{"id":3680,"date":"1974-08-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1974-08-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-55-no-8-august-1974-what-use-is-art\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:29:05","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:29:05","slug":"vol-55-no-8-august-1974-what-use-is-art","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-55-no-8-august-1974-what-use-is-art\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 55, No. 8 &#8211; August 1974 &#8211; What Use is Art?"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> Some persons find it difficult to associate                     art with such hard-headed facts of life as their daily jobs                     and the disorder of domestic and world politics.<\/p>\n<p> If, indeed, the chores and the excitements are poles apart                     from the arts, that is not a bad thing. In our present civilization,                     mechanization and industrialization make the arts necessary                     as a counterpoise if we are to retain our balance, our culture                     and our sanity.<\/p>\n<p>Art can take the chaos, the haphazard, the m\u00eal\u00e9e                     of daily life and set it before us in ordered simplicity,                     symmetry and perspective. It inserts evidence, as it were,                     between the shrieking headlines, that beauty, truth and goodness                     are not obsolete.<\/p>\n<p>The arts are not to be judged by the standards of industrial                     efficiency, with its absorption in mass production. Unlike                     useful things or the tools used to produce them, works of                     art are designed to serve no function other than to give enjoyment.                     Under the utilitarian code, creation of beautiful things is                     looked upon as the pastime of persons who might be employed                     in useful labour.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone knows that there are some things which we do because                     we must: these are our necessities. There are things we do                     because we ought to do them: these are our duties. There are                     other things we do because we like to do them: these are our                     play, a necessary offset to all the others.<\/p>\n<p>The humanizing influence of art is one of the most positive                     forces in the development of a well-balanced mind, helping                     us to cope with and to rise above the multitude of mundane                     and materialistic affairs that absorb most of our attention                     and time.<\/p>\n<p>Some persons are critical of present-day art, and put their                     dislike of it forward as a reason for brushing it to one side.<\/p>\n<p>Art cannot be praised or blamed for holding up a mirror                     to the society in which it exists. If the reality is chaotic,                     so will the reflection be. If the reality is confusing or                     difficult, the painter may sublimate it or shroud it in metaphor,                     as did one who was painting a landscape. &#8220;When a cow came                     slouching by,&#8221; he said, &#8220;another artist might have drawn it,                     but I always go wrong in the hind legs of quadrupeds, so I                     drew the soul of the cow.&#8221; Behind the mystery of much art                     today there are artists trying to draw the soul of society.<\/p>\n<h3>What art is<\/h3>\n<p>Some people will say that art is real when it shows sound                     knowledge, mastered craft, vivid imagination, strong common                     sense, truth, and wise meaning. Others will say that the distinguishing                     characteristic of a work of art is that it serves no practical                     end, but is an end in itself. Or it may be said that if a                     painting appeals merely by the story it tells it is not art                     but an illustration. The ultimate test of worth is: does it                     give pleasure? To arouse the powers of enjoyment, of yielding                     to beauty, is the legitimate end of art.<\/p>\n<p>Tolstoy said in his essay on art: &#8220;Art is a human activity                     consisting in this, that one man consciously, by means of                     certain external signs, hands on to others feelings he has                     lived through, and that others are infected by these feelings                     and also experience them.&#8221; This means that art is not an ornamental                     addition to life, but an organ of human life translating man&#8217;s                     perception into feeling. Art is not a matter of deftness of                     hands only, but the work of the whole spirit of man.<\/p>\n<p>The art described here can be enjoyed by gentle and simple                     men and women, by learned and unlearned, if they have a mind                     to it.<\/p>\n<p>That the sense of beauty is inherent in most people without                     regard to the extent of their education is clearly seen when                     we look at the art of primitive people. It is also seen in                     the unconsciously aesthetic appreciation which today&#8217;s man                     in the street will betray as he inspects the latest automobile,                     or in the presence of any beautiful building or machine which                     he is not asked to look at as &#8220;a work of art&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Many persons acknowledge that their attitude to art is purely                     emotional and inexpert, but nevertheless they enjoy the experience.                     