Monday, December 5, 2011

WHAT IS ART?


As a final project focus for ELC 698, and as an ongoing practice of lived philosophy, I pose the basic question:

WHAT IS ART?

As a result of my research, personal experiences and participation in class discussions throughout the Fall 2011 semester, I consistently return to notions of art as expressions and documentations of lived experience that reflect our common concerns as existential beings - as such, the human condition. Each of us connects to art and aesthetics in various and multiple ways: as art maker, viewer, listener and reflective thinker in our personal and shared life journeys. Sometimes the experience is consciously intentional and other times not. Nonetheless, I contend that art, in its many guises, infiltrates our lives. At best, living with artful mindfulness enables engagement with "the moment" on a more profound and visceral level, whether that moment be available in a traditional gallery or on a nature walk. I have experienced that kind of artful moment in both places this semester, realizing that, for me, the artful moment is always a philosophical moment in which I consider my place in the world relative to that which the artist or nature is expressing. From art galleries to "spoken art" poetry jams, to a modern dance workshop, lectures, presentations, readings and more, within each space of creativity emerges the subjectivity of both the artist and myself. The object is the unique vehicle through which and about which we express our humanity, and this is what interests me the most: the meanings that inspire and inform the creative undertaking and its processes.

Following is a quote from an MFA student at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (PAFA) that articulates the importance of meaning relative to his own art making and to his view of the world as an artist and as an existential being:
 
 0+0=
Out of no meaning, comes meaning.  The sensibility in which we live says that we are beings with inherent meaning and everything that we do, has some sort of importance.  This importance is man-made.  Man-made importance holds its place due to our being situated within the human condition and is that which we cannot step out of.  
Therefore, meaning is real because we hold true that we are real.  Out of nothing, comes everything. 
Light is nothingness
Importance is man-made
Nothing, everything

Reference: Jeremy Uglow, MFA 2012, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, from Thesis Draft, 2011

This post ends by circling back to the original question/thesis of this blog project:
"What is art?" And further, how is art linked to an existential, philosophically-driven life?  Students (possibly others) at an "Open House" event at Yale University responded to the classic question. For a great many of them, responses link art making to the human condition, the need to express meaning subjectively as well as to critique the culture of the times.
 Click on this link:
















EXISTENTAL PERSPECTIVES OF ART


Following are existential perspectives regarding art, as it relates to the human condition, from selected artists/writers, philosophers and educators, situated in specific geographic, social and political locations and corresponding to particular historical eras. The common thread for all is a concern with the human capability and need to find meaning in existence within an infinitely uncertain and contingent world. From the existentialist view, the exercise of freedom, choice and responsibility is uniquely available to the human being, as opposed to any other living creature in the world. An existential framework for living implies individual agency, along with the responsibility for engaging in the world with others. While some early existentialists focused on the absurd and nihilistic (life as lacking in meaning and value) aspects of mortal existence, paradoxically, I see the search for meaning as a universal passion among human beings, fundamental to their efforts to transcend notions of absurdity and submission to pessimism and oppression. Making meaning, especially through creative processes, is an act based in both hope and challenge. How each individual goes about searching for, actually creating, meaning is expressed in the choices she/he makes and the actions she/he takes to make a life. This is the hope, the challenge, the task and the responsibility of existential freedom.

To live life artfully, then, is to live with intentionality, mindfulness and integrity. To me, this connotes taking a philosophical approach to living that has to do with ongoing processes of self-creation, engagement with others and opening the imagination to new ideas and experiences: all for the purpose of making meaning of human existence, first as an individual and, ultimately, as a member of the local and global communities.

Art and aesthetics represent pathways to human expression, inter-communication and meaning making. Art can be expressed from a variety of inspirational spaces: personal and spiritual, as a medium for advocacy and social justice and as a chronicler or history. Certainly, art can represent the purest conceptions of beauty as perceived by the artist, as well as by the viewer. Whatever the inspirations and purposes behind the making and viewing of art, from an existential perspective, the creation of meaning, for self and in relation to others, is the elemental ingredient of our common humanity. While mortal life is finite, the process of meaning making is infinite, not only in a lifetime, but across cultures and history. Art can and does transcend mortal lives and the histories they create, linking generations of human beings in the universal human condition.

