Exercise 2.0

Find two paintings and one sculpture, each of which appears concerned with modernity, modernism and modernization. Indicate the relevant features on annotated reproductions.

The following questions should help. • Does the subject seem to be of its time? • Does the work or its subject matter appear mechanical? • Does the artist exploit the look of the medium?

Having done some background reading on Modernism in terms of Art, I would like to answer this question based solely on my understanding on Modern Art, rather than addressing the helpful questions above.

My understanding of Modern Art is that it is firstly different from other “periods” of art history in that it does not apply to specific dates. The term Modernist/Modernism rather applies to a style and approach to art that was evident across wide ranging time periods, depending on how one classifies an artwork (course text). The Museum of Modern Art describes modern art as “work made after 1880, when the atmosphere was ripe for avant-garde artists to take their work in new, unexpected and ‘modern’ directions” (MoMA, Powerpoint). Artists who undertook this new ‘modern’ approach were more influenced by their own thoughts, emotions and experiences than traditional artists, who would focus on the theme of the painting, it’s “realness” or it’s subject. The techniques and mediums that were used also became much more free and non-typical, with brushstrokes, depth perception, colours, materials and textures coming to the fore of the work.

Find two paintings and one sculpture, each of which appears concerned with modernity, modernism and modernization. Indicate the relevant features on annotated reproductions:

Study for “Luxe, calme et volupté”, Henri Matisse, 1904
  1. Experimentation with line: spots of colour made with repeating, quick brushstrokes categorise this painting as Modernist, which rejected conservative, historical methods and form. Matisse uses small lines to suggest features of the landscape rather than paint it realistically as seen.
  2. Form: Matisse used simplistic lines and strokes of colour to create human figures, trees, landscape. Most importantly for the Modernist period is the move away from historical “realistic” painting of the human form, which would capture the subject as realistic to life as possible. Using blue line forms such as these was a clear break from this tradition, and brought the human form to an impression rather than a realistic image.
  3. Abstraction: the scene is portrayed in abstraction as opposed to conservative forms of painting where every detail was laid out clearly for the observer. The figures not only don’t represent a realistic depiction of the subject, they also are not positioned as they would have traditionally. None of the figures appear to be looking “at” the observer, but are engaged in their own activities. In historical painting, the subject was often “gazing” at the observer, to draw the observer in, without being engaged in any of the activity in the rest of the painting. Similarly, the picnic blanket holds only the vague impression of crockery, as opposed to realistic interpretations.
  4. Use of expressive Colour: the colour palette in this piece is comprised of primary colours and extremely bright. There is little shade evident. The colours of the painting are being used to express an emotion, a feeling of the scene from the artists perspective, rather than an identical depiction of people on the beach. The scene itself seems to be Utopian; the lack of shade, the bright colours, the expressive brushstrokes, the ideal landscape, all produce a feeling of calm and tranquillity that perhaps would not have been communicated, had the painting been done in traditional form.
Still Life with Three Puppies, Paul Gauguin, 1888
  1. Exploring traditional subject matter, in new ways: Although the subject matter of Still Life is definitely traditional, Modernist artists often approached these traditional subject matters in ways that were unconventional, pushing the boundaries of what art should be. The inclusion of the puppies in this Still Life would have been unusual, since puppies are not “still” objects that can be captured over time. Their form is unusual in that it does not depict a realistic image of a puppies but rather a “still moment” that the artist experienced while they were feeding. None of the puppies are complete or in proportion, giving the impression that their image was “captured” momentarily, almost as though taken by a camera, which would have been a new technology at the time. One of the aims of Modern Art was to try to capture the now rapidly changing environment in which the artists lived. The puppies and their dish are almost equal size to the fruit and goblets which would be “closer” to the artist on the table, the focal point of the painting appears to be the goblets in the centre as though you were looking down on to the scene, rather than straight at it from ground level. Again, this evokes a sense of photography rather than traditional painting.
  2. Painted for the Artist: the goblets are drawn quickly, almost childlike, with little regard to realism or their depth. They are not intended to provide the observer with an identical copy of what the goblets looked like, rather they are painted for the benefit of the artist who wanted to capture objects or moments that were meaningful to him. Traditionally, paintings were commissioned by a “Someone” – usually a wealthy person or institution – and often depicted religious themes or scenes which told a story for the benefit of the patron (or the observer). Modern Painting was based upon the artists own feelings, experiences and emotions. I find the use of these goblets quite interesting, as I would associate them with a church or religious scene, but here they are portrayed in such a different scene that it is unusual.
  3. Outlining: each of the objects on the table is outlined in a thick, blue line. This is in opposition to traditional painting techniques which tried to conceal lines through shading and colour. The lines within this painting are bold and strong, intentional. This change in technique identifies the painting as Modern.
  4. Perspective: the perspective of the painting is not traditional and emphasises the surface and material of the painting. Rather than attempt to make the scene seem realistic and to scale, the table appears to be at an upturned angle, while the objects on it remain at a normal angle. This adds to the confusing perspective of the painting as something which is almost dreamlike in it’s composition.
  5. Brushstrokes: the use of short, sharp, repetitive brushstrokes in impressionist painting challenged the rules of depiction in painting of the past. Rather than make the fruit look like realistic pieces of fruit, the focus is more on the colour and the form. Short, blurred brushstrokes and a vivid colour palette were some of the hallmarks of modern art.
Crinkly avec disque rouge (Crinkly with Red Disk)(1973),  Alexander Calder
  1. Mobility: Alexander Calder was one of the first artists to introduce actual movement into his sculpture. Traditional sculpture was considered static, made from solid natural materials like wood or stone and was immoveable, even when the subject matter was considered to be a scene of movement (For example, Laocoön and His Sons )
  2. Subject Matter: traditional sculpture was made to represent something, or someone, and was generally commissioned for a particular reason. The subject matter of the work would often be very obvious, which made it useful when dealing with illiterate populations in ancient cultures. This modern sculpture has no obvious “meaning”. What it represents is personal to the artists, rather than obvious to the nation. The title provides little context, and perhaps deliberately, as it simply describes what the sculpture is; a crinkly form with a red disc. The meaning of the work is left for the viewer to decipher.
  3. Colour: traditionally, sculpture that was made of bronze or stone material remained its natural colour – or has since lost it’s painted surface. The use of vivid colour in this sculpture against the dark, muted background of it’s setting, makes it a striking example of modern sculpture
  4. Material: Calder used common construction materials for his sculpture. This was a break away from traditional sculpture materials such as stone, wood, bronze.