If one does not feel deeply stirred in the presence of great                     pictures, great sculpture or great music, he can be certain                     that he is living a vastly lower and more restricted life                     than he could be living. The mechanical world is of our own                     making, but the real world is one of deep emotional experience.<\/p>\n<h3>Everyone needs beauty<\/h3>\n<p>The aesthetic sense should be deliberately and consciously                     cultivated in all sections and activities of life. We are                     all too likely to become highly developed in one faculty at                     the expense of other, more personal, parts of our nature.                     Top-notch executives, experts in electronics, designers of                     computers: all these have hard intellectual force, but many                     of them have not been careful to preserve and develop their                     real, their beauty-loving, selves.<\/p>\n<p>Granting that the fine arts are those of which the end is                     beauty, the question next arises, what is beauty? It cannot                     be digested into general laws for all peoples and all times.                     Every person needs to form a philosophy of beauty for himself,                     making his own appraisal of what is lovely. Without that he                     will be tossed aimlessly on an ebbing and flowing sea of passing                     beliefs, emotions and ideas.<\/p>\n<p>There is no absolute and accepted scale of beauty, and some                     beauties are more easily discernible by some people than by                     others. The delicate carvings in wood of French Canada and                     the soap-stone and bone carvings of the Eskimos are more quickly                     and easily understandable than the clay figurines of China                     in the Royal Ontario Museum, but there is beauty in all of                     them.<\/p>\n<p>When thinking of fine art, we can say that any material                     object which gives us pleasure in the simple contemplation                     of its outward qualities is in some degree beautiful. When                     we say that there is beauty in a picture or in a piece of                     sculpture, what we really mean is that this particular arrangement                     of colours and forms causes a state of mind in us that is                     good.<\/p>\n<p>Much of our appraisal of beauty is influenced by the conditions                     under which we view the object, and also by our personal make-up.                     Some persons who write or think poetically about the redness                     of a rose will faint at the sight of the same redness flowing                     from a wound.<\/p>\n<h3>Down to earth<\/h3>\n<p>The fine arts have been brought down from the elevated regions                     of the religious and the classical societies, and launched                     upon their secular, their democratic, career.<\/p>\n<p>The term &#8220;fine arts&#8221; is conventionally used to designate                     those arts which are concerned with line, colour and form                     (painting, sculpture and architecture); with sound (music)                     and with the exploitation of words for both their musical                     and expressive values (prose and poetry). Architecture, sculpture,                     painting, music and poetry are by common consent the five                     principal or greater fine arts.<\/p>\n<p>The mechanical arts can be practised by strict adherence                     to rule and precept, but the fine arts, though they, too,                     have technical foundations which are matters of rule and precept,                     can be practised only by following, in a region outside the                     reach of rule and precept, the free prompting of some of the                     finest faculties of the spirit. They call for imagination:                     for, as Aristotle put it, bringing something into existence.<\/p>\n<p>An artist&#8217;s eye sees the surface of things but also discerns                     and interprets the organic structure and the potentiality                     that lie underneath. It is when a work of art achieves a synthesis                     of these that it becomes a contribution to the viewer&#8217;s understanding                     and opens up a wealth of cultural beauty.<\/p>\n<p>For art to live it must communicate. It needs both form                     and meaning. It is not enough that it mean something special                     to the artist: it must convey meaning or feeling to the viewer.<\/p>\n<p>The artist painting a landscape is not trying to describe                     the visible appearance of the landscape as a photograph would                     show it, but to tell us something about it, an original discovery                     made by him which he wishes to communicate to us.<\/p>\n<p>This is why looking at fine art is different from looking                     at an illustration. We do not seek photographic accuracy but                     a portrayal of a slice of life that is intelligible, informative                     and perhaps elevating.<\/p>\n<h3>&#8220;The Last Supper&#8221;<\/h3>\n<p>The artist groups and co-ordinates a diversity of parts                     into a unity, with every part relevant to the whole, in order                     to make his point clear. The edges of his canvas form the                     boundary of his painting. He must make everything he depicts                     relate to the size and shape he has chosen, and every object                     must have a definite relationship to the other objects.