Friday, April 29, 2011
Rivers Johnson - Is Beauty Universal?
Rivers Johnson - Sublime
Most people don't use the term sublime the way that it was originally intended, or when they do it's usually on accident. The term is meant to describe something beyond your ability to deal with, something so grand that just realizing its existence puts you at a loss. Sometimes sublime means something scary. Not scary like a-man-coming-at-you-with-a-knife scary, but scary in the way that the unknowable is scary. Like the way that the vastness of the universe is scary. Not scary in a bad way, but scary nonetheless. Scary can be beautiful. Never be afraid to be afraid.
Rivers Johnson - Nietzsche's Apollo and Dionysus
What is sad is that people don't recognize the connectedness of these two things. The scientific study of a leaf should not simply inform you of the leaf's function, but also of it's beauty. Next time you examine a leaf closely think of how beautiful the idea of a leaf is and appreciate the wonder of nature you hold in your hands.
Rivers Johnson - Schopenhauer's Escape From Will
"I'm not upset, just confused/And it's so tough/I can't relate to this world/I'm not bored enough/Watch out/The music will complete the change in you"
Escape from this world, music changing the listener, sounds something like what Schopenhauer is talking about, doesn't it?
Rivers Johnson - Was Plato Right About Art Being Imitation?
Jackson Pollack's work is world renowned and generally accepted to be art. But his art certainly doesn't fit into Plato's view of art as imitation of real life. So either Pollack's work cannot be art or Plato was wrong. Thoughts?
Rivers Johnson - Audience Involvement
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Hank Harrison - Sport as a form of Art
Imagine a field of 22 men, each facing off with a man of the opposite team. That means eleven different little battles being fought or one purpose: to move the ball downfield. A play, for example, that calls for a deep pass down the field is something that requires a massive amount of coordination and determination. The quarterback snaps the ball and the linemen each block their man and provide a pocket for the quarterback to stand in. The receivers sprint downfield, executing cuts and dodges in order to run their rout to perfection. Just when the quarterback sees an open man, a defensive end comes barreling through the offensive line at the QB's blindside like a freight train through a tunnel on track for a collision. Just in time, the running back picks up the block and gives the QB another two tenths of a second... just long enough to launch the ball 40 yards down field where he thinks the receiver is going to be. The receiver has to find a way to break from his defender and make his way to the ball flying through mid air. Using all the energy he has at his disposal, he churns his legs just a little faster and leaves the defender behind. He snatches the ball from the air with outstretched hands and falls into the endzone...
Or, maybe the quarterback gets laid out at the start of the play. Such is football, such is sports, and such is the reason (in my view) that a completed deep pass in football is one of the most beautiful things in sports. It is perfect coordination and adaptive ability between eleven men doing their part to achieve the same goal.
Hank Harrison - Art as an Escape
Nietzsche holds that there are two main kinds of art: Apolline art and Dionysiac art. The former is designed mostly as this kind of escape. It is a dream world that keeps the terrors of life at bay and allows us as human beings to find some kind of superficial peace while we wait to die. Dionysiac art, on the other hand, is art that absolutely intoxicates us. It is Subliminal art, as Schopenhauer might have said. It is the feeling we get when were in the middle of a huge singing crows at a rock concert. We allow ourselves to be totally taken over by and directed by it. Now thats an escape, and its another reason why I believe music to be the highest form of art.
Hank Harrison - Heidegger
My favorite element of Heidegger's is that he distinguishes art from other objects produced. He says that an object proclaims its purpose or function whereas art, on the other hand, proclaims its existence. Art exists! Its beautiful! Job done! A hammer, on the other hand, is not really worth anything until it is used. Maybe a hammer functions "beautifully," but a piece of art IS beautiful as it is.
Hank Harrison - Schopenhauer
I think this says a great deal in favor of Schopenhauer's intellectual ability. Unlike Hume, who I believe is restrained by his own hypothesis, Schopenhauer is open minded enough to learn from the thinkers that came before him and apply their rational to his own. Unfortunately, his outlook on life is totally gloomy, but at least he wasn't closed minded.
Hank Harrison - Kant
Thus, physics and chemistry and mathematics are only tools we can use to further process what we detect in reality, not rules to which reality must adhere.