  •  William Shakespeare, on art as essential to the human condition:
From the very beginnings of art, when man, in the recesses of his dark cave first dipped a finger     in  the fire-soot and by the flickering light of a burning brand traced the outline of some beast of prey upon the wall and looked over his shoulder for the appreciation of his fellow troglodytes - art assumed its place, as the mirror reflecting our mutually shared human condition and acting in a manner that Hamlet (speaking to Polonius of his players) described as the abstracts and brief chronicles of the times. [1] (Shakespeare. 1855. p. 355.) 
Evans, J. (n.d.). ART AND THE TRUTH OF THE HUMAN CONDITION - JUD EVANS- ATHENAEUM LIBRARY OF PHILOSOPHY. EVANS EXPERIENTIALISM - INDEX - THE ATHENAEUMLIBRARY OF PHILOSOPHY. Retrieved December 4, 2011, from http://evans-experientialism.freewebspace.com/evans_art.htm
[1] Shakespeare. W. Hamlet. Complete Illustrated Shakespeare. 1851. Routledge, London

  • Friedrich Nietzsche:
Art is the proper task of life. 
Reference: http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/topics/topic_art3.html, Retrieved Dec. 4, 2011


  • Jean-Paul Sartre, on poetry as art and human history:
Every age has its own poetry; in every age the circumstances of history choose a nation, a race, a class to take up the torch by creating situations that can be expressed or transcended only through poetry. 
Reference: http://www.mindpleasures.com/Quotes/Philosophy/Sartre/Sartre2.shtml, Retrieved Dec. 4, 2011

  • Jean-Paul Sartre (1949), on the moral imperative inherent to the aesthetic imperative as seen through literature [and applicable to all the arts, I submit]:
And if I am given this world with its injustices, it is not so that I might contemplate them coldly, but that I might animate them with my indignation, that I might disclose them and create them with their nature as injustices, that is, as abuses to be suppressed. Thus, the writer’s universe will only reveal itself in all its depth to the examination, the admiration, and the indignation of the reader; and the generous love is a promise to change, and the admiration is a promise to imitate; although literature is one thing and morality quite a different one, at the heart of the aesthetic imperative we discern the moral imperative. (Sartre, pp. 62-63)
Reference: Sartre, J. (1949). Literature & existentialism. New York: Citadel Press.


  • Maxine Greene (2001), educator and philosopher, on the meaning of aesthetics and the experiential nature and meaning of art:
It is important to understand that "aesthetics" is the term used to single out a particular field in philosophy, one concerned about perception, sensation, imagination, and how they relate to knowing, understanding, and feeling about the world. For some, "aesthetics" has primarily to do with the kinds of experiences associated with reflective and conscious encounters with the arts. Or it may focus on the way in which a work of art can become an object of experience and the effect it then has in altering perspectives on nature, human beings, and moment-to-moment existence. "Aesthetic," of course, is an adjective used to describe or single out the mode of experience brought into being by encounters with works of art. (Greene, p. 5)
Reference: Greene, M. (2001). Variations on a blue guitar: the Lincoln Center Institute lectures on aesthetic education. New York: Teachers College Press.
  • Maxine Greene (1995), educator and philosopher, on human imagination:
Every one of us inhabits a humanly fabricated world, is mortal and can acknowledge that mortality, and can tell the story of what happens to him or her as he or she lives. Aware, then, on some level of the integrity and the coherence of what may seem to us to be a totally alien world in the person of another, we are called upon to use our imaginations to enter into that world, to discover how it looks and feels from the vantage point of the person whose world it is. That does not mean we approve it or even necessarily appreciate it. It does mean that we extend our experience sufficiently to grasp it as a human possibility. (Greene, p. 4)
Reference: Greene, M. (1995). Releasing the Imagination: Essays on Education, the Arts, and Social Change. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

  • Adrian Piper, artist and philosopher, critiquing Formalism in art / advocating Conceptualism as engagement of art with the world, embracing intellectual and political content. To me, this indicates an existential outlook that celebrates individual identity and the responsibility of art making to address social inequities and advocate for social justice:
… Piper cites LeWitt’s call to set the artistic idea against the art object that results from it, calling this "the end of formalism, the end of art for art’s sake as an autonomous realm independent of the world, because to mine this intellectual content we needed to draw on all those fields and areas that previously had been considered off limits: the social sciences, natural sciences, humanities, even the other arts." (Adrian Piper, as quoted in Bowles, 2011, p. 35)

Reference: Bowles, J. P. (2011). Adrian Piper: race, gender, and embodiment. Durham [N.C.: Duke University Press.

