Title: The Performing Arts in Western Civilization
1The Performing Arts in Western Civilization
2Housekeeping (3/10/05)
- Quote(s) of the day
- All those who believe in telekinesis, raise my
hand. - I went to a restaurant that serves 'breakfast at
any time'. So I ordered French Toast during the
Renaissance. - Right now I'm having amnesia and deja vu at the
same time. I think I've forgotten this before. - -- Steven Wright
3Agenda - 3/10/05
- Papers Returned - Comments
- The Origin of the Work of Art
- An Eclectic Analysis
4(No Transcript)
5- KANT ? HEGEL ? BRENTANO ? HUSSERL ? HEIDEGGER
- Phenomenology as pure investigation into the
nature and content of consciousness Logical
Investigations (1901-13) - Back to the things themselves.
- Building on the works of Kant, Hegel, and
Brentano, Husserl was determined to provide
phenomenology with a viable method of
analysisthe Phenomenological Reduction
6The Phenomenological Reduction
- Epoche - The suspension of the natural attitude.
During this step, the analyst attempts to bracket
out all previous assumptions or prejudices
connected to the work - Eidetic (Essence) - An attempt by the analyst to
engage the essential characteristics of the work.
This type of engagement will never be referential
or formal in nature.
7Husserl (contd)
- 1913 - IDEAS - Husserl begins to discuss the
Transcendental Ego which would enable one to rise
above ones own experience and develop apodictic
knowledge. Essentially a retreat back into
Psychologism (subject at the center) - Husserl thus creates a philosophical singularity
by attempting to bifurcate the transcendental
mind from human consciousness.
8Husserls Later Phenomenology
- Cartesian Meditations (1931)
- Exhibits a steady development from his earlier
works. - The problem of accounting for the Other (other
egos) is engaged. - Ultimately concedes the existence of communities
of egos which form cultural bonds through common
values and associations. - Within this discussion, Husserl articulates his
conception of the Lebenswelt or life-world. - Lebenswelt
- Points to the concrete reality of a life-world in
which the intersubjective community of my ego
and other egos co-exist. - Includes nature and all that is physical in the
world. - In Crisis, continues to develop this idea.
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10Martin Heidegger (1889-1976)KANT ? HEGEL ?
BRENTANO ? HUSSERL ? HEIDEGGER Heideggers
Hermeneutic Phenomenology
- Builds on the foundations established by Husserl.
- Moves away from the Husserlian concept of
Transcendental Ego. - His addition of Historical Relativism creates a
radical change in Phenomenology. - Descriptions are never pure, but rather, are
marked by an interpretation rooted in the
analysts historic tradition.
11Heidegger (contd)
- For Heidegger, the question, What is Being?
must be prefaced by an analysis of human
existence. - Heidegger ultimately concludes that a
philosophical resolution of this question is not
possible. - Influenced by Husserl, Heidegger begins to look
back to Aristotle and the Greek thinkers in their
understanding of aletheia - the unconcealedness
of what is present.
121st Bifurcation (revisited)
- The Allegory of the Cave (Plato)
- FormsVirtual things, concepts, ideas - One must
first grasp the concept before one can understand
what we see and hear in the physical world - SUBJECTCONCEPTOBJECT
- Turning towards the light enables the
Philosopher-King to translate these forms into
their physical manifestations. - The Republic (Plato) causes a paradigmatic shift
in the West, which breaks with philosophical
development in the East. - Turning point in which the West moves in a
direction distinct from the East - Asian culture / philosophy is not concept based.
- Bifurcation occurs which leads ultimately to
Cartesian method and the Newtonian universe. - In the Arts, this led to a domination of the work
by rating it against a concept. - Cave walltelevision?
13Pre-Socratics Revisited
- Lived in Asia Minor and various Greek Islands
- Usually described as poets rather than
philosophers. - Parmenides (b. 510 BCE) - reality is a single,
unchanging substance. - Anaximander (611-547 BCE), Anaximander speculated
that all matter is an infinite, intelligent,
living whole. - Heraclitus (540-475 B.C.E.) (One can never step
in the same river twice.) the world is
constantly changing.