Hank Harrison - Hume
Hank Harrison - On my roof
Hank Harrison - My Laptop
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Rachel Worthington: "Nature" is What We See
"Nature" is what we see --
The Hill -- the Afternoon --
Squirrel -- Eclipse -- the Bumble bee --
Nay -- Nature is Heaven --
Nature is what we hear --
The Bobolink -- the Sea --
Thunder -- the Cricket --
Nay -- Nature is Harmony --
Nature is what we know --
Yet have no art to say --
So impotent Our Wisdom is
To her Simplicity.
- Emily Dickenson
In this poem, Dickenson is presenting to the reader her experience with the presence of God through his works in nature. She contemplates on nature and uses each example of it as a way to communicate how humans are inherantly one with it. The hill, bumble bee, sea, eclipse and soforth are examples of nature that humans hear, see and know; however, it is the meaning that the objects have is where one finds the divinity with in them. By discovering the beauty and meaning behind nature, one begins to understand theirself in relation to nature. Dickenson speaks of harmony between the self, nature and the Divine. Using a phenomenological approach, she attempts to represent the difference between things we simply observe with our senses with the things we engage our senses into. Lines 9 and 10 express how we know nature because we are of it, but we can only try to recreate the feeling of unity with it through art. She illudes to the notion that one can find themselves when they look for the self in nature.
Baker, Abu, and M. S. Ahmad. "Delving into the Mysteries of Dickinson's "'Nature' Is What We See"/ETUDES APPROFONDIES SUR LES MYSTÈRES DE "'NATURE' EST CE QUE NOUS VOYONS" DE DICKINSON - This Article Is an Attempt to Decipher the Meaning of Emily Dickinson's Poem 668 "'Nature' Is... - Canadian Social Science." Internet FAQ Archives - Online Education - Faqs.org. Canadian Social Science, 1 Nov. 2010. Web. Apr. 2011.
Rachel Worthington: Religion and Art
Plate, S. Brent. Religion, Art, and Visual Culture: a Cross-cultural Reader. New York: Palgrave, 2002. Print.
Sean Meslar- KPAX
Rachel Worthington: A Song in the Breeze
It is the mountains on the horizon.
No matter where you look you can't see on.
Wonder farther through the valley,
In search for this Blessed One.
As your feet collect the dust from
The wreckage of the age of time,
In yourself you'll finally find it:
A light for the blind,
On all it shines,
You will find,
In Dying 1,000 times.
As a voice whispers so softly,
you wonder if it's He or you or me.
And it's singing of the wisdom,
as the notes float on the breeze.
It's fleeting fast, you won't forget it
because it rests within our core.
You're getting closer to the One from
which all beauty was born.
Take a breath, detach and listen
and soon the world will go
and the wind will blow
then you'll know
we're all, mono-soul.
Rachel Worthington: The Cosmic Dance of Shiva
Cosmic Dance of Shiva: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5hO8YFroLI&feature=related
This video is of an Indian girl dancing the Cosmic Dance of Shiva. Every movement of her body was a symbolic for the power and worship of Shiva. The third eye symbol on the girl's forehead is representative of the Shiva, both as the Destroyer and the Creator. Her movements are reenactments of the dance of the universe, as it continually is destroyed, only to be re-created again by Brahman. The placement of her fingertips in parts of the dance shaped the sacred syllable, OM, which symbolizes the beginning and the end. The purpose of the dance is to bring about a spiritual energy that exists in all of nature and the cosmos. The beauty and grace of the dancer is derived in the beauty and divinity found in nature.
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Brandon Ferry - Dance and Philosophy
Brandon Ferry - Ecstasy
Schopenhauer and Music
Nineteenth century German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer once said that “the effect of music is so very much more powerful and penetrating than is that of the other arts, for others speak only of the shadow, but music: of the essence.” Schopenhauer’s philosophy was a groundbreaking, albeit a complex one. He viewed music as a unique kind of revelation, derived from the world of experience, also known as the phenomenal world. He believed that the “inner nature” of all things was present in individual experiences and he characterized their existence as “the will." Viewing Schopenhauer’s ideals in relation to music with a cultural vibe allows the listener to attain a great understanding of how to listen to a song and its lyrics.
Sarah Firth, Hegel: On the Arts
Brandon Ferry - Everyday Things Seen as Art
Brandon Ferry - Dance & Religion
Sarah Firth, Aristotle in ‘The Nature of Art’
When referring to dance, Aristotle speaks of “mimesis in the medium of rhythm.” My interpretation of this is that a dance is representing an emotion, not to imitate it, but to embody it and bring forth this emotion in the viewer’s eyes.