Tutor Feedback – Assignment One, Pre-tutorial

I received my Tutor Feedback on Assignment one last night. It came in two parts; an annotated version of my work (here) which made it much easier to relate the notes to my own work, and a general comments feedback form (here) which contained more general comments.

I am arranging a convenient time/date to have a phone tutorial with my Tutor to discuss everything in more detail. Meantime, I am going to work on the research suggested by my tutor – namely:

  • J.P. Sartre – “existence precedes essence” – Existentialism in general
  • Pooke, Grant and Newall, Diana. (2008), Art History: the basics, London: Routledge
  • Howells, R. & Negreiros, J. (2012), Visual Culture. 2nd Edition, Cambridge: Polity

I plan to re-construct my essay based on my research, the feedback in my Tutor notes and the tutorial over the phone. Once it is done, I will upload it in a separate post. Areas that need work are:

  • Develop a single point perspective and why – I need to ask my Tutor to explain this more fully during the Tutorial.
  • Defining terms at the start of a paper
  • Referencing (in my own opinion) – should I have larger bibliographies for assignments? Am I referencing enough?

I was delighted to read that I have made a strong start to the unit. I am really enjoying this course and the different depths and categories of research that it brings me to; philosophy might be new favourite subject!

Overall, I am looking forward to the tutorial and have already started Part 2.

Self-Assessment based on the Assessment Criteria

Understanding Visual Culture: Part One

Self-Assessment based on the Assessment Criteria

I am writing this piece very quickly before I start to review my Tutor feedback on Assignment One.