 
  • Jazz musician Herbie Hancock on art and aesthetics. Excerpt from an interview with SGI Quarterly: 
SGI Quarterly: Can you talk about what it means to live a creative life?
Herbie Hancock: At this point in my life, my primary focus is not on the art form that my career has been built around to date. What I focus on primarily is the real source--or the purpose--that my art form, music, is about. That is, life itself.
At the foundation of artistic expression is the very core of life. So what I'm finding is that the more I attempt to expand and develop my life, the greater the impact is on my music. Music becomes a tool for that expression. My focus is to practice this particular art form with the hope that ultimately it will be a catalyst in the listeners' appreciation of their own lives. My hope is not particularly that the audience will be inspired by my music and put me on a pedestal. That's not what it's about. I hope that somehow it triggers something within themselves where they feel that their life has more meaning, substance and inspiration. That they become more aware of something that is already in them.
Reference:  Gandhi, A. (n.d.). SGI Quarterly | The Art of Life. SGI Quarterly | Human Rights Education Today. Retrieved December 4, 2011, from http://www.sgiquarterly.org/feature2001Apr-1.html














EXISTENTIAL THEME: AUTOBIOGRAPHY

FEATURING TWO UNIQUELY DIFFERENT ARTISTS AND HUMAN BEINGS:
*IDENTITY *AUTHENTICITY *PURPOSE *CREATION

Adrian Piper: Artist / Philosopher

The artist as subject:




Larry Bissonnette: Autistic Person / Outsider Artist   Learn about this unique artist here: http://myclassiclifefilm.com/  
                                                              YouTube Video Preview

EXISTENTIAL THEME: BODY / SEXUALITY


All artwork in this section is original work, produced by Anna Kaplan, MFA candidate (2013) at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (PAFA) in Philadelphia.

 Click on the link for a series of paintings representing body image/weight issues from the perspective of the scale – “Weight Based Portraits”


 Click on the following link / two works under the heading “Ecstasy and Sexuality”

EXISTENTIAL THEME: CHRONICLERS OF HISTORY


The Huffington Post is featuring the following pieces written by cultural critic and essayist, G. Roger Denson. Links to Part 1 and Part 2 are posted below. In these articles, Denson traces the timelines of critical eras in history from existential, political, artistic perspectives. These pieces are extensive because they include images of paintings and photographs that document major moments in time from which, one must hope, we will recognize our common humanity and the significance of art in representing both the atrocities and the beauty of which human beings are capable.



Diego Rivera at MoMA Makes Us Ask, What Happened to the Radical Left in Art? (Part 1), 11/18/11


 

Political Art Timeline, 1945-1966: Postwar Art of the Left (Part 2), 12/3/2011




EXISTENTIAL THEME: SOCIAL JUSTICE


I came upon a journal article in Educational Studies (September-October 2011) that integrates qualitative research methods and photographic art to highlight contemporary social justice issues. In this case, the issue is community apathy toward homelessness in general, and the plight of one homeless woman, in particular. The article begins by acknowledging the work of journalists such as Jacob Riis (1849-1914) who chronicled the deplorable living conditions of tenement dwellers in New York City during the early twentieth century, along with the work of Lewis Hine (1874-1914) who photographed children working under abusive conditions in coal mines and factories. The authors of the article make the distinction between those early documentarians, whose photographic work, they claim, was more journalistic in approach, and the photography utilized in this piece as art making for the purpose of advancing social justice education.