My impression when reading Aristotle is that, like Plato he sees art as an attempt to cop reality, but unlike his teacher, he believes that art has potential to enhance and enlighten the viewers experience of the things that are represented in art.
Brandon Ferry - Graffiti
After reading through some news articles, I found it very interesting to come across the debate of the value of graffiti. Many of these news stories labeled this form of street art as not artistic and undeserving to even be considered being placed in a museum. I disagree wholeheartedly, and although some graffiti is vandalism in the truest sense, a lot of graffiti is done with the artist trying to say something worthwhile about their own personal beliefs and values. In many cases, graffiti is utilized as a marketing technique to lure in customers and attract business. I find a good deal of graffiti as worthwhile and extremely interesting art, with true passion lying just between the lines of spray paint. As we keep continue trying to find ways to label what art is, I think if a piece of "art" can send a message to a viewer, then it has accomplished its job in a sense.
Brandon Ferry - Film as Art
Being a film studies minor, I always see filmmaking as true art in every essence of the word. Not only does every little aspect in the creation of a film (writing, directing, cinematography, acting) all qualify as art, but all together it is one big piece of art. Some films exemplify more artistic merit and value than others, but when a film is crafted with such reverence to good filmmaking, the viewer cannot do anything but respect the great film that they have seen. The above movie still from Slumdog Millionaire can be seen as a piece of art taken out of context of the movie or it can be a testament to the artform of the movie itself. Either way, a picture says a 1,000 words, while a film can say much, much more.
Brandon Ferry - Body Art & Trauma
Brandon Ferry - Blurry Photographs
Another outside reading which I wanted to bring attention to is an article entitled Blurred Images Put Ideas in Focus by Philip Douglis which discussed how blurry photos can still be regarded as art. It gives a great deal of reverence to the idea that art is in the eye of the beholder and different meanings for each viewer can lead to a different encounter with an art form. This blurry photo for instance can be interpreted by the viewer in many different ways, whether that be seeing the tree as the point of focus or how the lighting obscures the true time of the day. Interpretations are very subjective and in this case I don't know how else to label a blurry photograph than as art in its truest sense.
Brandon Ferry - Culture & Art Discrimination
Diverse Populations which argued that the oppressed not being able to think for themselves in relation to culture, art, and politics. Those who disregard the world and world events around them and do not participate in our society’s voting procedure do not think for themselves and never truly advance through any ranks of the country’s economic statues. Although this is a very vague argument attributed to Ashe, I see some inherent truths in it. The oppressed’s future is many times regulated by the oppressor, but one is not strictly confined to a future of being powerless. Culturing oneself with art and various religions is necessary in order to properly view the world with great subjectivity.
Sarah Firth, Kemal’s Aesthetic Judgments and Idealism.
My observation is that Kemal contradicts Hume by saying it is not an agreed understanding that establishes an object as art, but actual physical qualities that determine art to be art. My understanding of Kemal statements is he asserts that art does not have to be pleasurable to be beautiful. I would argue that the essence of beauty is creating some sort of pleasure whether it is the pleasure of an unfamiliar feeling, the pleasure of being in awe or surprise, or the pleasure of a revelation derived indirectly from the beauty. However, not all art must be beautiful.
Sarah Firth, The Artist’s Intentions
“My Art is no art without my mind's simplicity. My Art does not want to subscribe to the view that unhappiness commands the world. When I paint or draw, I keep my mind's thought-garden completely free of self-doubt-weeds. My Art is the hide-and-seek between my soul's illumining smiles and my heart's streaming tears. The Artist in me has three faithful, sleepless and self-giving friends: a newness-eye, a oneness-heart and a fullness-life. The heart of my Art and the heart of a child are extremely fond of each other. They love each other deeply; they need each other constantly; they are interdependent, sleeplessly. My mind says that anything I do is too insignificant because I am wanting in qualification. Needless to say, this includes my Artwork. My heart says that anything I do is too significant because the God-Touch is always there. Needless to say, this includes my Artwork. The moment I start painting, I clearly see my soul-meditation is blessingfully clasping my heart-aspiration-flames. First things first: the Artist in me, before embarking on his Artwork, invariably catches his heart's aspiration-express. True, in my Art I want to see the face of earth's beauty. But I want to see the heart of Heaven's Divinity more, infinitely more.”