14Pre-Socratics (contd)
- Unfettered by a post-Platonic paradigm (dichotomy
between subject and object), Early Greek thinking
is characterized by gathering or apprehension
and collection. - Heideggers concept of meditative thinking
attempts to release the will, in order to
ensure a responsiveness to things. This creates
the possibility of waiting upon an object and
allowing it to reveal itself. - One does not experience a thing by re-presenting
it through a concept but instead remains directed
to it. - Heidegger explores these ideas in greater depth
in the essay, The Origin of the Work of Art.
15PHYSIS Physical Things are
- Ever-changing
- Emerging
- Dynamic
- For 2500 years in the West we have described
PHYSIS as inanimate
16Heidegger on Physis
- this is what I mean by the EARTH
- Dynamic, Changing, Emerging
- In the Modern Era, one measures and literalizes
the EARTH. - As a result, the EARTH closes
17Preliminary Conclusions
- Heidegger
- Builds on concepts of Husserlian phenomenology.
- Avoids the subtle bifurcation of Husserls
transcendental ego by positing the existence of
Dasein - mans being in the world. - Heideggers radical phenomenological shift lies
in his effort to reveal the perceivedness of the
perceived. - The focus of his phenomenological model is
therefore, ontological. - Heidegger will next leap out of the metaphysics
outlined in Being and Time in his essay, The
Origin of the Work of Art from Poetry, Language,
and Thought
18Heideggers Turn
- Following the publication of Being and Time, it
was clear to Heidegger that the philosophical
community did not recognize the radical shift in
his conception of Da-sein. -
- Da-sein was not simply a new take on an old idea,
rather, it was a concept that was prior to any
existing philosophical view of the transcendental
subject. - Therefore, Heidegger concluded that only a
radical leap out of Western metaphysics was
required in order to clarify the concept of
Da-sein. - Heidegger introduces the concept of waiting
upon phenomena in order to allow them to lie
before us and show themselves. - For Heidegger, this is precisely what the Western
mind has forgotten how to do.
19The Origin of the Work of Art
- Art, for Heidegger, refers to visual art, music,
architecture, drama, sculpture, poetry, etc. - All Art is Poesis
- The Question
- What is the origin of the work of Art?
- On first view, the work arises from the artist.
- But the artist is defined by the work!
- Art, therefore, encompasses both the artist and
the artwork.
20Arts thingly character
- There is something
- stony in a work of architecture
- wooden in a carving.
- spoken in a linguistic work.
- sonorous in a musical composition.
- How is this thingly quality of art the same or
different from other things?
21Being and Time revisited
- Three types of being
- The ready-to-hand equipment, e.g., an automobile.
- The present-to-hand (junk), e.g., a pile of
leaves. - Da-sein - human existence
- No clear answer was forthcoming, so Heidegger
decided to abandon theoretical positions in favor
of a description of a particular piece of
equipment. He thus moves from meta-theoretical
levels to the level of art criticism. - As an example of equipment, he chooses a pair
of shoes as depicted in the painting Les
Souliers by Vincent Van Gogh.
22Shoes
- Physical Characteristics
- Made of leather
- Strung together with laces
- Joined with nails.
- Form is based on use.
- However, we have now circled back to the
matter-form theory. - Heidegger recommends that we
- Ask not what shoes are made of
- Ask instead what are they made for.
23Vincent Van Gogh Les Souliers Oil on canvas /
Paris early 1887
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25Les Souliers(contd)
- The peasant woman wears her shoes in the field.
Only here are they what they are. They are all
the more genuinely so, the less the peasant woman
thinks about the shoes while she is at work, or
looks at them at all, or is even aware of them.
She stands and walks in them. That is how shoes
actually serve. It is in this process of the use
of equipment that we must actually encounter the
character of equipment. (Last sentence moves
from the level of criticism to the level of
theory.) - The shoes in Van Goghs painting are out of use,
and their context is ambiguous. - Therefore, how can one understand their use?