Abstract for article:
This article describes the use of Photography and Oral History research methods as part of a collaborative research project on homelessness in Miami. Issues involving the use of documentary photography and oral history as a means of creating greater social awareness in the general public are explored, as well as broader issues of social justice. (Provenzo, p. 419)
Reference:  Provenzo, Jr., E. F., Ameen, E., Bengochea, A., Doorn, K., Pontier, R., & Sembiante, S. (2011). Photography and Oral History as a Means of Chronicling the Homeless in Miami: The StreetWays Project. Educational Studies, 47(5), 419-435. Photographs by Lewis Wilkinson, Independent Photographer and Documentarian


UNCG students can access the entire article, with enlarged photos, by clicking on the link and typing in your UNCG username and password:
http://www.tandfonline.com.libproxy.uncg.edu/doi/full/10.1080/00131946.2011.602151 









MY EXISTENTIAL JOURNEY OF ART: GRAPHIC NOVEL


GRAPHIC NOVEL: The Influencing Machine by Brooke Gladstone

Comments on the graphic novel, The Influencing Machine, written by Brooke Gladstone and illustrated by Josh Neufeld. For a graphic novel, the content is quite comprehensive, providing historical references from ancient times to the present regarding the impact of media on the people of a given culture and its era. She directly references key historical figures and events, including issues about freedom of the press, reporters and objectivity, political game-playing (manipulation of the truth) both in peace and wartime, etc. Contemporary media is especially scrutinized relative to the proliferation of the Internet, with commentary focused on both critics and proponents of mass information access, social networking, etc. The overall point, for me, is that with each generation and its prevailing cultural and technological innovations (especially in terms of communication), there have been accompanying benefits and disadvantages, along with the social/moral contexts that we, as human beings, must inevitably acknowledge and deliberate.

Marshall McLuhan said years ago, "The medium is the message." The medium of a culture influences/has the power to change the way people think and behave. From a historical perspective, think of culture and lifestyles/behaviors: pre-television / post-television. From a more contemporary perspective, think of culture and lifestyles/behaviors: pre-Internet / the Internet as the dominant medium of these times. Who is behind the creation and use of the medium at hand? Still people, I think, so we need to take responsibility for how and why we use it (as opposed to deny or negate its existence) and evaluate, individually and socially, the extent to which we incorporate it into our lives. Can we still make personal choices that go against the dominant, influencing machine should we wish to do so? In a similar vein, we might question how we view the broadcast news at home and from across the world --- do we accept everything we are told without question, or can we be critical? How it is presented, along with the amount of news presented to the public is a great part of the workings of the influencing machine.

There are scientists/philosophers who currently advocate for cybernetic technology, anticipating a not so distant future when humans will be implanted with devices that will render them capable of doing things, from the body so to speak, that we now do via computers. Critics of cybernetics fear the erosion of the existential, human condition; that humans of the future will be more robotic/less human.

How does "the influencing machine" of media figure into our humanity. Gladstone ends with the following (in bubble text, of course):
"I am generally a dark individual, but I think this is a great time to be alive" (p. 155).  > 
"Our limits are purely human" (p. 155) >
"Our enemies are not the digital bits that dance across our screens but the neural impulses that animate our lizard brains" (. 155) >
"We get the media we deserve" (p. 156).

MY EXISTENTIAL JOURNEY OF ART: ART EXHIBIT


ART EXHIBIT:  RELOCATIONS

On Friday, September 9, 2011, I visited an exhibition of paintings, photography, a video installation and an interactive installation, collectively presented under the title “Relocations,” at the Green Hill Center for North Carolina Art at the Cultural Arts Center, Greensboro.

My initial reactions center on two points: (1) the distinctive formats/media used to represent the theme of “relocation” and (2) the distinct, sometimes dissonant representations or conceptualizations of “the modern city” relative to the subjectivity of the viewer. It is noteworthy that these pieces represent global perspectives and artistic renderings ranging from the American South, to New York City, to Asia and beyond. In this regard, one person’s modern city, such as Fuquay-Varina (NC) as depicted in the works of Rachel Herrick, might be considered a countryside location according to the perceptions and perspectives of a viewer who identifies more intimately with New York (as shown in the photography by Jean-Christian Rostagni) or to a viewer familiar with the colorful and crowded cities of Asia, as represented in the brightly hued paintings of Keiko Genka. Overall, my response to this exhibition centers on making meaning relative to how human beings use, sometimes abuse and ultimately interact with their environments to construct communities and, ultimately, how these humanly constructed communities impact individual and collective identities or, on the other hand, possibly provoke a sense of alienation from a particular communal identity.

