“What is the significance of modern nonobjective art? Are the old aesthetic concepts with which we used to try and understand the nature of art still valid today? Many outstanding representatives of modern art emphatically reject the pictorial expectations with which we approach it. Such art generally tends to produce an explicit shock effect upon us. How can we explain the new stance taken by the painter who repudiates all our previous traditions and expectations? How are we to respond to the challenge of this new art?
There are many skeptics who believe abstract painting to be nothing more than a fashion and who like to regard the art business as ultimately responsible for its success. But we have only to take a look at the other related arts to realize that the root of the matter lies much deeper than this. For we are faced with a genuine revolution in modern art that began shortly before the First World War. We see the simultaneous emergence of so-called atonal music-an idea that sounds as paradoxical as that of nonobjective painting. At the same time we also see-in Proust and Joyce, for example-the disappearance of the naïve, omniscient narrator who observes events hidden to others and lends them epic expression. In lyric poetry we hear a new voice that interrupts and inhibits the familiar flow of melodic language and eventually turns to experimentation with quite new formal principles. Finally, something rather similar makes itself felt in drama as well-less so here than elsewhere perhaps, but undeniably perceptible all the same-with the repudiation of realistic staging and its naturalistic psychology and the deliberate rejection of theatrical illusion in Brecht’s new epic theater.
Of course, I do not think that a consideration of the other related arts is sufficient to explain the revolutionary process that has taken place in modern painting. This process still retains an aspect of arbitrariness and an obsessive love of experimentation, although it is quite different from the kind of experimental method that first arose in the natural sciences. For there, an experiment represents a question that we deliberately put to nature so that she reveals her secrets to us. As far as painting is concerned, there is no question of conducting experiments in order to obtain the desired results. Here, experimentation finds adequate fulfillment in itself, as it were, since the experiment itself is the sole outcome. How can we come to terms intellectually with an art like this, which rejects any chance of understanding it in the traditional way.
First, we should not take the self-interpretation of the artist too seriously. We are not speaking against artists when we say this, but rather for them, since the claim implies that they must create in their own artistic medium. If an artist could express what he has to say in words, he would not wish to create and would not need to give form to his ideas. At the same time, it is inevitable that language, the universal communicative element that supports and holds together our human community, constantly awakens in the artist a need to communicate and express himself in words, to interpret what he is doing, and to explain himself to others. And, as we might expect, the artist thereby comes to depend on those who specialize in interpretation, such as aestheticians, philosophers, and all kinds of writers an art. If, like Arnold Gehlen, we take a work like Kahnweiler’s important masterly book on Juan Gris to represent the relationship between philosophy and art (and Kahnweiler is an excellent contemporary example), then we fail to see that here too the owl of Minerva only begins its flight with the falling of dusk. Kahnweiler’s subtle investigations represent the inspiration of the interpreter rather than that of the creator” (Gadamer 1998:92-93).
Gadamer, Hans-George
1998[1986] The Relevance of the Beautiful: And Other Essays. Robert Bernasconi, ed. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
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