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Perception: From Modern Painting to the Vision in Christ

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Title: Perception: From Modern Painting to the Vision in Christ


1
Perception From Modern Painting to the Vision in
Christ
  • Theological Art History 101
  • Susie Shaefer
  • May 5, 2004

2
Art, should be an account of, and a meditation
upon, our relationship to what we are given. And
the given must be that against which we measure
ourselves and all of our projects, be they
theological, philosophical or aesthetic, because
any departure from what is and its presentation
to us, in the name and pursuit of what is not, is
a refusal to see, acknowledge, or fulfill the
promise of worldly creation. (220)
3
The Problem of Modernity
  • Apparently, for us moderns, it is entirely
    appropriate to separate ideality from reality, as
    reality has nothing of the ideal in it the
    belief being that reality presents itself to us
    outside of and apart from any transcendent
    formideality has abandoned any location or
    expression in the world, to reside only in the
    head, claiming not tolie in the things themselves
    but in the human mind. (221)

4
The Problem of Post-Modernity
  • The separation of reality and ideality in
    modernism, combined with Cartesian philosophy,
    has resulted in post-modern relativism and
    nilhilism - we are left with either
    self-sufficient accounts of reality or a
    self-sustaining idealism that neither requires
    nor seeks an actuality at all (221)

5
How did we get from this
Michelangelos David, (image from Blufftons
website!)
6
To this?
  • And why does it matter for theologians?

Jackson Pollack, The Moon Woman, 1942
7
Impressionism and the path form objectivity to
subjectivity
Monet, Impression, Sunrise, 1872
8
Early Nineteenth Century
  • The move towards modernism begins with a focus
    on realism
  • human portraiture is abandoned in favor of
    nature and its earthly depiction as a sensate
    realm illuminated and colored by light and the
    possibility of experience

Courbet, Near Ornans, Morning, 1848 circa
9
Gustave Courbet, The Grain-sifters, 1855
Importance of Light, motion, and everyday
occurences
10
Joseph Millard William Turner, Shipwreck, c. 1805
Light and Color creating sensuality
11
Impressionism
  • Plen air - painting outdoors, the painting of
    nature was still innovative, and not respected in
    France before the Impressionists
  • Attempting to paint the world as it is
    immediately seen - the play between light and
    color, before the human mind can place context on
    what the senses perceive
  • Monet, Rouen Cathedral, Harmony in Blue, 1893-4

12
An Emphasis on Perception
the Impressionistic imperative was to capture
every momentary disclosure of appearance, as
visuality reveals itself, not for itself but only
for us (224) the inability of the eye to focus
with detail on more than one point at the same
time, the inevitable blurring at the periphery of
vision (224)
Monet, The Bark at Giverny, 1887
13
The ever-more attenuated attention to the
foundational primacy of perception in human
accounts of objective reality uncovered not an
account of reality but rather the great
philosophical claim of modernism- that
subjectivity constitutes objectivity and makes it
possible (224)
14
Cezanne and the path from subjectivity to
objectivity
  • Cezanne broke with the Impressionist School in
    1877
  • The aim of Cezannes art is to picture that
    which is permanent in the changing world of
    appearance - to capture the objective beneath
    the perception
  • Art should translate the objective reality of
    nature into a form we can understand - Art is a
    harmony which runs parallel with nature

Paul Cezanne, The Railway Cutting, 1869-70 (225)
15
Cezanne and Landscapes
  • Plain by Mount Sainte-Victoire, 1882 and La
    Montagne Sainte-Victoire, c. 1897-98
  • Color and shading, an interest of the
    Impressionists, is increasingly used by Cezanne
    to separate the subjective viewer from the object
    in the painting

16
Cezanne and Portraits
  • though they represent people who Cezanne knew
    well- friend or relatives- something deeply
    reserved, inaccessible and alien adheres to them
    all
  • Paul Cézanne. Antony Valabrèque. 1866

