6 Beauty Versus Ugliness Article
6 Beauty Versus Ugliness Article
6 Beauty Versus Ugliness Article
Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him) established the doctrines that Allah is
beautiful and loves beauty (Sahih Muslim), that He is good and accepts only that which is
good (Sahih Muslim), and that He loves to see the effects of His blessings and favors on
people (Jami’ al-Tirmidhi).
This implies that since Almighty Allah loves beauty, He created everything perfect and
beautiful. Moreover, He also wants His servants to do so, that is, to love beauty, be beautiful
and generate beauty through words, deeds, character, garments, general outward appearance,
and the cultural and civilizational creations of theirs.
In doing so, however, people must subscribe to and apply only the highest heavenly standards
of goodness and beauty, without contaminating them with the effects of their intrinsic
inadequacies, myopia and whims. It is on account of this that Islam abhors ugliness with all
its physical and metaphysical dimensions and features. It does so, for example, as much in
evil speech, disposition and conduct, as in ungodly elements of culture, art and architecture.
Through the infinite realm of aesthetics, Muslims are bidden to maintain the established
supreme standards of beauty on earth. Islamic aesthetics in behavior, manners, thought,
culture, art and architecture is only an extension of the created and revealed heavenly artistic
order, deriving therefrom its strength and identity.
External beauty is the theophany of inner beauty, just as external ugliness is a manifestation
of inner defects and ugliness. Beauty lies at the heart of existence. It is not simply a
subjective state existing only “in the eye of the beholder”.
Beauty is meant to be universal and ever-present. The Arabic most common word for beauty
is “jamal”. However, related to the same word are the words “ijmal”, “jumlah” and “jamala”,
which mean, respectively, “generalization, totality, and to gather or accumulate to excess”.
Islam establishes that beauty is a human right and life’s standard thing. It is a necessity for
the soul as the air we breathe and the food and water we consume are for the body.
Beauty is the rule and, at the same time, symbol and quintessence of goodness. Ugliness, on
the other hand, is an anomaly and exception. It is equivalent to evil. In Arabic, the word
“qubh” means both ugliness and evil.
Beauty is additionally associated with reality and its undeniable existence, and ugliness with
unreality and nonexistence. Indeed, the ugliest thing is the mere absence and perversion of
the truth, and the imposition of the invented and deceitful substitutes.
It is only man who can create ugliness. He does so when he turns his back on Heaven and its
guidance, and becomes unable to find the correct course forward.
Another word in Arabic for beauty is “husn” (“hasan” is beautiful and “hasuna” to be
beautiful). The word’s various derivatives attest to the above-mentioned point of beauty’s
righteousness, absoluteness and totality. Some of the most important concepts derived
therefrom are goodness and excellence (hasan), virtue and good deed (hasanah), kindness
and good outcome (husna), benevolence and merit (ihsan), to do good and excel (ahsana),
benefactor and doer of good (muhsin).
It goes without saying that beauty, goodness and the truth are indivisible in Islam. According
to Seyyed Hossein Nasr, the Qur’anic term “al-muhsinun”, which is normally translated as
“the doers of good”, can also be translated as “those enmeshed in beauty”. Hence, such
Qur’anic idioms as “Allah is with the doers of good (al-muhsinin)” (al-‘Ankabut, 69), and
“Allah loves the doers of good (al-muhsinin)” (al-Baqarah, 195), could likewise be
understood and translated as “Allah is with those enmeshed in beauty” and “Allah loves those
enmeshed in beauty”, respectively.
Beauty originates from the highest plane of the transcendent Presence, descending upon and
engulfing the hearts of its devotees and servants. It targets the heart because the heart is not
only the seat of emotions and piety, but also of intelligent faculties. With the heart, people
understand and intelligently appreciate things and experiences, including beauty. As an
essentially spiritual thing, beauty is most attuned to the dispositions and competences of the
human heart and soul.
The eyes signify no more than a lower level in the hierarchy of means and capacities for the
knowledge as well as the truth acquisition and appreciation. Thus, in connection with
comprehending and following the truth, the Qur’an says that it is people’s hearts by which
they reason and learn wisdom, on the basis of the inputs of their ears by which they hear - and
by extension, their eyes by which they see. Then the Qur’an affirms what the root cause of
inappropriate visions and the lack of wisdom is: “For indeed, it is not the eyes that are
blinded, but blinded are the hearts which are within the breasts” (al-Hajj, 46).
The Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) said: “Verily, Allah does not look at your
appearance or wealth, but rather he looks at your hearts and actions” (Sahih Muslim).
Clearly, in Islam, on the whole, the forms and mere appearances are secondary to the spirit
and substance of things, playing second fiddle to them. Form follows substance and the truth.
The goal of human life is to beautify the soul through goodness and virtue and to make it
worthy of offering to God Who is the Beautiful. That is, the goal of human life is to be
beautiful, live beautifully, return to the Beautiful, and be admitted into Paradise which is the
highest representation of pleasure and beauty, the culmination of its bliss being beholding the
Beauty of the Face of the most Beautiful and most Beloved.
Following the advent of modernity as a ubiquitous way of life and modernism as its
philosophical wing, things dramatically forever changed. It was a time when, generally, all
religious, moral and traditional principles and values were rejected (nihilism), when sensual
self-indulgence became a norm (hedonism), when nothing as regards the ultimate truth was
considered either known or knowable (agnosticism), when man and his scientific and
technological legacy became deified (humanism), when nature became desacralized and
turned into a mere utility (naturalism), and when religion became secularized and God either
humanized or relegated to the ambit of absurdism.
That was a time when beauty as a gift of God – to borrow Aristotle’s term – was
compromised, and when ugliness (the absence of true beauty), at once as a concept and
sensory actuality, took over and started to reign supreme. Such was the case because once the
spiritual, moral and intellectual mutinies came to pass, the truth became defiled and forsaken
by the modern man once and for all.
What remained was the ubiquity and abyss of doubt, uncertainty and faithlessness,
constituting anything but a conducive environment for breeding and enjoying authentic
beauty. As John Ruskin, the leading English art critic of the Victorian era, said: “Nothing can
be beautiful which is not true.”
One wonders if a person does not believe in God and has no connection with Heaven, what
his understanding, source and criterion of beauty could be.
Indeed, one of the greatest offences against Divinity was committed when Protagoras, a
Greek philosopher who lived around the 5th century BC, declared that “man is the measure of
all things”. That precept denoted that people, rather than God or any revealed moral law, are
the ultimate source of ontological significance and value. Protagoras is thus regarded as the
first humanist.
However, humanism as a systematic philosophy or a belief system did not come to pass until
the European Renaissance, a period between the 14 th and 17th centuries. New humanism
standards of beauty, which centered exclusively on man and his existential contexts, were
then born.
There is even a “cult of ugliness” which is associated with the arrival of modern art and its
rejection of all classical beauty ideals and its embracing of ugliness, i.e., relative and
subjective beauty. “Modern art’s impulse was to destroy beauty”, was a verdict of Barnett
Newman, a leading American artist of the 20th century.
This “cult of ugliness”, according to Seyyed Hossein Nasr, “has now also spread to the
Islamic world, which knows many mosques that are in no way behind their Western
counterparts in ugliness (a large number of horrendously ugly churches). They do not,
however, represent Islamic art or thought but simply external influences.”
The whole thing is reminiscent of the parable of “the emperor’s new clothes”. Everybody
knows there is something seriously wrong in the ways our lives unfold, but not many people
dare to question the status quo for fear that they will be branded regressive and retarded. It
will take a lot of institutional, rather than individual, guts to “shout” – and prove – that the
emperor, actually, has no clothes.
As a result, our modern cities are ugly because they have been converted into concrete
jungles. Their forms and functions provide evidence of man’s separation from nature - yet his
very self - and his professed domination over it. Cities became the physical loci of all the
crimes associated with unrestrained materialism, consumerism and hedonism as modernity’s
foremost creeds.
In such milieus, there is less and less space – and tolerance – for traditional and religious
forms of architecture and art. Cities became necropolises of traditions and man’s innate
spiritual and moral innocence.
There is nothing left in the modern man with which he can genuinely beautify and regenerate
his cities and the whole of his built environment. Everything he does, by and large, is
superficial, hollow, short-term and boring. Concurrently, though, everything seems
deceptively glossy and, of course, vainglorious, reflecting the character of the maker.
