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Art for Life's Sake
| Article
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16957 |
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Section : |
MODERN THOUGHT
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| Issue
Date : |
4 / 1990 |
4,562 Words |
| Author
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Ellen Dissanayake After fifteen years abroad (in Sri Lanka, Papua New Guinea,
and Nigeria), Ellen Dissanayake now teaches at the New School
for Social Research and is employed by Transcripts Associates
in New York City. The author of numerous articles on art and
the arts, she is currently completing a book, Deep Art, in
which she proposes an alternative to both high and superficial
art. |
In a century of violence and change, of increasing vulgarity and continued erosion of once-cherished values, it is perhaps not surprising that the arts also are often outrageous and unpleasant or tawdry. Yet at the same time, there are still many who believe that art should be a repository of beauty and truth, something that uplifts our spirit and helps us to recognize and strive for noble ideals.
What is art, and what is its purpose today? The controversy last year about government subsidy (though the National Endowment for the Arts) of work that many consider to be offensive is only the most publicly visible instance of contemporary uncertainty about the nature and function of art. Even while the buying and selling of artworks is a billion dollar business and while hundreds of thousands of people throng to major art exhibitions, contemporary philosophers of art admit that they cannot define their subject anymore. "We have entered a period of art so absolute in its freedom that art seems but a name for an infinite play with its own concept," states one eminent observer and critic of the arts today.
It seems to me that art in America is currently viewed under at least two antithetical and incompatible ideological banners, both inadequate to what I see (and will describe later in this essay) as a more demonstrably useful and universal view of the nature and function of art. The first or "fine art" approach demands largely a passive and hands-off attitude. It claims that art is sacrosanct, ennobling, mysterious - to be regarded with quasireligious reverence. The second robustly asserts democratization and individual expression, where art must challenge, provoke, disturb, liberate, and above all, itself be free. Oftentimes partisans of one or the other of these views find themselves marching under the other banner - the rabble claiming untouchability and a privileged view, or the high priests insisting that their work has popular relevance. (There is also a their view which dismisses or ignores art altogether as being marginal to the real business of life, which is making money and demonstrating American superiority, but this view is rarely openly admitted. Indeed, when confronted with art issues, persons of this persuasion generally trumpet the art-as-sacred-and-valued view, as one could see when Congress debated funding of the NEA.)
The confused double (or triple) view of art arises, I believe, form the peculiar circumstances of the birth in the eighteenth century (and particularly "fine art") as an abstract concept. Until that time, no other society had considered art to be an entity in itself, to be set
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