<\/p>\n<p>This is illustrated in Leonardo da Vinci&#8217;s &#8220;The Last Supper&#8221;,                     probably the most famous painting in the world. It illuminates                     a moment of unparalleled human drama, and Leonardo directed                     every element of his composition toward communicating it.                     He made use of the architectural features of the room: lines                     radiating from the rafters of the ceiling meet at the head                     of the central figure; the other figures are so disposed,                     in a wave-like pattern, as to move the current of excitement                     toward the centre of the table where it seems to break against                     the serenity of the central figure.<\/p>\n<p>Not all that is optically possible to be seen is to be shown                     in every picture. Care must be taken not to emphasize particularities,                     for that would be confusing. A painting of a building in which                     every brick is reproduced with the greatest fidelity has left                     no scope for poetry in the artist&#8217;s conception of his piece.<\/p>\n<p>Art is a response to the demand for stimulation of our senses                     and imagination, and truth enters into it only as it is useful                     in arriving at these ends.<\/p>\n<p>Truth in art has almost as many aspects as in morals or                     philosophy. The painter may understand it as truth of general                     effect, possibly to the neglect of truth of detail. Not everyone                     concedes to the artist or the poet the right to subordinate                     actuality to his point of view, or to suppress some externals                     in order to reveal the deeper, simpler truth as he sees it.<\/p>\n<p>The first Canadian Christmas Carol, for example, adapts                     an ancient story to the understanding, environment and way                     of life of the Huron Indians of Georgian Bay 300 years ago.                     It was written by Father Jean de Br\u00e9beuf in the Indian                     dialect.<\/p>\n<p>The illustrations for the Carol on slides by the National                     Film Board repeat the setting of the words: &#8220;a lodge of broken                     bark&#8221; instead of &#8220;a stable&#8221;; &#8220;a ragged robe of rabbit skin&#8221;                     instead of &#8220;swaddling clothes&#8221;; and &#8220;gifts of fox and beaver                     pelt&#8221; instead of &#8220;gold and frankincense and myrrh.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>What pleases the eye<\/h3>\n<p>Fine art addresses itself not only to the eye but also to                     the imagination. The eye takes notice of ten different qualities                     of objects: light and darkness, colour and substance, form                     and position, distance and nearness, movement and rest. It                     is through his depiction of these in his painting that the                     artist reaches our minds and animates our thoughts.<\/p>\n<p>Many pictures owe their permanent value in art and their                     chief charm in our eyes to the artist&#8217;s excellent feeling                     for line, and his facility and skill in draughtsmanship. Others                     please us by richness or harmony of colour, or by the delicacy                     of their effects of light and shade. The human eye tires of                     machine-drawn straight lines. The curve is the line of beauty,                     whether in the draperies in portraiture or the profile of                     a landscape or ocean waves.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps in nothing else is the skill of the landscape artist                     more put to the test than in his rendering of the effects                     of distance. Perspective, said Leonardo, is the bridle and                     rudder of painting, but perspective has been renounced by                     some abstract artists. They seek to stress the independence                     of the world they create from the laws which govern appearance                     in the natural world.<\/p>\n<h3>Architecture: science and art<\/h3>\n<p>The stuff of an artist&#8217;s dreams is easier to conjure up                     in paint on canvas than in bricks and concrete. Architecture                     is the greatest and most complex of all the arts, being both                     an art and a science. By it are erected and adorned the buildings                     raised by man, and we require of these buildings that they                     fulfil two kinds of goodness: the doing of their practical                     duty well, and their being graceful and pleasing in appearance.<\/p>\n<p>People of today demand practicality in architecture. Were                     Pheidias, the celebrated statuary of Athens, commissioned                     to supervise the building of a Parthenon to crown Mount Royal                     in Montreal, or Signal Hill in St. John&#8217;s, or Grouse Mountain                     at Vancouver, there would be without doubt a demonstration                     of citizens asking why he was not engaged on something useful,                     like a housing project.<\/p>\n<p>An architect who is creating churches or office buildings                     does not use the trimmings taken over from past styles because                     they cannot be considered an honest expression of our period.                     He must take into account the environment, the purpose of                     the building, the style of the other buildings near by, the                     climatic conditions, and the cost.