Man’s life is increasingly becoming mechanized and programmed, with little thinking and
much less emotions. Substance is as good as nonexistent. Beauty is a false glitter, and is only
skin or surface-deep.
No wonder that at the core of the manifesto of modernist architecture reside such dogmas as,
for instance, “less is more” (Ludwig Mies van der Rohe), “ornamentation is crime” (Adolf
Loos), “the house is a machine for living in” (Le Corbusier), and “form follows fantasy” (the
slogan of deconstructivism or new modern architecture, which was opposed to Louis
Sullivan’s slogan “form follows function”).
Art
Our modern art is also essentially ugly because it is either rendered for its own sake, needing
neither justification nor any particular end to serve, or it expresses but the personal feelings
and visions of artists.
In the former scenario, art, inspired by the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, upholds “the
autonomy of aesthetic standards, setting them apart from considerations of morality, utility,
or pleasure” (Encyclopedia Britannica). In the latter scenario, art is subjective, individual and
eccentric. It is often associated with the creative and powerful rendering of personal
confusion, skepticism, bohemianism and ambiguous abstraction.
Either way, art oscillates from one extreme to another, deviating from and betraying its
fundamental purpose and mission. In that case, art emerges as a form of “ingenious,
interesting and charming ugliness”. It is nihilistic and subversive.
For example, it is sometimes said about Pablo Picasso, one of the greatest artists of the 20 th
century, that he was just a big show-off most of whose work is inherently trivial. Each case
represents a unique piece of autobiography. To understand Picasso’s works, one must regard
them as “anecdotes or snapshots of a particular moment in his life” (Germaine Greer).
At best, excellent art excellently and ingeniously poses greatest life questions. Bad art does so
poorly. And questions without answers remain just that: questions, and so, doubts and
anxieties. Therefore, art is fine – and beautiful - only as far as it goes.
Popular culture
Furthermore, our modern everyday life activities and passions are impressed with the elan
vital of ugliness because they are infused with the spirit of popular culture, which is an
upshot of modernity and its sacrilegious philosophical penchant.
Popular culture was always linked with lower classes and poor education. Its rise could be
traced back to the emergence of the distinct and somewhat influential middle class spawned
by the Industrial Revolution as the first complete manifestation of modernity. Popular culture
instantaneously became affordable and accessible.
Popular culture is often contrasted with the official or high culture of the upper class
(aristocracy and nobility). It is likewise regarded as frivolous and “dumbed down”. Some yet
perceive it as one-dimensional, consumerist, sensationalist, immoral and corrupt. It is perhaps
best represented in the domains of such cultural products as arts, music, film, television,
radio, literature, fashion, sports, advertising, print media and internet culture.
In the wake of the Industrial Revolution, relentless scientific discoveries and technological
dynamics created in people a sense of perpetual expectation, hope and insatiability. People
wanted more of everything, and that those things be always better, faster and brighter. There
was so much in life to be experimented and enjoyed by everybody. Opportunities were
limitless and on hand.
Life was not to be wasted on lethargy, traditionalism and religious conformity. It was to be
lived to the fullest. Excessive and abstract intellectualism, as well as religiousness, were not
welcomed either.
Suddenly, people felt about life as though they were kids in a candy store. It was as if the
rising middle class was bent on taking matters into their own hands. The irony was that in
terms of serving as authority and a point of reference, the intellectual and cultural elites now
became treated by the masses in the same way as the elites had treated the traditional and
religious authorities. Things came full circle.
The elites and their high culture became more and more bereft of influence and credibility.
Due to their centuries-old inability to solve mankind’s perennial ontological quandaries, and
lead to the right path, the elites (including religious leaders) were perceived as inadequate, yet
failures. The past and its traditions were ever more loathed and rebuffed.
The only solution was to live in the moment and for the self. As Friedrich Nietzsche put forth
that in this world, we should live our lives to the full and get everything we can out of it. The
only issue was how best to do that in “a godless, meaningless world”. Beauty was only that
which generated and enhanced people’s hedonic and, to some extent, rational pleasures.