Demonstration of subject based knowledge and understanding

I think that I have demonstrated that I am trying to develop a subject based knowledge. Prior to starting this course, I had absolutely no exposure to Visual Culture, art history or theory, or Philosophy. I have been reading, listening and watching as much as I can in relation to the subject. Do I think I have demonstrated subject based knowledge? Perhaps, if just in a small way. I believe that this will develop over the next parts of the course.

Demonstration of research skills

Research feels like all I am doing at the moment! I am enjoying it. I believe that I have demonstrated some research skills by my referencing and by my learning log, however in reality I am doing much more “work” than I am recording. I am going to change this starting with Part 2 – and record instantly any reading that I am doing and my thoughts around it. I think it will help me to hone my skills for referencing properly, too.

Demonstration of critical and evaluation skills

Up until Assignment One, I would have said that I didn’t know how to be critical of something, at least not academically. I think that I have gotten the hang of it now. One thing I am struggling with is structure – with laying out my thoughts in a coherent manner. I am also struggling with the feeling that criticism and evaluation can go on forever, that there is no real “answer” to anything, just constant criticism and defence and recreation.

Communication

Communication is generally a strength of mine. I think that my communication skills have struggled slightly because of my lack of subject knowledge, but the skill is still there. I think that my communication will improve when I start to record more frequently what I am reading. I also need to work on my thought process and how to translate that into coherent communication.

Thoughts on “There are no visual media” by W.J.T. Mitchell

As part of my course pack from OCA I received The Visual Culture Reader. Up to now I have been unable, or maybe anxious about, starting it. I tried to start reading it the day I received it and it was much too difficult.

Chapter 1 is “There are no visual media” by W.J.T. Mitchell.

Much more simple than I had expected to understand, the article raises many questions that I have been considering lately outside of this course. I have been listening to a series of lectures by The Teaching Company called “The Great Ideas of Philosophy”. Several lectures that I listened to over the last week addressed the ideas of whether there is a material world or it is just a combination of sensations that we interpret through sensory organs. The eventual conclusion seemed to be that yes, there is a material world but that it is experienced by each person differently to some extent. Man is a material being, a material thing, which exists in a material world and experiences that world as a mental function through its sensory organs and it’s mental capacity to categorise experiences as good or bad, moral or immoral, safe or dangerous.

In addition to these lectures I have been reading Oliver Sacks “The Man who mistook his wife for a hat” which is a fascinating insight into the human neurological world and how – even if your sensory organs are intact and working correctly – the brains interpretation of the world can make it so different from one person to another.

When I consider these writings in conjunction with the article denouncing visual media, it really does make sense. If you, as an observer, were to use only your visual organs to interpret the world, you would be completely lost. Considering this against my first assignment on “the innocent eye” makes me question my response to the question. On one hand I understand the theory behind “the innocence of the eye” being useful in painting, I just cannot agree that it would produce anything engaging.

The artist puts themselves into their work -even when trying not to do so. As Mitchell says “seeing painting is seeing touching, seeing the hand gestures of the artist”. The world itself is not purely visual. Our day to day experiences are not purely visual; consider our constant mental narrative which makes sense of our world minute by minute, second by second. People with visual impairments experience the world and contribute to the world in a way that suggests their experience is not all that different from those with functional vision. To see a painting is to touch, by some extension that I cannot clearly describe, the painting itself. The eye can identify all of the media that was used – sketch lines, base colour, layering, brushstrokes, frustration, patience, recklessness and perfectionism. We see these parts of a painting without trying to. Yes, they are visually represented to us but they are experienced through a mixture of mental thought, drawing on previous experiences of touch, smell, taste etc.