<\/p>\n<p>Prettification is avoided. Beauty is cubical and severe.                     Square sections are used even for rain-water heads &#8211; the sturdy                     man-figures supporting rain spouts on St. Mark&#8217;s Cathedral                     in Venice find no place in architecture today.<\/p>\n<p>Yet if it is to remain pleasantly in the memory, a good                     building must have a memorable personality, not merely mass                     and height. The architect needs to provide focal points and                     resting places for the eye, with some arresting intersections.<\/p>\n<p>Besides painting, sculpture and architecture, there are                     many other ways of expressing artistic sense. Historically,                     pottery is among the first of the arts. It is the most elemental;                     it is the most difficult because it is the most abstract.                     Pots, to many early races, had souls which cried out and fled                     when the pots were broken. The value of the potter&#8217;s product                     was as much in its beauty as in its capacity to hold water                     or wine.<\/p>\n<p>In primitive tribes the basket-work and textiles, although                     industrial in the sense that they were made to be used, were                     none the less the work of craftsmen making the whole object                     with reference to beauty as well as to use.<\/p>\n<p>Behind the mechanical industry of the weaver&#8217;s loom there                     is the fine art of the designer who has contrived the pattern.                     Medieval tapestries can set the heart a-pounding. These status                     symbols of royal personages, in shaded wool or silk and metal                     thread, have whimsy and wit. In the Academy of Fine Arts in                     Florence there is a tapestry depicting the naming of the animals                     by Adam. In front, setting the pace of the parade, are snails;                     then come a lion with a haughty look and a lioness with her                     head turned toward him with a comical look of affection.<\/p>\n<h3>Changing art<\/h3>\n<p>The changing art in our time is rather confusing to the                     lay observer, as when people from one dream start dribbling                     into another dream. Every civilization creates an artistic                     style of its own, but bits and pieces from former eras keep                     showing up.<\/p>\n<p>Art changes its outlook, just as so many other parts of                     life do. It is the expression of an age, perhaps even a revolt                     against the civilization of the age. One generation despises                     what its predecessor applauded, yet it would be a great mistake                     to suppose that the latest is always the best.<\/p>\n<p>What is displayed as the art of today may indeed depict                     the churned-up or the squared-off conceptions of life held                     by modern man. The artist realizes that life, especially mental                     life, exists on two planes, one definite and visible in outline                     and detail, like the part of the iceberg above water; the                     other, the greater part of life, is submerged, vague and indeterminate.<\/p>\n<p>It is the advanced artist&#8217;s aim to try to realize some of                     the dimensions and characteristics of mankind&#8217;s submerged                     being, and to do this he resorts to various kinds of symbolism.                     This presents enormous difficulty to the average lover of                     art. Even if one possesses what may be called &#8220;a modern point                     of view&#8221; one must still work oneself slowly into this world                     of strange forms.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps the greatest innovation in modern art occurs when                     the painting or sculpture is itself the event, that is, when                     there is no object to serve as a model or point of departure.<\/p>\n<p>In some circles this movement has extended almost to a worship                     of the meaningless, and this does not appeal to the man in                     the street. If the message cannot be deciphered except by                     those who hold the key or the code the bulk of the public                     is disquieted.<\/p>\n<h3>Looking at pictures<\/h3>\n<p>Nevertheless, every person who seeks to be cultured and                     to understand life needs to become acquainted with the work                     of today&#8217;s artists as well as the work of the great masters                     of the past.<\/p>\n<p>It is necessary to approach an exhibition of art with an                     open mind. You may not feel in sympathy with every exhibit,                     but you will at least appreciate admirable qualities.<\/p>\n<p>Students can learn much of technique by studying, nose to                     canvas, the brush strokes of a master, but the essential character                     of the artist&#8217;s operation lies in those parts of it which                     fall outside the rules, precepts, measurements, and other                     communicable laws or secrets. Rembrandt remarked to someone                     who was looking too closely into one of his paintings: &#8220;Pictures                     are intended to be looked at, not smelled.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Do you have to visit the National Gallery in Ottawa, the                     Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Louvre in Paris,                     or the Pitti Gallery and the churches in Florence to see and                     enjoy art? Not at all.