(http://www.srichinmoypoetry.com/poems_quote/poems_about_art/)
I read through this poem and to me what the artist is trying to say is that he has these entities and feelings and this love inside of his heart and inside of his soul. He wants to bring these things out in to reality so he can see them and marvel at them and share them with the world and art allows him to do that. In the process of doing so his art also filters out his fears and his self doubt and takes him out of the negative places in his heart. The art that comes from inside him gives him hope and fulfillment in a way that external things do not. I believe these feelings are synonymous with the experiences of many artists and illustrate the purpose of many artists’ creations. The artist is seeking completion from his art and desires to communicate what is in his soul.
Eric Shulman on Students Adapting to CNU
Brandon Ferry - Buddhism
After reading the outside reading article Listening to the Buddha's Own Words: Direct Participation as a Principle of the Teachings of the Buddha, I saw that the main theme prevalent in the article was that more studies into the religious and spiritual sides of communication are needed by those practicing the faith. Direct participation with the religious art of Buddhism are seen as a direct communication with the Buddha himself and with greater understanding of this religion, we can strive to see beauty in all forms of benign religious practices. being from a Christian background, I personally see Buddhism as an extremely deep religion that allows one to get more in touch with their artistic and spiritual sides.
Brandon Ferry - Hawaii's Culture & Religion
As an outside reading/documentary, I chose the PBS film Hawaii's Last Queen as an interesting source to analyze. Christianity played a large part in forever influencing Hawaiian culture and the spread of this religion even altered Queen Lili’uokalani’s identity and values since she grew up with its prevalence in her own society. I personally can see how Christianity could influence the natives so much, since I have attended Catholic school for a good portion of my own education. I can imagine that scare tactics were used by the missionaries in order to manipulate the Hawaiian people, especially those at such a young age. Although I saw great benefit in attending Catholic school as a kid, I constantly considered the ramifications of my daily actions and was scared whether I would go to Hell because an authority figure made me fearful if I ever went against religious rules and doctrine. I believe that fear can be a powerful tool and I assume that the missionaries used it to become authority figures to the natives, at least in religious functions at first.
Hawaii's Last Queen. PBS Documentaries. 2007.
Brandon Ferry - Hoover Dam Photo
This seemingly ordinary photograph of the Hoover Dam may appear on the surface to be an innocuous photo of one of America's most treasured landmarks, but when the background of its existence is taken into account, it becomes all the more breathtaking. Standing 890-feet above the Colorado river, the Hoover Dam provides hydroelectricity to over a million people as well as providing water to 20 million residents of Western states. This particular photo, with the subtle colors of the dam contrasting the dark blue water adjacent to it, speaks volumes to me with an incredible amount of beauty and veracity. Although man is responsible for the construction of the dam, the natural elements of its reasons for existence in all their glory make me value the simple act of snapping this picture from an aerial view.
Brandon Ferry - BP oil spill martini
Defining beauty is sometimes a rather challenging task, since the classic phrase "beauty is in the eye of the beholder" seems to hold an incredible weight of truth. After I came across this photo of a martini inspired by the tragic BP oil spill, I had mixed feelings regarding its true beauty. At first, it seems as if it is a disrespectful "tribute" to the tragedy that glued Americans to their tv sets for months, but after researching its origins, all proceeds from the drink will go directly to Greater New Orleans Foundation's Gulf Coast Oil Spill Fund. With this fact in mind, the image of this drink and the intentions behind it invest a great deal in true beauty after a unspeakable disaster.
Link to story & photograph: http://www.baynews9.com/article/news/2010/august/140603/Anna-Maria-Island-bar-creates-BP-martini
Brandon Ferry - Underground "Mail Rail" Photographs
Through simply reading through the top stories at yahoo.com, I stumbled upon a crop of beautifully fascinating photographs of an abandoned post office railway in London. Constructed in the 1920's, as an elaborate way to shuttle mail back and forth, this "mail rail" used intricate underground tunnels to great use. With the discovery of the mail rail, photographers jumped at the opportunity to visually document the cold, industrial-like beauty of a relic from our American past. Viewing these photos, I felt as if I was experiencing an abandoned past, ripe with disregarded potential. The photos themselves survive along with the original mail rail as pieces of a forgotten time in American history.
Link to photos: http://www.silentuk.com/?p=2792
Sarah Firth, On Hume’s Standard of Taste
I agree with Hume that there could be some qualities that most of the world considers beautiful. However, I do not believe that any quality is universally beautiful. There is no one feature that transcends time and culture and is ultimately beautiful in every human beings eyes.