An interesting quote from Marshall McLuhan (1994/1964) is placed in this article which says “the content of a medium is always an early medium”, and so the content of a painting is always a combination of multiple previous content; the artists experience, the way the artist saw their subject, the techniques they have learned and practised to be able to present this scene, their wishes for the outcome of the painting, their choice of surface, their preference of setting. On top of that there is the medium of paint itself – constructed by another anonymous person by various materials in order to represent a colour which was experienced by them, or not likely, was inferred upon them by their employer to mass produce pigments. Similar processes go into television, music, drawing, architecture and film. Manipulation of various media in order to reproduce a something based on the artists intentions, and then communicated to the observer who manipulates the situation all over again for their own understanding.

It really is a fascinating concept. My challenge to myself is to figure out how to incorporate this work into my own artwork. The phrases that sticks with me while I do this are “language enters painting” and “seeing painting is seeing touching”

References:

Mirzoeff, N. The Visual Culture Reader, “There are no visual media”, Routledge, 2013, Third Edition

Robinson, D. N.(release date 08/07/2013), The great ideas of philosophy, 2nd edition, narrated by: Robinson, Daniel N., available at http://www.audible.co.uk, ,Downloaded on 1 October 2018

Sacks, O. (release date 12/07/2018), The Man Who mistook his wife for a hat, narrated by: Jonathan Daivs, Oliver Sacks, available at http://www.audible.co.uk, Downloaded on 11 February 2019.

Finding time for work

At the recommendation of my tutor, I have been trying to find time for creating, as well as reading.

Today was a day to ease myself back in after quite a long break. I always find myself back with horses, so I went with something comfortable until I get back into the swing of things.

I keep thinking about perspective. It was part of assignment one and I feel I didn’t read enough on it. It played on my mind today while painting and I find the final piece looks better from a side angle. I wonder was this an unconscious decision? Or perhaps it is the perspective of viewing the painting as a photo of the final piece, rather than looking in person.

I find watercolours frustrating. The paper warps and the pigment is never strong enough. I used HB pencil, charcoal and then watercolour. The frame is unfortunately obvious as a late idea, I was thinking about how the worth of a painting is sometimes related to its setting.

Part 1 – Assignment 1

PART A

Look at the painting The Innocent Eye Test by Mark Tansey (below). The phrase ‘the innocence of the eye’ was coined by the British critic John Ruskin in 1857:

The whole technical power o painting depends on our recovery of what may be called the innocence of the eye; that is to say, a sort of childish perception of these flat stains of colour, merely as such, without consciousness of what they signify, as a blind man would see them if suddenly gifted with sight.

Consider what Ruskin is saying and give an interpretation of Tansey’s painting in light of this.

The Innocent Eye Test, Mark Tansey, 1981

When Ruskin wrote his piece on The Elements of Drawing in 1858, he was really pushing back against the grain of art teaching at that time. He mentions at the start of the series that he wishes to provide an alternative to the teaching practices which were popular at the time. The goal, it seemed to him, was to train students to emulate the work of “second-rate artists” or to further the rapid manufacture of designs (Ruskin, 1858, pp. 9, 10) . The idea of the “innocence of the eye” came from his insistence that the aim of teaching was not to reproduce other artists work, but to reproduce colours and shades as they appear to the eye – without the interference of the artists experience; innocent as a child or a blind man; thereby creating a unique and realistic piece.

The paragraph discussing the innocence of the eye begins with a philosophical statement which reads “the perception of solid form is entirely a matter of experience”. This theory that reality is constructed by our perception of our environment is discussed, many years later, by John R. Searle in The Construction of Social Reality. While there are over 100 years of thought between these two authors, similar and contrasting ideas about reality are discussed throughout both volumes.

Ruskin compares the required ability of a true artist to be similar to those of an infant, or a blind person who has just gained sight; where the world around them consists entirely of various shades of colour. Ruskin states very clearly that “the whole art of Painting consists merely in perceiving the shape and depth of [..] patches of colour, and putting patches of the same size depth and shape on canvas” (Ruskin, 1858, p. 23). In this way, Ruskin is stating that the world consists of intrinsic shapes, colours, physical composition, chemical composition. Searle also discusses this in The Construction of Social Reality, where he explains that intrinsic features of physical objects exist without the need for the attitude or need of an observer; a stone is a physical object whether one had ever known it to be a stone or not. Searle goes on to explain that “when we begin to specify further features that we might call intrinsic to nature and those features that exist relative to the intentionality of observers” (Searle, 1995, p. 9). Ruskin would, in my opinion, insist that a true Artist will paint the world exactly as he sees it at an intrinsic level, without the interference of the intentionality of the artist as an observer. This is what he meant when he described the “innocence of the eye”.

