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OK... I take this as suggesting that "beauty" is something along the lines of what Oscar Wilde intended when he wrote, "It is the spectator, and not life, that art really mirrors." Or simply put... "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder?" To a certain degree, I concur. The failure to appreciate James Joyce or Richard Wagner or Picasso... or as I have admitted with regard to myself: Chinese Opera... is not a failing on the part of the artist, but rather a failing on a part of the audience. But is this always so? Is there no good nor bad but thinking makes it so? All judgments in art are subjective... but some judgments are better than others?
When I suggested that Serge Marshennikov's paintings... in spite of their failing in terms of personal style or self-expression or unique artist's voice... were still "beautiful" I suggested that I was speaking of an aesthetic or artistic concept of "beauty". The paintings conveyed a facility... even a mastery of handling paint. The choice of colors were elegant and harmonic. His sense of composition is quite solid. The paintings display an internal logic. Now are we really to suggest there is no possible objective concept of "good" or "bad" when speaking of the structure and form and internal logic of a work of art? Are there not poems that are clearly awkward, disjointed, poorly written? Are there not works of music that strike you as flawless... and yet boring... not because of some failure in form or "beauty"... but because they lack the artist's voice?
Yes, because we know beauty is one element for art, not all of it. What often happens in the debate is that different artists or movements try to define Beauty by the internal logic of their work. They are not going to be wrong - as the artist needs the notion of what beauty he is doing, but obviously, one rule for Beethoveen another for AC/DC. (As I would say, the it is not a judgment of vallue :D ). So many fields happened because many have been able to spot the rules that worked so well for them and could not accept it was not universal. It is like there is Beauty and beauty.
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OK... I can buy that. "Beauty" is not the goal (or always the goal) of art... but it is an element of art. And if we accept Burke's notion of beauty as that which inspires or evokes pleasure, then "beauty" is a necessary element of art... or rather if we don't find a work of art pleasurable/beautiful we are not likely going to appreciate it. I rarely find Schoenberg beautiful because he rarely gives me pleasure... but I find Berg... and even Tristan Murail and Giacinto Scelsi beautiful/pleasurable.
Yes, I would just not use the word pleasure. It is not always it. It can be painful as Miyako suggested. There must be some impact.
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In confronting ftil's notions of the lack of beauty in 20th century art, I was attempting to point out that there can be a beauty in that which inspires fear or sadness or angst or other negative emotions when these are given an artistic form: Burke's "Sublime"... but that there remains much in Modern art that is quite "beautiful" in a traditional sense.
Yes, obviously. Divinity is both terrible and beautiful. But maybe, the thing is that art objective is too provoke that aesthetic emotion able to persuade us to revive emotions and experiences as if they are real and that was called Beauty. But this Beauty was just confuded with harmnoy, the perfect of forms, the physical beauty, true. Would be better maybe allure.