I isolate three artists for the purpose of illustrating my focus on the viewer’s subjectivity regarding her perception and interpretation of the following questions: What is the modern or urban city? How do I create personal identity and construct community identity in terms of my own location?
           
Rachel Herrick’s city, Fuquay Varina, North Carolina, is represented conceptually with traditional (almost iconic) buildings that represent small businesses seemingly typical of the American South that I, personally, associate with small towns: from a mattress store to a small convenience store that sells slushies. Interestingly, the titles of Herrick’s pieces, along with the actual wording incorporated within each piece, provide additional conceptual stimulation for the individual viewer in terms of analysis and interpretation of Herrick’s work.
           
Keiko Genka’s paintings depict very bustling and colorful modern cities that seem to represent Asia’s commercial/consumer progress. The bright acrylics are truly eye-catching. While very appealing visually, I interpret this brightness as also symbolizing a kind of contrived abundance within cities that are so highly populated and lacking in open spaces.
           
Rostagni’s photography captures the uniqueness of New York City as the (in my view) epitome of the modern city, an identity that cannot be obscured or lessened by the demise of the Twin Towers on September 11, 2011, the subject of one of his pieces. 










MY EXISTENTIAL JOURNEY OF ART: POETRY JAM




                                         Image:  http://www.everydaynodaysoff.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Slam-Poetry.jpg
 POETRY JAM

On Saturday, September 24, 2011, I attended the first hour of what is typically referred to as a “Poetry Jam,” sponsored and performed primarily by members of the Triad Poetry Meetup group.

Audience members and poets, alike, represented a broad cross-section of humanity in terms of gender, race, ethnicity and age, while the relaxed environment of the coffee house lent its informality to the intimacy of the program style and content. Clearly, the impact of the poetry could best be appreciated with active listening (print-outs of performed poems are not provided) and viewing because “spoken art” is both aural and visual, with each poet enacting the words, using her/his personal vocal style and emotive approach. I noted specific themes or lines from several poets’ performances as they resonated with me. The title of Alfred’s first poem, Crystal Ballerinas provides no initial hint of the poem’s anti-war theme. Bobby, exhibiting a rapper-like style of delivery, performed Glorious Poetry, a poem in which he celebrates the use of language, the history of words, freedom of personal expression, release of emotions and the quality of the poetic soul: “Poets are unique individuals” (Bobby, Sept. 24, 2011). Diane Engle, representing the “Writers of the Triad – Poetry Writers,” performed a poem titled Voice in the Night in which she advocates for social justice work, declaring that “change starts with the individual” (Engle, Sept. 24, 2011). A man identified as Ariel (uncertain of name/spelling) gave a strong performance of Mama Said, a poem in which he addresses the history of slavery and racism in America, the negative influence of the media over human minds and souls, and common child-rearing practices that condone violence (his mama taught him to hit back if someone hit him first). Amidst the cacophony of words, a particular line provoked clarity: “Let my poetry lay down love” (Ariel, Sept. 24, 2011). Later, Alfred performed another poem (I could not hear the title) in which he chides the U.S. educational system with the lines: “America, America, God shed his grace on thee, Sweet, sweet land of illiteracy” (Alfred, Sept. 24, 2011), calling for a resurrection of “the power of words.”

Before the advent of the printing press, poetry was typically recited aloud. Later, poetry took hold as a print medium. The Beat Generation of the 1950’s, including Allen Ginsburg, Jack Kerouac and William Burroughs, among others, brought spoken poetry back to its social orientation in New York City coffee houses, although the Beats primarily represented disaffected white males. The highly competitive “Poetry Slam” format arose in popularity in the 1980’s-1990’s. I see our local Poetry Jam as a grassroots initiative, extending an open invitation to all citizens, for the purpose of advancing social awareness/change and as a forum for self-expression and the exercise of democratic principles.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

MY EXISTENTIAL JOURNEY OF ART: WEEKEND IN BOONE, NC: OCTOBER 22- 23, 2011


There is seemingly no limit to the ways in which art can be imagined, represented and produced by human artists and by nature itself. I decided to use my weekend in the Boone, North Carolina area as a personally-inspired art adventure, exploring the “human/commercial” side of art and the art of nature: plants, streams, trees and animals with only traces of human intervention in their midst.
           