Interpretation of Tansey’s painting in light of this

Taking this into consideration, I think that Tansey’s painting is quite tongue-in-cheek. The painting itself is done in monochrome, rather than colour, which feels like an educational diagram rather than an aesthetic work of art. Within the painting itself we see men with clipboards and laboratory-like clothing, taking notes. We see that the men are looking at the cow, not at the painting. They have unveiled the painting from behind a curtain which now lies on the floor. The painting and the cow are within a museum or gallery setting, not outdoors which would be the natural environment for a cow. The painting of the straw bale in the background is, perhaps, there to encourage the cow to feel more comfortable – although the gilded frame would immediately remove that possibility.

The painting suggests to me that the men – representing perhaps the Institute of Art itself – are relying on the opinion, the reaction, of this cow to determine…what? Should the cow recognise this work of art, would that make the art realistic and therefore worthy of being made in the “innocent eye”? Is Tansey suggesting that the Institution of Art is relying on antiquated methods of judgement to ascribe the title of “Art” to a candidate work? Or, even more provocatively, is Tansey equating the Institute of Art to the cow itself? Danto wrote that art is “any artefact…which has had conferred upon it the status of candidate for appreciation by some person or persons acting on behalf of a certain social institution (the art world)” (Freeland, 2001, pp. 37, 38).

It is difficult to tell from the painting what the cow’s opinion of the painting is. She does appear to be looking at it, but there is no indication of her approval or not. This is not particularly surprising, when to take Searle’s work into account, it would seem that observers (presumably there is no discrimination against bovine observers) will not view the painting with an “innocent eye” but with all of their relational, intentional, historical observations categorising it as a “something”. Therefore, for the cow to see these marks on the canvas and relate them to her previous experience of other cows in nature, she would need to possess the cognitive ability to do so. I do not know a lot about cows, but perhaps this is not possible, particularly when the painting is placed in such an unsuitable environment.

I find myself returning again and again to the “test” word in the title. What is the test? What would be considered a pass? What are they testing for? My conclusion, time and again, is that these official-looking men are basing the worth of a piece – not yet framed, therefore not yet “deemed worthy” – on the reactions of an incompetent jury. I feel that this can only be a criticism of the Art World, of the religiosity of “works of art” and Museums, of the world of art criticism itself.

References:

Bibliography

Freeland, C., 2001. Art Theory A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Ruskin, J., 1858. The Elements of Drawing in Three letters to Beginners. New York: Wiley & Halsted.

Searle, J. R., 1995. The Construction of Social Reality. The Free Press ed. New York: Simon & Schuster.

PART B

What are the implications of saying perspective was invented, and what are the implications of saying it was discovered. Assess these two possibilities and give reasons for the one you believe is correct.

Make a list of things you know to be invented and things you know to be discovered. Consider what distinguishes them and where perspective is best placed. Try to be attentive to counter arguements.

Saying that perspective was either invented or discovered is subjective to the type of perspective you are discussing. The definition of perspective is two-fold; either the interpretation of the world as 3D where shapes and environments have physical depth, or the perspective of one’s attitudes towards, or way of seeing something. Both could be applicable to this question, considering the course that we are taking.

Saying that perspective in painting – the creation of depth, of 3D appearance – is discovered means that at some point it existed but had not been recognised or had not existed at all. A quick internet search on the topic brought me to a painting which is considered to have been the “first” painting to use Linear Perspective by Fillipo Brunelleshi in 1415 (see below). What strikes me as uncomfortable about the description of perspective as being discovered, is that perspective has always been part of human daily life. If perspective was only “discovered” at some point, it would mean that the artist suddenly realised that the world is three dimensional, and then decided he should include this important information in his work. That doesn’t sit right with me.  