17
With the Impressionists and Cezanne, reality and
ideality have been separated, the objective and
the subjective are no longer joined. We are left
with two potential tracks Relentless Objectivity
and Unfettered Subjectivity
18
Unfettered Subjectivity Kandinsky
Black Lines, December 1913
19
The What of Art
  • No longer that material objective what of the
    former period, but the internal truth of art the
    only fidelity art owed was to itself and its own
    internal necessity (228)
  • Reinforced the loss of the world - the only
    perception that mattered was internal, rather
    than connected to the senses and the external
    world

Kandinsky, Improvisation 30 (Cannons),1913
20
Relentless ObjectivityMondrianMondrian evolved
an extreme abstract language to evoke the unity
and order of nature by reducing natural forms to
their purest linear and colored
equivalents-Chicago Art Institute Diagonal
Composition, 1921
21
Universality and Equivalence
  • Cezannes refusal to mediate the universal
    through its particular acts of reception and
    perception, became in time a wish to depict the
    unmediated form of the universal itself (228)
  • Extreme objectivism also results in a loss of
    the world, separating us from reality, as
    Mondrian comments Only when the individual no
    longer stands in the way can universality be
    purely manifested

Mondrian, Composition No. lll , 1935
22
The Nihilism of Modern Art
  • Modern art has become the depiction and
    celebration of nothing whatsoever- nothing, that
    is, but the fluctuation between a subjectivity
    without recongnisable objects and an objectivity
    whose pursuit renders it uncognisable for
    subjectivity.

23
Another possibility
  • If the aesthetic negation of the world that I
    have been describing has been pursued from both
    sides of the subject/object divide, and if these
    traditions have culminated in the nihilistic
    enthronement of nothing over the God-given
    reality that we inhabit- the reality that is of
    something- then are there artists who express and
    paint the glorious filliation of the universal
    and the particular that alone creates a world?
    (229-231)

24
Real in Ideal, Ideal in Real
  • Not painting his world as one which is mundane,
    but rather as one which is inundated with the
    color of the transcendent light itself (230)
  • Van Gogh, The Sower, 1888

25
Malevich and Iconography
  • The Black Square, 1915 a totally bare icon with
    no frame.
  • In terms of theology what should a bare icon
    disclose- save the inability of nothing to be
    anything at all (230)

26
Malevich and Portraiture
  • Even where the face of a human figure is left
    blank, the colors surround it edge around and
    mark out in the absence of a face the shape of
    what might fulfill such a request
  • Malevichs work was indeed iconic, a visible
    testament ot the presence of the ideal in the
    real - open to possibility while working with
    the given of creation

Sportsmen, 1928 (231)
27
Enter the Incarnation!
  • The answer has already been provided by Christ,
    for he and he alone teaches us that te Most High
    and the most ideal has been incarnated here in
    our world as the most explicit account of the
    union of ideality and reality that we have ever
    been given. (231)

28
Main Concerns for Blond
  • Incarnational theology
  • Goodness of creation
  • Creation as revelatory of God- natural theology
    in tradition of Scotus, where God and humanity
    are compared to some super-reality, but after
    Aquinas
  • An explicit and utterly evident love of
    creation, the kenotic love of a God who wholly
    gives himself to that which he has created, so
    much so that he makes himself manifest in it.
    This, of course, does not mean that that which is
    seen or shown ins itself wholly expressive or
    exhaustive of God

29
Theology it seems should take seriously the
issue of the senses, not only because these
senses were once expressed to divinity but really
and rather because the nature and message of the
Son is that all creation can and does participate
and share in this grace and can itself be
similarly so ordered. (234)
30
Questions for Reflection
  • Do we buy this premise? Does the Incarnation
    require us to intertwine reality and ideality,
    subjective and objective?
  • Blond is using theology to comment upon, and
    nearly define, aesthetics and art. Does theology,
    as a discipline, have authority to order other
    disciplines? If we want to say that Christian
    theology can only by people of faith, what does
    theology have to say those outside the faith? Do
    our thoughts on this change when we think about
    the world of art and natural theology as
    presented in this chapter?
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