A visit to “The Cabin Store” provided opportunities for viewing/documenting a wide variety of folk art: from hand-made furniture pieces, to restored and stuffed dead animals, to Native dolls and other interesting pieces. My favorite art experience of the weekend was the nature hike during which I photographed the art inherent to the natural world. I later posted all my photos and captioned them with my reactions, ranging from thoughts about representations of art in terms of commodification, animal rights issues, the notion of freedom of expression and creation from the perspective of the human artist and the subjective reactions of viewers relative to those same issues. 

I believe that there is no limit to the ways in which individuals confront art in its various manifestations. At the same time, I contend that some people can only conceive of art in more traditional formats and settings (as in paintings, sculptures, other pieces typically associated with museums and galleries). Engaging in non-traditional locales and confronting different and, sometimes, controversial productions of art opens the imagination in wonderful, mysterious and, often, troubling ways --- always well worth the experience.

This was truly an existential experience for me in terms of creating my own art journey, engaging in a spiritual communion with nature and learning a bit more about my own creative inclinations; almost as if I was standing outside myself and observing my perceptions in the moment, then pondering my reactions to those perceptions. I truly believe that every confrontation with art, whether created by humans or nature itself, is an existential experience.


Abandoned Shed


A naturally found work of art.

MY EXISTENTIAL JOURNEY OF ART: DANCE


OBSERVATION: MASTER CLASS / MODERN DANCE AND THE BALLET DANCERS OF  DEGAS’ PAINTINGS

I was granted permission to observe a Master Dance class/workshop (modern dance) at the Greensboro Cultural Arts Center on Saturday, November 5, 2011. During the same week, I happened upon an NPR article about an exhibition of the works of Degas, titled “Degas's Dancers at the Barre: Point and Counterpoint” [http://www.phillipscollection.org/exhibitions/degas/index.aspx]. The Degas exhibition, at the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., began October 1, 2011 and will run through January 8, 2012.

After the Master Class observation, I re-read the article about the Degas exhibition. As a result, themes from both coalesced for me: a perspective of dance as art for the ultimate purpose of performance -- and -- dance as embodied art expressed from a space of personal passion and practice. The opportunity to observe the master class was a microscope into real-life dance practice. In particular, I felt privileged to watch dance being created and expressed in the moment, with a continual evolution of movements relative to the motions of the human body: dancers achieving (or not) the proper spin: executing (or not) a perfectly pointed toe; maintaining (or not) the proper rounding of arms.

Similarly, as highlighted in the NPR piece, the content of Degas’ paintings depict the practice of ballet dancers (as opposed to formal performance) because he was more captivated by the daily lives of dancers than any singular performance. I internalized these two renditions of dance practice as art in the making, as daily life for the dancer as art maker. Further, the experience of observing an actual dance practice, conducted by a professional dancer, and the visual themes represented by Degas’ paintings of ballet dancers in the studio provide spaces for sensory and interpretive experiences, on the part of the viewer, pertaining to aspects of the creative process at work.

I was aware of the existential significance for each dancer in the workshop as (1) an individual experience of self as artist/dancer and (2) the group experience as a dancer among peers, creating a community of dancers.

Following is a quote from the NPR article about Degas’ paintings of ballet dancers in practice:
Degas' art emerged from these privileged, private moments. In fact, he rarely showed ballerinas in performance. Instead, they stretch at barres, pull up a stocking, or bend to adjust a satin toe shoe ribbon. In their pretty tutus and sashes, they are in the process of making art — that's the subject of Degas' obsession.
           
Another interesting point about the Degas exhibition is the fact that it includes an area where two mirrors and a real ballet barre are mounted for actual use by visitors. According to the article, a visiting dancer could not resist stretching on the barre. This scenario illustrates, for me, the personal passion that I believe motivates the authentic artist. Doing her art is part of who she is and, thus, an essential part of her self-expression and her existential authenticity.