Physical interpretation of perspective, depth, in our day to day lives; our observations as users of our environment, must be considered to have been discovered. Persepctive, in this manner, is something that every person discovers in childhood and learns to understand as an intrinsic part of their world. Items have depth; they take up space. An artist would be aware of this, and constantly attempt to include this detail in his work. Why then, did linear perspective only ‘appear’ in Brunelleshi’s picture, in 1415? “Discovered” is the wrong term, I think.

Perspective as invented makes more sense to me. It strikes me that since the artists before 1415 were naturally aware that the world is three dimensional, then they simply had not discovered a way to portray this in their work. Perspective is difficult, even for those of us well practiced in art creation, and it is not surprising that this technique was not just naturally available to all artists since the dawn of time. Perspective had to be understood to be re-created. And the invention of perspective, as a technique in art, would seem to me more likely.

If one considered “perspective” to mean how we see things, which I think is more likely given the course, the conversation is quite different.

Perspective as ones way of seeing, is invented in so far as we base our perceptions of the world on our experiences. One could experience grass for example, in a positive or negative manner, depending on experience. However, our perspective is also discovered in that it can be reflected upon in order to determine what values our perspective holds. One can discover that ones perspective on something is faulty, or incorrect in some way. Our perspective is also both invented and discovered when we talk about our perspective of art, in that some institutions create – invent – an experience of art in a particular way, to control our perspective of the art. For example, placing a piece of art behind special glass, in a room of it’s own, under special lighting, all creates a religious perspective for the viewer.

However, we can also now come to perspective on art by discovery in today’s world because of the internet. Our constant connectivity and the never ending database of works – without any context – means that our perspective of different art is discovered differently each time we view it in a different context. I found John Berger’s BBC series on Ways of Seeing (Ways of Seeing, 1972) to be very informative on the subjects of perspective, observation and the construction of the reality we live in. I have not quoted directly from the series, but the series itself informed my thoughts on this piece.

Things I know to be invented:

Money – does not exist naturally in the world without human involvement, was invented as a way to keep track of debts between people and to enshrine value on possessions.

Cameras – camera’s were invented by a human being in order to capture the visual experience of a moment and reproduce it.

Telephone – the telephone was invented to fulfil a human need to communicate with other humans despite distance.

Things I know to be discovered:

Various animals – animals existed in the world outside of human observation or categorisation, they exist intrinsically in their own right. Their discovery relates to the human observation and therefore categorisation of them, as they were found in nature.

Fire – fire exists without human observation. It exists in a physical sense whether we agree it does or not.

Stars / Planets – stars and planets existed before our observation of them – although their discovery was really only possible after the invention of the telescope.

References

Ways of Seeing. 1972. [Film] Directed by John Berger. UK: BBC.

Stepping into Philosophy

As I reach the end of Part 1 of the Understanding Visual Culture course, I find that I am reading more philosophy.

This week I am reading John Searle’s The Construction of Social Reality. It is absolutely fascinating. Yes, it is a difficult read. Not because it is written in a way that is difficult to understand, but because the subject matter is so shockingly obvious but so completely outside the realm of learning that I have been in until now.

Searle’s writing style is wonderfully engrossing. It is so simple to follow his train of thought. The explanations for each theory are true to life and easy to understand, so it really allows you to understand a theory rather than just learn it verbatim. I have found it impacting my day to day life more than ever in the last week, as I think about what, within my own life, is truly intrinsic and what is observer related.

Mark Tansey, The Innocent Eye Test, 1981

I am reading the book in order to get a better understanding of Mark Tansey’s The Innocent Eye Test, 1981. This painting forms the basis for the assignment in part one of the course. Once I read the question, I immediately knew what it was I wanted to express, but I couldn’t find the language to explain myself properly. Reading Searle’s work has really given me an insight into how to frame my thoughts on this piece and I am looking forward to finalising my draft essay later this week.

