’.¹ Instead of giving a definition of art as static, Baudelaire has described a dynamic creative process, which is appropriate in so far as the making of art is, in fact, an ongoing activity.

    Baudelaire is not alone in approaching art as a process. In 1936, the German Expressionist painter Oskar Kokoschka posed and replied to the question ‘What is Art?’ ‘It is not’, he said, ‘an asset in the stock-exchange sense, but a man’s timid attempt to repeat the miracle that the simplest peasant girl is capable of at anytime, that of magically producing life out of nothing’.² In 1948, the German-born American Abstract Expressionist painter Hans Hofmann defined a work of art as ‘a world in itself reflecting senses and emotions of the artist’s world’.³ In the mid-twentieth century, the French artist Henri Matisse asserted that an artist’s true function is creation, which begins with vision. The artist, according to Matisse, ‘has to look at life as he did when he was a child, and, if he loses that faculty, he cannot express himself in an original, that is, a personal way.’⁴ All of these statements describe a process rather than a finished product called ‘art’, speaking instead to the act of creating works of art.

    Some definitions assume that visual images replicate the real world and are recognizable. Others, especially since the early decades of the twentieth century, take into account non-figurative abstraction, in which familiar forms are not recognizable. But most definitions assert that a work of art is expressive in some way, whether the image is recognizable or not. That expressiveness communicates to viewers and reflects the artist and culture that produced it.

    One could argue that there can be no definition of art, since it is in a continual state of change and development. The subject matter of art, its materials and contexts, and the ideas that inspire it, are infinitely varied and open, adding to the difficulty of pinning down a definition of art. As the twentieth-century American graphic designer Milton Glaser tersely stated in one of his posters, one could simply say: Art Is. Slightly less concise, but no more informative, the Conceptual artist Joseph Kosuth declared in 1966 that ‘Art is the definition of art’.

    For more help we turn to some philosophers, who have addressed the interpretation and evaluation of art as well as its definition.

    Art as imitation

    For the ancient Greek philosopher Plato (428–347 BC), in Book 10 of The Republic, art is mimesis (roughly translated as ‘imitation’). But because art (in particular, painting) is a copy and not the real thing, Plato did not consider art useful. You can’t smoke the image of a pipe or sleep in the image of a bed. (He did not discuss architecture, which typically is useful.) Plato’s term techne refers to the technique or skill of the person who makes the useful, actual thing – but he distinguished that from art. He believed in the existence of a timeless, unchanging world of ideas, the forms of things that exist in the physical world. The ‘real’ bed is the form that exists timelessly. The bed you sleep on is a copy or an example of the real bed. A painted bed is even farther from the truth than the real bed – and in Plato’s view is dangerous because of that distance.

    In 1928, the Belgian artist René Magritte painted his famous The Betrayal of Images (Figure 1), which seems to speak to Plato’s argument. At first glance it is a straightforward, convincing representation of a pipe. Below the image, however, Magritte has written ‘This is not a pipe’ (Ceci n’est pas une pipe), as if to remind viewers that what is painted is not the real thing – that a space separates art and reality. The ‘betrayal’ of the title is consistent with Plato’s notion that such an image can be dangerous. To Plato, essential truth and beauty reside only in the realm of ideas and actual works of art are a danger to society. Since art (along with poetry and music) can incite dangerous passions, Plato banished artists, poets, and musicians (although he did allow martial music) from the Republic – his ideal state ruled by philosopher kings.

    Figure 1 René Magritte, The Betrayal of Images, 1928, oil on canvas, 23½ x 28½ in. (55 x 72 cm). Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California. (© Christie’s Images/Corbis)

    The early twentieth-century Romanian artist Constantin Brancusi believed his sculptures represent the ‘essence’ of things – an approach that seems to be consistent with Plato’s ideal forms, though Brancusi was not necessarily influenced by Plato’s philosophy. Brancusi’s marble sculpture of 1912 entitled Mlle. Pogany, for example, was for him the essence of the Hungarian woman, Margit Pogany, whom he met in Paris and of whom he made portraits in bronze as well as in marble (Figure 2). Brancusi detached the hands from the body and showed Mlle. Pogany resting them against her cheek. He emphasized her large eyes, and gave her a slim nose and mouth. To some viewers, Brancusi was an ‘abstract’ artist, but Brancusi regarded such observers as ‘imbeciles’ who failed to recognize the essential truth of his images.

    Figure 2 Constantin Brancusi, Mlle. Pogany Version I, 1912, white marble; limestone base, 17½ in. (44.8 cm) high. Private collection. © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris. (Image: © Institute of Contemporary Art / Corbis)

    Art as form

    In the Poetics, Plato’s student Aristotle (384–322 BC) identified form as the quality to which a viewer responds in a work of visual art. Form, by his definition, was produced by the artist’s control of material and his ability to capture the essence of a thing – much as Brancusi aimed to do. Distinct from Plato, for Aristotle the essence of a thing is immanent in the thing, and can be conveyed by material, by form, and by the physical skill

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