- This appears to be a painting of an isolated pair
of brown shoes, but for Heidgger, there is much
more
26Heideggers Critique of Les Souliers
- From the dark opening of the warm insides of the
shoes the toilsome tread of the worker stares
forth. In the stiffly rugged heaviness of the
shoes there is the accumulated tenacity of her
slow trudge through the far-spreading and
ever-uniform furrows of the field swept by a raw
wind. On the leather lie the dampness and
richness of the soil. Under the soles slides the
loneliness of the field-path as evening falls. In
the shoes vibrates the silent call of the earth,
its quiet gift of the ripening grain and its
unexplained self-refusal in the fallow desolation
of the wintry field. This equipment is pervaded
by uncomplaining anxiety as to the certainty of
bread, the wordless joy of having once more
withstood want, the trembling before the
impending childbed and shivering at the
surrounding menace of death. This equipment
belongs to the earth, and it is protected in the
world of the peasant woman. - Heidegger, The Origin of the Work of Art (33-34)
27Heideggers Critique (contd)
- Heidegger assumes that the shoes project and
crystallize the existence of the peasants world. - The shoes are out of use, but by means of the art
work, the Being of equipment is revealed. - This process of coming to unconcealment
corresponds to what the Greeks called, aletheia,
which translates as truth. - Heideggers ideas as exemplified in his analysis
of Les Souliers are a radical shift from
traditional Western theories about aesthetics
28Aesthetics
- Alexander Baumgarten (1714-1762)
- In this system, Art is a collection of objects
(Aesthetic Objects) - Aesthetic objects exists for one purpose onlyto
be looked at for their structure alone (Aesthetic
Perception) - Posits an Aesthetic Experience which is
Universal. - Bracketing out an art object from its context.
- Baumgarten thus modifies the DOING, MAKING
definition of Art. - Meyer Schapiro (1905-1995)
- As an art historian, Meyer Schapiro attacked
Heideggers philosophical interpretation on one
of van Goghs paintings of shoes. He maintains
that he finds nothing in Heideggers fanciful
description of the shoes represented by van Gogh
that could not have been imagined in looking at a
real pair of peasants shoes. - In defense of Heidegger, Jacques Derrida states
that, it is not the truth of a relationship (of
adequation or attribution) between such-and-such
a product and such-and-such an owner... art as
putting to work of truth is neither an
imitation nor a description copying the
real, nor a reproduction, whether it
represents a singular thing or a general
essence. Derrida, J. (1987) Restitutions of the
truth in pointing pointure, pp.255-382 in The
Truth in Painting. Chicago University of Chicago
Press
29Meyer Schapiro Responds to Heidegger
- As an art historian, Meyer Schapiro attacked
Heideggers philosophical interpretation on one
of van Goghs paintings of shoes. He maintains
that he finds nothing in Heideggers fanciful
description of the shoes represented by van Gogh
that could not have been imagined in looking at a
real pair of peasants shoes. - Heideggers original intention was to elaborate
his philosophical value, and not to discuss the
origin of the artwork. His argument is based on
imagination, which is a part of aesthetic
experience. - Schapiros claim may assert his capability as an
art historian, however, the statement
inadvertently reveals that he has poor
sensibility to aesthetic quality. He would not be
capable of enjoying subtle feelings created by a
certain atmosphere, nor would he contemplate,
extend imagination freely, nor amuse himself by
pleasant surprises all found in everyday life. He
would only be impressed by a work of art and dry
facts, and he would not appreciate any aesthetic
quality until someone frames it and places it in
a museum.
30Physis
- Heidegger on physis this is what I mean by the
EARTH - Dynamic, Changing, Emerging
- In the Modern Era, one measures and literalizes
the EARTH. - As a result, the EARTH closes
- Heideggers World
- Heideggers 2nd essential element in a work of
art. - The work is a symbol the something else is the
World. - Parallels Husserls notion of lebenswelt.
31Ontological World
- We live in a stream of history that connects the
past and future. - The historical life-world that surrounds an
artist of the past is connected to contemporary
viewers / listeners and their present through the
historical tradition that encompasses both. - The contemporary viewer / listener experiences
art through the stylistic and expressive norms
that have developed in the historical tradition
in which his past and present are conjoined. - Ones historical tradition acts as a filter
through which a contemporary person engages art.