Consequently, pure philosophy, art and religion, as exclusive intellectual pursuits and
potential behavioral compasses, were increasingly losing their sway and appeal in favor of
the rapid advances of empirical science and technology. The latter was the source of every
modernist legitimacy, including the questions of goodness and beauty, in that they were
making everyone’s life interesting and enjoyable.
Machines and gadgets were turned into objects of love and worship. As Bertrand Russel said:
“Machines are worshipped because they are beautiful, and valued because they confer
power.” The same holds true insofar as all the other objects of people’s biological needs and
desires were concerned.
This explains, for example, why many people nowadays – especially youth - are addicted to,
yet worship, their smart phones, allowing their gadgets to shape their lives. Rather than being
in control, they found themselves controlled. As a result, smartphones became a symbol of
popular culture and people’s behavioral idiosyncrasy. Their ostensible trademarks are beauty,
empowerment and relative affordability. They are windows to the world, self-determination
and freedom.
Smartphones and the way people use them further stand for a microcosm of modernity’s lack
of spiritual and moral compass. It is obvious that people are both the culprits and victims of
modern civilization’s spinning out of control, with popular culture being the arena of stars
and main proceedings.
Popular culture soon developed into a prevalent and almost universally accepted
phenomenon. It became part of the mainstream. High culture could not stem the tide of the
former’s growth and spread because the elites lived in ivory towers, even though, with
respect to the actual value and substance, high culture fared no better than popular culture. In
their own respective ways, they both personified and promoted untruth, uncertainty,
nonconformity and loss of purpose and direction.
However, without right worldviews and proper orientations in life, those developments later
proved detrimental for the whole of mankind and their planet earth. The results were out-and-
out ugliness, repugnance and sin, which, in collaboration with other transgressions of the
modern man, led to the destruction of personal moral values, the family institution, human
relationships, and the harmony and order of nature.
Consequently, genuine beauty became all but extinct. It became a scarce luxury that could be
enjoyed only by certain categories of people. It became most expensive. The global art
market is estimated today to be $64 billion worth (Gaby Del Valle).
Cultural and aesthetic junk was made available for the masses within the provinces of
shopping centers, sports venues, mass media, literature, entertainment, fashion, dance, music,
cinemas, cyber-culture and even education. The lowest of values were encouraged so long as
there were happy takers (consumers), and the matters could be commercialized.
Everything was subjective and good enough, as beauty was “in the eye of the beholder”.
Beauty was banalized, trivialized and aimed principally for financial and other material gains.
People were happy because they could express themselves and make their voices and banal
preferences heard. In terms of their vain and inconsequential life missions, the domain of
popular culture proved an expedient medium for people’s self-actualization.
Ugliness thus was promoted in the name of beauty, backwardness and primitiveness in the
name of progress and civilization, ignorance in the name of knowledge and education, and
wretchedness in the name of happiness. So much so that authentic beauty, both as an idea and
palpable reality, was often openly despised and poked fun at. Chances are that it will soon
join the grades of absolute truth and virtue, which are neither deliberated, nor seriously
pursued, by anybody.
Without a doubt, today’s modern civilization is predominantly junk. People own many
things, but are in reality indigent. Living in the Information Age, they are educated, but
ignorant, let alone wise. They talk so much to one another, but are bad communicators. They
seem happy, but are discontented. They furthermore seem to be enjoying life, but are
suffering.
Just as consuming much junk food destroys gradually our health and body, so does
consuming junk components of culture and civilization destroy our total being. It destroys our
humanness.
This ubiquitous sentiment perhaps prompted Musa Ćazim Ćatić, a famous Bosnian poet of
the early 20th century, to supplicate to God in one of his poems: “O God! Grant me a sense of
beauty (and save me thereby).”
It could be argued that modern ungodly civilization is an experiment that went horribly
wrong. With the current profane worldviews and voracious ways of life aboard, humanity
seems to be doomed.
It is no secret that Islam only has the proven capacity to offer a total and viable alternative to
the existing global cultural and civilizational mess; hence, this macro Islamophobia crusade
by various ideological and political axes of evil. Positively, devil and his associates never
sleep. To them, anything but the truth makes sense and can be accommodated.