MY EXISTENTIAL JOURNEY OF ART: LECTURE ON ART AS AUTOBIOGRAPHY


LECTURE BY MARY MATHEWS GEDO:   “ART AS AUTOBIOGRAPHY” ROGER BROWN and ED PASCHKE
                                Image: http://images.artnet.com/images_US/magazine/features/spivy/spivy6-4-08-12.jpg
Roger Brown, Artist

I attended a lecture at the Weatherspoon Art Museum Friday evening, November 18, 2011, by art historian Mary Mathews Gedo (Ph.D. in art history from Northwestern University, 1972). Originally trained as a child psychologist, Gedo applies her psychoanalytic orientation to her critique of individual works of art and the artists themselves. She has authored/edited numerous works, including Picasso: Art as Autobiography (1982); Looking at Art form the Inside Out: The Psychoiconographic Approach to Modern Art (Contemporary Artists and their Critics (1994); Monet and His Muse: Camille Monet in the Artist's Life. (2010, hardcover); and Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Art, V. 3 (1988, hardcover), Mary M. Gedo (editor).

Gedo’s lecture focused on Chicago Imagists Roger Brown (1941-1997) and Ed Paschke (1939-2004).
The “Chicago Imagists” were a group of representational artists closely associated with the School of the Art Institute of Chicago during the 1960’s and 1970’s. Both Brown and Paschke graduated from the Art Institute. This Chicago-based movement set itself apart from the concurrent New York art scene of Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art, purposefully distancing itself from classically-educated/trained artists. Outsider and folk artists (untrained artists) were also incorporated into this group.

Gedo’s lecture, supplemented by visual representations of the artists’ work, left me wanting to know more about Paschke and Brown. I even wanted to understand Gedo better as a trained psychoanalyst and art historian. Overall, my primary insights and thoughts have to do with understanding art as representative not only of a particular image or concept, but of the person behind that image, the artist herself/himself. I always find myself drawn to the psychological motivations behind the visual representations because, in my mind, it is not possible to separate the artist’s subjectivity from the object. With my limited exposure to visual art and art theory, and with my interest in the great existential questions, I seem to impose a “meaning of life” orientation into my art experience. Is it possible that in doing so, I am undermining the purity of the visual experience itself?  I don’t know --- I am caught up in the dynamics of subjectivity and objectivity – relative to both the artist and the viewer; the personal, social and political contexts that influence lives. And what about the artist as creator and viewer of her own work? Pondering the individual experience of art as a dynamic life experience for both artist and viewer ……..

Finally, from the standpoint of personal taste, I appreciate the art of the Chicago Imagists as very forceful and thought-provoking, actually visceral in its capacity to affect strong responses. It is not the kind of art that I would want in my personal surroundings. In a way, this makes the “art as autobiography” component even more compelling regarding these particular artists.

Ed Paschke:

Roger Brown:

MY EXISTENTIAL JOURNEY OF ART: FINAL THOUGHTS



 Image: http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://takebigbites.files.wordpress.com/2008/12/what-is-art.jpg&imgrefurl=http://takebigbites.wordpress.com/tag/nina-katchadourian/&h=305&w=449&sz=25&tbnid=hfx4xhAir41DlM:&tbnh=88&tbnw=130&zoom=1&docid=_aZmp7IFjpCmlM&sa=X&ei=4J3dTv65NMK4tgeQqOzlBQ&ved=0CEsQ9QEwCg&dur=863

FINAL THOUGHTS:
 I end by returning to the beginning with my overarching question:

WHAT IS ART? 

And I answer based on my existential journey of art and the meanings I have created from it:
·      It is everywhere.
·      It is internal and external to our beings.
·      It is individual and communal
·      It is expression and communication.
·      It is communion and spirituality.
·      It is contemplative and gentle.
·      It is compelling and visceral.
·      It is light and it is dark.
·      It is autobiographical.
·      It is embodiment.
·      It is history.
·      It is social justice.
·      It is passion.
·      It is work, and it is play.
·      It must exist because we exist.

Art, in all its manifestations and representations, is how we humans try to make meaning out of the beautiful, the bleak, the ordinary and the extraordinary experiences of living in an uncertain and contingent world.