A tradition provides the initial stance for
aesthetic understanding. - Ones present context continually causes the
viewer / listener to modify the original
significance of past worksart is always
understood in some relation to the present, e.g.,
Music and Technologyhearing the music and the
means of reproduction Crosby / Microphone Les
Paul / Multi track etc. - The time and place in which an analysis occurs
impacts on what an art work can mean.
32Heideggers Aesthetic Dynamic
- EARTH?(tension-rift)?WORLD
- 2 Elements
- 1) Earth
- Work materials (subject of Phenomenology)
- Crafted and formedproto-formal
- The more training one has, the more the EARTH
closes. - 2) World
- IDEATIONAL WORLD (wants to open up the Earth)
- In Heideggers model, the EARTH opens, and then,
the WORLD is grounded.
33Greek Temple
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35Heidegger on the Greek Temple
- The building encloses the figure of the god, and
in this concealment lets it stand out into the
holy precinct through the open portico. By means
of the temple, the god is present in the temple.
This presence of the god is in itself the
extension and delimitation of the precinct as a
holy precinct. The temple and its precinct
however, do not fade away into the indefinite. It
is the temple-work that first fits together and
at the same time gathers around itself the unity
of those paths and relations in which birth and
death, disaster and blessing, victory and
disgrace, endurance and decline acquire the shape
of destiny for human being. The all-governing
expanse of this open relational context is the
world of this historical people. Only from and in
this expanse does the nation first return to
itself for the fulfillment of its vocation.
36Greek Temple (contd)
- The physical building encloses and conceals the
ancient Greek sense of god(s). - By means of the temple the ancient god is still
present. - The temple, in its standing there, first gives
to things there look and to men their outlook on
themselves. This view remains open as long as the
work is a work, as long as the god has not fled
from it. - Openness is used here in two ways
- Any ontological world is open insofar as it is
ideational. The world that frames and permeates
an historical people is not a physical thing. - The work itself must remain open to be a work.
37Langer on Architecture
- In Feeling and Form (1953), Langer describes
architecture as a mode for creating Virtual
Space. - A plastic art - its first achievement is always
an illusion. - A machine to live in.
- As scene is the basic abstraction of pictorial
art, and kinetic volume of sculpture, that of
architecture is the ethnic domain. - Articulates the virtual place by treatment of an
actual place.
38Langer on Architecture (contd)
- Quotes Le Corbusier
- Architectureshould use those elements that are
capable of affecting our senses, and of rewarding
the desire of our eyes, and should dispose them
in such a waythat the sight of them affects us
immediatelythose elements are plastic elements,
forms which our eyes can see and our minds can
measure. (Feeling and Form 96-97) - Plastic elements EARTH
39Physis revisited
- Heidegger on physis this is what I mean by the
EARTH - Dynamic, Changing, Emerging
- In the Modern Era, one measures and literalizes
the EARTH. - As a result, the EARTH closes
40Heideggers Aesthetic Invariables
- EARTH? (rift-design)? WORLD
- Form
- 1) Earth
- Work materials (subject of Phenomenology)
- Crafted and formedproto-formal
- The more training one has, the more the EARTH
closes. - 2) World
- IDEATIONAL WORLD (wants to open up the Earth)
- In Heideggers model, the EARTH opens, and then,
the WORLD is grounded.
41Aesthetic Object vs. Art Object
- Aesthetic Object
- The viewers intention makes an object aesthetic
or not aesthetic. - The viewer sends an aesthetic intention to the
object. - An object becomes an aesthetic object when a
person directs an aesthetic attitude towards that
object. (Ferrara 36)
- Art Object
- Inherently possesses the strife between EARTH and
WORLD which the appreciator is allowing to occur
(Heidegger) - Example a Rembrandt is viewed in terms of its
value as an investment rather that its value as a
work of Art. Heidegger says that in this case, it
is not an art object since the viewer is not
engaging the WORLD. - Merely engaging the syntactical elements in a
work leads one away from the WORLD.
42Upcoming Assignments
- Goodman, The Ways of Worldmaking one full page
summary due Tuesday 3/22/05 - Ferrara, Phenomenology as a Tool for Musical
Analysis, one full page summary due Thursday
3/24/05