<\/p>\n<p>Art has been brought out of its privacy in palace, cathedral                     and gallery into the world for the enjoyment of all. While                     simply putting more art in more places will not make aesthetes                     of us all, it gives us a chance to enjoy what was once the                     privilege of the few.<\/p>\n<p>There are galleries and museums in every province. Commercial                     and industrial offices display art pieces, some the product                     of Canadian artists and others imported from abroad. Reproductions                     of the best of the world&#8217;s art are to be had at little cost.<\/p>\n<p>We should not approach our adventure into art without some                     preparation. It is commonly said that the onlooker sees most                     of the game, but it is small benefit to him unless he knows                     the rules of the game being played. The acuteness of our perception                     and of our judgment depends upon the wealth of our knowledge.                     The more comparisons we are able to make, the more qualified                     we are to enjoy art and to express our opinions.<\/p>\n<p>In addition to being open minded when appraising art, you                     need to be independent. &#8220;To know what you prefer,&#8221; said Robert                     Louis Stevenson, &#8220;instead of humbly saying &#8216;Amen&#8217; to what                     the world tells you you ought to prefer, is to have kept your                     soul alive.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Try self-expression<\/h3>\n<p>Nearly everyone has the capability to express himself or                     herself in some art form. Perhaps your product will not be                     of exhibition class, but its production will give you pleasure                     even if you hide it in a clothes closet.<\/p>\n<p>Painting, sculpture, pottery and needlework provide refreshment                     of the spirit to many thousands of men and women who do them                     seriously enough to take pride in their product. They learn                     how to approach life in an original and personally expressive                     way.<\/p>\n<p>The necessary technique of an art may be studied in day                     or evening classes operated by the continuing education branches                     of universities, the Y&#8217;s, adult education groups and community                     associations. The comradeship of an art group in a church                     hall, a schoolroom or a home, engaged in sculpture, painting,                     ceramics, or some other art, is worthwhile aside from what                     a member produces. Here are people of kindred minds, with                     similar aspirations, interested in a fascinating activity.<\/p>\n<p>Art is useful because it raises men&#8217;s minds to a level higher                     than merely existing. Here are activities that men and women                     put forth not because they need but because they like. In                     an age when material things have such prominence and such                     a deep influence on people&#8217;s minds, it is increasingly important                     to be able to seek the relief to be found in aesthetic activity.                     It releases them from the arbitrariness of life.<\/p>\n<p>One artist follows his star, and another his will-o&#8217;-the-wisp.                     Both are members of society who are so constituted as to feel                     more acutely than others certain classes of pleasures which                     all of us can feel in our own degree. Their talents are not                     useful in the sense that a plumber&#8217;s are, or a truck driver&#8217;s,                     or an auto mechanic&#8217;s, or a computer programmer&#8217;s. But if                     out of their brooding on the sprawling incoherence of life                     they produce a coherent expression of normality, they have                     performed a service that is very valuable to their own peace                     of mind and to that of others.<\/p>\n<p>Their art is not an escape from reality. To ignore the dark                     and sometimes terrible side of life would doom the artist                     to shallowness. But horridness for the sake of horridness                     is anathema to artists who seek to contribute something toward                     the redemption of life from brutality.<\/p>\n<p>Appreciation of art releases us from our claustrophobia                     and gives us a wider outlook. It helps us to rise above life&#8217;s                     trivialities and to subdue its turbulence. Its purpose is                     not to help us to escape from life but to enter into a larger                     life.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[54],"class_list":["post-3680","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-54"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 55, No. 8 - August 1974 - What Use is Art? - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-55-no-8-august-1974-what-use-is-art\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 55, No. 8 - August 1974 - What Use is Art? - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Some persons find it difficult to associate art with such hard-headed facts of life as their daily jobs and the disorder of domestic and world politics. 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If, indeed, the chores and the excitements are poles apart from the arts, that is not a bad thing. 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