Understanding Visual Culture – the course

I am really glad that I started my degree with this course. When I first received my material from OCA and started reading the coursework, I was floored by how much I just didn’t understand. I really did feel overwhelmed; what if I didn’t have the education to dive into such a deep subject? What if I just couldn’t get it? I’m going to be honest and say there was a moment of panic.

However, having finally made it to the end of section 1 I can say that I am feeling much more comfortable. It is hard, it is sometimes like I don’t even know where to start, but all of this has led me to research more on my own initiative. I think if this course had been a face-to-face taught programme, it would have been very easy to just ask the questions of my tutor without doing the work myself; that would have been a waste really, because the work that I have put in so far has brought up my confidence level, has taught me to look for my own sources and not just use coursework, has encouraged me to verbalise my own thoughts on the work that I am doing, rather than just repeating information that has been given to me.

It remains to be seen whether I am actually on the right track with my research, but I am feeling more confident that I can take any recommendations that I receive on the chin and simply refocus myself should I be looking at the wrong area.

My next task is to start creating work in response to what I am reading and learning.

Exercise 1.5

Reflecting on Searle’s observation at the beginning of this chapter, how would you explain the difference between the construction of social reality and the social construction of reality?

The difference appears to me to be intent.

Social Reality as a concept is constructed – unintentionally – by how we perceive the world to be and what meaning we take from the experiences we have. I may have a very different social reality to you, but not by intent, simply by difference in perceptions. The signs or symbols that I am interpreting look the same to you as they do to me, but it is possible that they represent something very different.

When you consider the Social Construction of Reality, that refers to a more systematic, all inclusive experience, by which signs and symbols have an “agreed” definition and meaning. This is intentionally constructed through teaching, training, morals, religion etc. It is not something that we consider ourselves to have a choice in accepting or not – there are simply some things in life that “are known” and it is not our place to question these things.

Thoughts on Ways of Seeing Ep 2

I don’t know why but I wasn’t expecting the series to turn to nudes! I thought it would follow a more abstract theme on screens, reproductions etc.

What an interesting episode. I felt that it was very honest, and very relevant (despite being aired in 1972) to today’s culture with regard to nudes and nakedness and a woman’s “place”. I had not noticed before that nude painting models are always disengaged from the passion of the situation, that they were always looking to see the stranger looking at the picture. Always looking to see how they are being seen. That resonated with me on a personal level; constantly considering how I will be seen by others if I wear this thing, or dress that way, or do my hair that way etc. I had taken it to be a more modern phenomenon about self worth and self esteem, and that society is flooded with these “ideal” images of women that we feel compelled to emulate. I was actually quite surprised to realise that it was true during the Renaissance as well – and actually a little sad. I had previously thought of nude paintings as images of the “ideal” woman, admired for her beauty and poise and highly regarded. Liberated in some way, for appearing naked and unconcerned in their portraits. I can see now just how incorrect I was in that assumption. They were not regarded as even people, more as objects – gifts to be given to male friends or kept for male pleasure. They were deliberately staged to be less sexual for themselves, and more appealing for the voyeur.

I enjoyed the views of the other women that Mr. Berger met with to discuss his film, however one thing struck me as strange. At least two of the women said that they would not consider the models in the paintings to be realistic, to be anything close to their own body shape or size etc. I have always found myself relating to those paintings – especially because they are NOT what the current “social ideal” body for a woman is today. They are almost always voloptuous women with curves and with bellies and they were admired for their sturdy body shape. Now, I feel that the “ideal” for women is always smaller – the thinner the better, you don’t need to have breasts or hips, you definitely shouldn’t have any fat on your arms or stomach etc. So in this case, my viewpoint on these paintings – from my culture, my society, in 2019 – is so very different from the viewpoint of those women in 1972. My culture, my society, my location, my own personality and personal experiences have all shaped how I see these paintings in terms of negativity or positivity or both or neither. That is very interesting.

