Sunday, September 05, 2010

In his essay:



Art and Aesthetics in Action
Written by: Professor Severyn T. Bruyn



Bruyn a new venture in aesthetics.


Below are polar ideas in philosophy. Polar ideas are contrary or contradictory to one another. The taxonomic image in Table 1 should prepare our thinking about how a philosophy of aesthetics develops in a university.

The analysis of D.W. Gotshalk is based on contrary principles, but we now expand their number. A new philosophy of aesthetics now asks questions about how contrary ideas touch every discipline. 

This observation of opposites may assist in reading, and thinking about art.

Polar Principles in Art

Philosophical
Being vs. Becoming
Order vs. Change
Subject vs. Object
Conscious vs. Unconscious
Same vs. Different
Repetition vs. Innovation

Unity vs. Plurality
Spirit vs. Matter
Mind vs. Body
Real vs. Ideal
Feeling vs. Reason
Knowledge vs. Ignorance
Religion/ Ethics
Sacred vs. Secular
Transcendent vs. Imminent
Human vs. Divine
Life vs. Death
Everything vs. Nothing
Right vs. Wrong
Virtue vs. Vice

Interior vs. Exterior
Mortal vs. Immortal
Heaven vs. Hell
Holy vs. Unholy
Moral vs. Immoral          
Good vs. Evil              
Inner vs. Outer
Natural Science
Night vs. Day
Soft vs. Hard
Black vs. White
Female vs. Male
Wide vs. Narrow
Deep vs. Shallow

Light vs. Dark
Smooth vs. Rough      
Summer vs. Winter
Height vs. Depth
Fast vs. Slow
Tall vs. Short
History
Particular vs. Universal
Unique vs. Common
Structure vs. Change
Continuity vs. Discontinuity
Present vs. Future

Natural vs. Human
Progression vs. Regression
Cyclic vs. Linear
Present vs. Past
Causality vs. Telos
Politics
Freedom vs. Justice
Liberty vs. Slavery
Male vs. Female

Hierarchy vs. Equality  
Guilt vs. Innocence
Upper Class vs. Lower Class
Humanities and Arts
Conceal vs. Reveal
Control vs. Surrender
Spontaneity vs. Design
Seeing vs. Finding
Impulse vs. Idea
Fact vs. Value
Logic vs. Intuition
Appreciation vs. Judgement
Comedy vs. Tragedy
Harmony vs. Discord
Purity vs. Impurity
Beautiful vs. Hideous
Vitality vs. Decay
Social Science
Optimism vs. Pessimism
Community vs. Individual
Despair vs. Rage
Innocence vs. Guilt
Connection vs. Disconnection                 
Social vs. Economic
Religion vs. Science      
Inhibit vs. Release
Visible vs. Invisible
Simplicity vs. Complexity
Empty vs. Full
True vs. False  
Life vs. Death.

Friday, September 03, 2010

Artist Technique : James Barry

 The Judgment of Paris.

From the Tate:


This study illustrates Barry's method of sketching out a composition. After making an initial rough sketch in black chalk, he has used the brush like a pen to draw over the chalk with loose flowing lines. The result is an image composed of soft grey strokes, varying in length and width. The figure of Paris (on the right) is the most well-defined in the composition. Those of Juno, Minerva and Venus are more worked over with numerous repeated strokes and flourishes of the brush. To give more definition to this group, Barry has finished off with some darker grey strokes, applied quite dryly.
 (From the display caption August 2004)



James Barry was one of the most influential figures in Irish and British art during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. He was a great history painter, a print-maker, and essayist. He was appointed Professor of Painting at the Royal Academy in 1782. He was born at Water Lane in the Blackpool district of Cork in 1741. He was a protégé of the statesman, Edmund Burke, and a firm sympathiser with the movement for American Independence. In his youth he studied classical antiquity and history painting in Bologna and Rome, only returning to London in 1771 where he became a member of the newly-created Royal Academy.
Barry was a great individualist who believed completely in the vocation of painting, particularly history painting. Instead of settling for an easy life of making society portraits, he chose the lonely and unrewarding path of truly fine art, and of history painting in the great European tradition. He lived a life of wretched poverty and deprivation, growing increasingly isolated and paranoid in later years. He fought with his friends and enemies with equal vigour and, up to recently, he was the only artist ever expelled from the Royal Academy.
Although he painted beautiful self-portraits and individual history paintings in the Classical tradition, such as Christopher Nugent (1772), Edmund Burke (1774), Barry as Timanthes (1786) and Ulysses and his companions escaping from Polyphemus (1776), his fame rests firmly on the prodigious series of wall painting he executed for the Great Room of the Royal Society of Arts in London. He spent nearly six years working on these six huge works on canvas. They existed for Barry and his contemporaries as a profound allegory on the progress of human knowledge and Hellenic civilisation.
Barry was also a very important theorist of Art. His letters from the Continent are full of the most brilliant perceptions on the meaning of art, especially Classical art and the Italian Masters. His book An Inquiry into the Real and imaginary Obstructions to the Acquisition of the Arts in England (1775) is a powerful defence of the British artistic imagination whileThe Works of James Barry (ed. E. Fryer, 2 vols., 1809) contain the lectures, correspondence and opinion that challenge the reader to seek after greatness. Although he may have fought with everyone in the British arts establishment, in 1806 Barry's body lay in state in the Great Room of the Royal Society of Arts and he was buried beside Sir Joshua Reynolds in the crypt of St Paul's Cathedral.
See also the complete  correspondence of James Barry at : 


 
*/ /* Use this with templates/template-twocol.html */