I agree with the idea that all sentiments are right because a sentiment is only in reference to itself: a person’s feelings. However, I believe any determination or understanding can become truth whether it has always been truth or not. This is because understandings are concepts and concepts only exist in the mind. The only people who can confirm these concepts to be true are the people who think them. Therefore, if a group of people understand something to be true then the concept is true, and so becomes a part of reality to the individuals whose truth it is. If an understanding is disproven to an individual who once thought it was true, then it is no longer an understanding. An example of this is the popular practice of blood letting as a cure all for illnesses in medieval Europe. Though modern medicine has disproven its effectiveness, it still stands that the blood letting technique was understood to be a true multipurpose medicine in those times.
Eric Huggins - Art as Cognition, Aristotle
Unlike Plato, Aristotle sees art (including music, dance, literature, painting, and sculpture) as representational. He claims that we see art as pleasurable in the sense of the virtue in which it is represented. So when you view something that looks very aesthetically pleasing, and you can’t understand why, this is a good explanation. I can understand how a painting, or a sculpture is representational; but what about music? Music without lyrics is nothing more than tones, strung together in melody and sometimes harmony to produce a coordinated noise that we find pleasing. Can it represent the pain of a wronged lover, or the joy of a new season? How do we distinguish between these? Beauty is certainly in the eye (or ear) of the beholder, especially when it comes to music.
When it comes to poetry, or literature produced in a play or opera, Aristotle argues that a more successful tragedy has a wronged character that an audience can identify with. This can explain why women can relate to stories about a woman being wronged by a man and thus the phrase, “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned,” came from. Also, this would explain why men relate to a story about a man who tragically loses his family and seeks vengeance.
It’s amazing how each philosopher makes a legitimate case for their view of art. Beauty is certainly in the eye of the beholder, but how do we determine what art is more beautiful than another? When I have kids, my little girls’ drawing of her and her daddy – to me – is going to be so much more beautiful than any Monet or Picasso. Maybe there is something there…
Rachel Worthington: Art and the Divine
Sarah Firth, Beautiful Companionship
Sarah Firth, The Cupid and Psyche Syndrome
In class we had a discussion about the story of Cupid and Psyche. The story goes that the most beautiful princess in the land was said to be more beautiful then The goddess of beauty her self, Aphrodite. This rumor angers Aphrodite so she sends her son, Cupid, to go make Pshyche fall in love with the ugliest beast in the land. In the process of doing this task Cupid pricks himself on one of his love arrows and falls instantly in love with Psyche. He then whisks her away to his “castle” in the far away mountains. Psyche's sister comes to visit her and sees that she is not living in a castle but a terrible raggedy place. Some how, over time Psyches’ sister also falls pray to the delusions until a guide brings her back to reality with the power of reason. The guide is not able to bring Psyche back into reality because Psyche is in love with the world that she exists in. In a sense her lack of reason is her longing for death because she longs to be closer to the gods and her love cupid. The moral of the story, those who are deluded by their own fantasies and refuse reason are suicidal in a sense. From the religious point of view the message could be perceived as; one must see reason before delving completely in to blind faith. This story however reminds me of much of the sheltered life that college students live, and could be extended to the comfortable life that most Americans live. We are so distracted by the beautiful world that we make around our selves that we don’t see that the rest of the world is rotting right in front of our eyes.
Friday, April 22, 2011
Rachel Worthington: A Wilderness Experience
Sarah Firth, Ugly Nature
I could never perceive the natural world as a whole as being ugly, though there are so many things in nature that are terrible looking. There are so many beautiful things in nature that can’t be ignored even though there are many perils that are ready to attack at any moment. The beauty of a flower, the warmth of the sun, the smell of fresh air, how could anyone have ever thought of the outdoors as disdainful? These times when nature was so close it was an ugly enemy are so different then today, where nature is an exotic stranger. This might not be so in other parts of the world where nature’s bad temper still has the lives of some people hanging in the balance, such as Niger and Somalia. Nature may have also recreated it self as an enemy in places such as Japan and Thailand. Though nature may be overwhelming it is still beautiful. The fact that nature is so overpowering may be why it was once so hard to see in the past. We have been taught that beauty that is sublime is often also feared in some way. When artists started painting nature scenes in art people started admiring nature. Perhaps art served as a looking glass that people could safely stand behind to view nature as beautiful.