Some points that I noted during the episode:

  • “To be naked is to be onesself, to be nude is to be seen naked by others and yet not to be recognised for oneself”
  • Nudes are objects, not women, not people. They have no activity, no speech, not emotion, no passion. They are objects to be viewed.
  • “Nakedness is a sight for those who are dressed”
  • They are not naked “as they are” they are naked “as you see them”
  • In Oil painting, the second person who matters, the second person who matters most, is the stranger looking at the picture – they model almost always looks toward the viewer, even if there is a second person or lover in the scene.
  • The nudes have little hair. Hair was considered to be part of the sexualised woman, part of the woman’s passion. Therefore hair was removed and/or limited and tidy to remove any passion for the woman, while positioning the naked body in such a stance as to arouse the male.

LINK:

Thoughts on Ways of Seeing

I have been watching the Ways of Seeing series by John Berger online via YouTube (link below). This is a record of my thoughts during episode 1.

Firstly, I think that this subject really cements for me my thoughts on art and the Art World before starting this course. I have always enjoyed art and found my own meaning in it; but I always felt alienated from the “official” meanings behind the works. What makes it “real art”? What is different about printing a copy of a work of art compared to seeing the original? What makes art so expensive? Why is it so mysterious to the general public? What about “Instagram Art” – is it art? Or is it simply imagery? Can you become a “real Artist” nowadays?

I enjoyed the first episode of the programme. I felt quite a lot of varying emotions during it – I was really focusing, trying to understand as I listened, and found I needed to stop a couple of times to take notes on how the programme affected me and my thinking. A lot of the time, I felt – physically felt, in my chest – a sort of eurika moment. It was as if this man was speaking what I was feeling, but had no language to express before now.

Some key points that I have taken note of are:

  • “The painting on the wall, like the human eye, can only be in one place at one time”. This helps me to understand what I think is the basis of “ways of seeing”, that at one time you could only view that painting in the place it was, not reproduced online, not photographed, not travelling to different galleries. Even before Galleries it was intended to be viewed in a certain place at a certain time by certain people. The meaning intended by the artist is so incredibly lost in all this time. How could we know the intended meaning unless there are written records by the artist themselves? And how can we really take the meaning as it was intended if it is viewed in such a distance of time and culture? Is the modern world, bombarded with imagery constantly, removing the real meaning behind art (the classic, immense works by famous artists from the past) and art today (made for mass reproduction, mass consumption and how can that have a meaning?)
  • “Everything around the painting is part of it’s meaning”. This seems so obvious to me, and it hits upon a niggling problem I have had with art galleries and online art for a while now. Is there any real point in viewing paintings from hundreds of years ago, under special lighting, in special frames, in the wrong location (compared to where it was intended to be viewed). How can we understand that language? How can we decipher the real depth of a painting without its surroundings?
  • “People travel to it”. Original works of art were intended to be once off pieces with specific meanings and a specific location. If I had wanted to see the work, when it was created, I would have had to travel to it to see it myself. Now, the work can travel to me. It’s meaning can be manipulated along the way. I have no control over the situation of the image, really, because no matter what, it is not the original that I am viewing. There are no real “once off” works of art anymore. All art is reproduced in some way.
  • Art is no longer interesting because of it’s meaning, but because of it’s market value.
  • Because it has a market value and is reproducible, a “religiosity” was introduced. This was to substitute for what the paintings lost when the camera made them reproducible.
  • Artist’s meaning (e.g. religious worship) -> Gallery meaning (e.g. monetary value) -> reproduction meaning (e.g. a commodity) -> Consumer’s meaning at home (e.g. religious worship, social standing, decor etc.)
  • Mystification: this idea spoke loudly to me. Art is mystified. It is “out of reach” to those who don’t study it (and therefore pay money for the privilege of that information). What can be understood by anyone – even a child – from directly looking at a work of art, is veiled by the mysterious “history of…” texts that accompany it, the (difficult to read) explanations, criticisms, theories, placed upon it. These texts not only make the work more distant from us, but they also make it feel as though we should not be allowed to view it if we don’t understand it, and we can’t understand the work because we don’t understand the text that accompanies it. This is absolutely untrue.

I am looking forward to Episode 2.

LINK: