{"id":3697,"date":"1950-12-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1950-12-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1950-vol-31-no-12-the-search-for-beauty\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:58:09","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:58:09","slug":"december-1950-vol-31-no-12-the-search-for-beauty","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1950-vol-31-no-12-the-search-for-beauty\/","title":{"rendered":"December 1950 &#8211; Vol. 31, No. 12 &#8211; The Search For Beauty"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Beauty is as much a necessity of                     our everyday life as bread. If our lives are to be more than                     mere existence, they demand something besides a weekly pay                     cheque, three meals a day and a roof over our heads. There                     must be food for the mind and the eye, the soul and the spirit.<\/p>\n<p> The thought of beauty, its expression, and the love of it,                     have been present in the minds of men of every century. Writers                     and artists have spent their lives capturing and immortalizing                     the beautiful in words and in paint; the men of the Middle                     Ages made lasting monuments to beauty and the glory of God                     in the building of great cathedrals; ordinary people have                     been inspired and uplifted by beauty in their physical and                     spiritual lives.<\/p>\n<p>As far back as 25,000 years ago, in the early stone age,                     paintings on the walls of caves in France and Spain show the                     desire of men to create, and to rise beyond the limitations                     of the daily struggle to keep alive. We today are also struggling                     in an anxious world &#8211; and if ever any people needed some power                     outside themselves to give relief from worry and alarms, we                     do. We are more fortunate than our forefathers, for we have                     the accumulated culture and wisdom of the ages to draw upon.<\/p>\n<h3>What is Beauty?<\/h3>\n<p>We use the word &#8220;beautiful&#8221; dozens of times a day, to describe                     anything from a new fashion to a sunset, but what actually                     is beauty?<\/p>\n<p>Great thinkers have defined it in many ways, some of which                     we might quote. One of the best known, one that has had far-reaching                     influence, is the teaching of Plato: Beauty is the splendour                     of truth. The influence of this can be seen in the lines written                     by Keats, in his <em>Ode on a Grecian Urn<\/em>: &#8220;Beauty is truth,                     truth beauty, &#8211; that is all ye know on earth, and all ye need                     to know.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Moli\u00e8re, in one of his sparkling comedies, went so                     far as to recommend beauty as a civilizing force. The music                     master in <em>Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme <\/em>ask: is it not true                     that war proceeds from want of concord among men? He suggests                     that if all men learned music, it might be a means of keeping                     them in tune, and of bringing universal peace to the world.<\/p>\n<p>Ruskin, in <em>The True and the Beautiful<\/em>, had this to                     say: &#8220;Any material object which can give us pleasure in the                     simple contemplation of its outward qualities, without any                     direct and definite exertion of the intellect, I call in some                     way, or in some degree, beautiful.&#8221; But perhaps the simplest                     definition of all is that given by St. Thomas Aquinas: &#8220;That                     which when seen pleases.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>These descriptions can include everything in life, from                     a bride to an advertisement, from a bird-song at dawn                     to a radio broadcast, from a heather-covered mountain                     to a department store window.<\/p>\n<p>We live in a world that abounds in beauty, but sometimes                     we are too absorbed in ourselves, our pursuits and our problems,                     to see the beauties. We scarcely notice the small unselfishness                     or the single flower; it is the grand gesture or the big bouquet                     that ordinarily calls forth our admiration.<\/p>\n<p>But there is beauty all around us, in poetry and in paintings,                     in our vast forests and in our own backgardens, in city streets                     and business offices and in factories, and in the lives of                     saints and ordinary men. To feel this beauty makes the imagination                     richer, and the world more interesting.<\/p>\n<p>A recent editorial in a Montreal newspaper called attention                     to three kinds of beauty.<\/p>\n<p>First there is beauty of the senses, the joy that comes                     from loveliness of colour, line, form and tone. A second aspect                     of beauty exists in the understanding of the origin and being                     of Nature (including human beings). This constitutes science.                     The third form of beauty lies in seeking the meaning of beautiful                     things we see, and the purpose they express. The deeper and                     farther we go in the search for beauty, the higher we rise                     beyond the physical and sensuous to the spiritual sphere.<\/p>\n<p>We were all born with an eye for beauty, but when we were                     children we were perhaps more closely akin to the homespun                     beauties of the world. The softness of a kitten&#8217;s fur, the                     brightness of an autumn leaf, the first fresh snowfall, these                     were all sources of wonderment and pleasure. As time went                     by, and sophistication set in, we lost this first fine appreciation                     of beauty, our eyes were not so open to the simple things                     which once gave us pleasure, and our outlook became not so                     alert and eager. We lost some of our natural eye for beauty,                     and with it we have lost some of our happiness too.<\/p>\n<h3>Beauty and Happiness<\/h3>\n<p>Beauty contains the seeds of happiness &#8211; that dearest wish                     of every human being. Happiness and beauty are closely intertwined.                     In our social life we try to make our surroundings, manner                     and conversation pleasing. We do not wish to expose the duller                     portions of our lives to the public eye. In the books we read,                     in the plays and the films we see, we all desire the happy                     ending, and we are slightly disappointed and &#8220;let down&#8221; if                     things&nbsp;.do not &#8220;end well.&#8221; In enjoying the beautiful,                     we increase our own happiness.<\/p>\n<p>This cultivation of love of the beautiful is not a special                     privilege, the preserve of the few or the possession of a                     caste. Beauty is ours to enjoy without money and without price                     &#8211; a rewarding joy within the reach of all. It has nothing                     to do with technical ability or wealth or high education.<\/p>\n<p>We cannot all create beauty or be artists in the grand manner.                     Not many of us will write a great novel, paint a masterpiece                     or perform on the concert platform. But every one of us is                     capable of creating beauty in one form or another, and of                     appreciating it even more widely. The woman taking a well-baked                     loaf out of the oven, the man gathering vegetables from the                     garden he has carefully tended, the mother telling a story                     to her children, and the employer who makes a congenial working                     atmosphere for his employees &#8211; all of these are creating something                     that is beautiful. Beauty can be small, but it can never be                     insignificant if it adds to the enrichment and dignity of                     human life.<\/p>\n<p>Russell Lynes, in the Centennial issue of <em>Harper&#8217;s Magazine<\/em>,                     points out that before the American and French revolutions                     taste had been the prerogative of the few families of wealth                     and position. Then, as a result of the political revolutions                     and the Industrial Revolution, a new middle class was created,                     eager to enjoy the arts of leisure and the exercise of taste.<\/p>\n<p>It has been truly said that beauty is in the eye of the                     beholder. Incidentally, it is comforting to know that, by                     some divine astigmatism, each one of us is supremely beautiful                     in the eyes of another! But perhaps in no other sphere is                     there such latitude of choice or expression of individuality                     as in the love of beauty. What seems beautiful to one person                     does not appear so to another &#8211; and here you have the yardstick                     of taste.<\/p>\n<h3>The Test of Beauty<\/h3>\n<p>In all the arts there has always been a controversy of opinion                     concerning what is beautiful. In commenting on Turner&#8217;s painting,                     <em>The Slave Ship<\/em>, Ruskin wrote that it was &#8220;perfect and                     immortal&#8221; The painter Inness declared: &#8220;It&#8217;s claptrap.&#8221; Thackeray                     was puzzled and neutral: &#8216;I don&#8217;t know whether it&#8217;s sublime                     or ridiculous.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Eric Newton, the British critic, whose book <em>The Meaning                     of Beauty <\/em>has just been published, said some years ago                     that there is no real test of beauty, because beauty is the                     expression of the artist&#8217;s aesthetic excitement. If one person                     shares that excitement and another does not, then the former                     thinks the work beautiful, and the latter thinks it ugly.                     When we say that there is beauty in a picture what we really                     mean is that that particular arrangement of colours and forms                     causes a state of mind in us which is good.<\/p>\n<p>An object cannot be beautiful if it can give pleasure to                     nobody. A beauty to which all men are forever indifferent                     is a contradiction in terms. And to be beautiful, an object                     must communicate some idea. It must mean something to someone                     other than the person who created it. Not until the second                     quarter of the twentieth century was the essential communicability                     of art ever denied, says Francis H. Taylor, Director of the                     Metropolitan Museum in New York. &#8220;Communication has been common                     to all the great racial traditions&#8230;The one and only quality                     denied to a work of art throughout the ages is privacy. Unless                     participation is allowed the spectator, it becomes a hopeless                     riddle and ceases to be any work of art at all.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In our choice of the beautiful, familiarity plays a big                     part. We all cherish scenes and memories which &#8220;flash upon                     that inward eye&#8221; to strengthen and uplift us, and on these                     our future choices of the beautiful are based. These things                     of beauty, like a great affection, a clear thought, or a profound                     faith, are eternal possessions.<\/p>\n<p>We cannot, of course, retain everything in our own personal                     storehouse of beauty. Something that we find shining with                     beauty at one time we may find later has lost interest for                     us; this holds true for people and paintings, books and memories.                     There is an interesting variation of this. As time passes,                     and we undergo wider and more varied experiences, we can and                     do return to people and to art and discover new beauties and                     new values which we did not see in earlier years.<\/p>\n<p>An example of this is to be seen in the work of the Canadian                     artists who are known as the Group of Seven. When their work                     first appeared, about thirty years ago, it was adversely criticized                     in some quarters. Today the work of these artists, which includes                     such great names as Tom Thomson, Lawren Harris and Dr. Arthur                     Lismer, is considered by the majority of our people as being                     typically Canadian. It has captured the character and flavour                     of our country.<\/p>\n<h3>Where to Find Beauty<\/h3>\n<p>Where can we look for beauty? Where can we search and be                     sure of our reward?<\/p>\n<p>Art may sometimes disappoint and confuse us, but Nature                     never. The effect of natural beauty is to elevate us to a                     higher level. We cannot look upon a great natural scene, a                     serpentine river, a snow-capped mountain, or a green                     and gentle meadow, without feeling remote from our personal                     pettinesses. We cannot, in these days, and all of us would                     not, even if we could, follow Thoreau in choosing a hermit&#8217;s                     life by a Walden pond, but natural beauty can play a vital                     part in raising our lives from the humdrum to the enjoyable.<\/p>\n<p>Sometimes we are almost barbarous in our disregard of nature&#8217;s                     beauty. The man who takes a motor trip with the sole idea                     of covering so many miles a day, and arrives at his destination                     with mingled memories of the country he has sped through,                     is not only ignoring a source of physical relaxation but he                     is rejecting balm for his eye and his spirit. To catch a record-breaking                     number of trout in a day is not as soul-satisfying as                     to enjoy the mental peace and physical joy of a clear stream                     and the cloistered calm of tall trees.<\/p>\n<p>Even a city dweller walking quickly along a crowded street                     can catch some moment of natural beauty. Often a shaft of                     sunlight striking a church spire, a strange and interesting                     formation of clouds, or the delicate outline of an ancient                     weathered tree, can pierce our busy day with a little stab                     of pure delight.<\/p>\n<p>One of the grandest photographs we have ever seen was of                     an electric-wire pole against a cloudy sky; it was entitled:                     &#8220;The Power and the Glory.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Art, Beauty and Life<\/h3>\n<p>The nearer one is to nature the more instinctive art becomes.                     It has been said that art is the one thing we all want, the                     expression of man&#8217;s joy in his work. Line, form, colour and                     sound all play a part in widening our mental and spiritual                     horizons, stimulating our senses and our imagination. Art                     is the work of the whole spirit of man&#8230;it is not something                     extraneous to life, but the way by which vital needs are perfectly                     satisfied.<\/p>\n<p>Before the industrial era, there was greater opportunity                     for creative expression within the limitations of a man&#8217;s                     working day. The craftsman, making things painstakingly by                     hand, had a particular pride in his whole artistic achievement.                     Today, with the fragmentation of production, there is not                     this satisfying sense of creation.<\/p>\n<p>Since many of us do not derive this full artistic satisfaction                     from our daily work, we must find the answer elsewhere &#8211; in                     the broadening of our culture in our leisure time.<\/p>\n<p>An indication that this is becoming more and more usual                     is shown in the mounting interest and participation in adult                     education. Men and women of all ages gather in groups all                     over the country to listen to fine music, to study the great                     books, to learn new skills in handicraft &#8211; to learn anything,                     in fact, to which their tastes incline.<\/p>\n<p>It is interesting to hear from McGill University that 25                     per cent of the extension courses given there are cultural.                     Doubtless a similar proportion would be found elsewhere. This                     is a symbol of our desire, in this age, for what are so inadequately                     referred to as &#8220;the higher things in life.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is quite true that we cannot all become outstanding in                     the arts. But a man is not an artist only because of what                     he writes or makes, but because of what he feels. To have                     imagination and taste, and to love the best, is an accomplishment                     in itself.<\/p>\n<p>To live in these days is a strenuous experience, demanding                     more than ever before of vigour, thought and spirit. When,                     then, we learn to enjoy beauty as we seek it and find it,                     we are indulging (as it were by proxy) an instinct which in                     other times and other circumstances would find expression                     in the doing of beautiful things.<\/p>\n<h3>Beauty in Business<\/h3>\n<p>From beauty in art to beauty in business may seem a sudden                     transition, but beauty plays a very important part in the                     world of commerce. In practically all goods produced for sale                     there must be an appeal to the eye or ear. Advertisements,                     displays, shop windows and billboards, as well as the actual                     products themselves, concentrate on this, and so create a                     desire to possess the goods. Everything from automobiles to                     bookjackets and bacon wrappers is designed to appeal to the                     consumer&#8217;s aesthetic sense in addition to more practical considerations.<\/p>\n<p>One of the first things to attract the would-be purchaser                     is the packaging of an article. This was thought to be so                     important a part of selling goods that a survey of packaging                     in Canada was carried out recently by representatives of the                     British Board of Trade and the British Export Trade Research                     Organization. The main purpose of this survey was to help                     British manufacturers design the packaging of their products                     to conform to the tastes of Canadian consumers.<\/p>\n<p>The survey showed that British designs were often considered                     old-fashioned and without eye-appeal chiefly because                     of lack of colour. Canadian taste was found to prefer simplicity                     in design, with abstract patterns generally preferred to pictures,                     and full, bright colours, with blue, red and green as the                     most popular.<\/p>\n<h3>Colour in our Lives<\/h3>\n<p>Colour has always played a principal part in our selection                     of the attractive. A recent issue of <em>C.I.L. Oval<\/em>, entitled                     <em>World of Colour<\/em>, tells in small space the potentialities                     and influence of colour. In the world of nature and of science,                     in our homes and in our factories, in art and in the expression                     of emotion in literature, as pointed out by Hugh MacLennan,                     colour has a predominant meaning in our lives. We can use                     it in modern merchandising and to make our living more graceful                     and attractive.<\/p>\n<p>We know that there are certain effects of colour that give                     us pleasure, and others that jar, almost like a musical discord.                     The development of this sensibility, and the increased availability                     of colour materials, has created a new art, which deals with                     colours as music does with sound.<\/p>\n<p>Colour can create psychological changes. Hospitals choose                     colours that help build an atmosphere of calm and relaxation;                     schools and factories use colours to stimulate activity and                     efficiency; and industrial safety can be aided by special                     painting of buildings and machinery.<\/p>\n<h3>Patrons of Art<\/h3>\n<p>We can see that business needs and profits by beauty, but                     in this century business is playing another part also&#8230;that                     of patron of the arts.<\/p>\n<p>In earlier ages, the role of patron was assumed by men of                     culture, position and wealth. Then in the Middle Ages the                     Church largely superseded the private patron. It employed                     the finest talent in building cathedrals and monasteries,                     and fostered the arts of painters, sculptors, goldsmiths and                     silversmiths. It was only the Church&#8217;s influence and position                     as art patron that enabled the European artist, and thus the                     thread of European culture, to survive.<\/p>\n<p>Later, kings like Henry VIII and Charles I were patrons                     of such famous artists as Hans Holbein the Younger and Van                     Dyck. And by the eighteenth century it was an established                     tradition that great and noble families should Contest with                     one another in their art collections and in their employment                     of artists.<\/p>\n<p>The high peak of patronage was reached in the eighteenth                     century; the nineteenth saw its decline, and the twentieth,                     with high taxes and death duties, saw its almost complete                     disappearance.<\/p>\n<p>And here, with happy results for both artist and patron,                     has entered industry. Imperial Chemical Industries in Great                     Britain is an example of an industrial sponsor of the arts,                     with its informative advertisements for which it commissioned                     well-known artists. A series called <em>Portraits of an                     Industry<\/em>, which pictured actual workers employed by the                     company, was so successful that, after being used for advertising                     purposes, it went on a two-year tour of municipal and                     other art galleries throughout England and Scotland. The Canadian                     Pulp and Paper Association, commissioning such artists as                     A. J. Casson, Thoreau MacDonald and A. Y. Jackson to interpret                     the operations of the industry, has contributed greatly to                     art in Canada.<\/p>\n<h3>Beauty in the Home<\/h3>\n<p>Business can use and cultivate beauty on a large scale,                     but each one of us can create an atmosphere of grace and charm                     in the smaller environment of his own home. We have come a                     long way from the over-ornamental architecture, gloomy                     colours and heavy hangings of the Victorian era, and the modern                     trend is toward light, space and colour in our surroundings.<\/p>\n<p>There is a growing appreciation of utility and grace in                     household goods. From this has come an emphasis on functional                     beauty as the basic requirement for good design in articles                     made for everyday use. Recently the industrial designer in                     Canada has been given professional recognition. The Association                     of Canadian Industrial Designers has been formed, and, in                     1948, a National Industrial Design Committee. This is made                     up of manufacturers, retailers, research officials, educationalists                     and designers, all united by an enthusiasm to co-operate                     in ensuring that Canadian industry will be able to meet our                     mounting desires for more attractive goods, and to compete                     abroad with the best-designed products of other countries.<\/p>\n<p>Thousands of labour-saving devices are now on the market.                     When first invented, many of these were of intricate mechanism,                     cumbersome to handle, and unattractive in appearance. The                     industrial designer has worked toward increasing their simplicity,                     their ease of operation, and their beauty. These principles                     apply to the design of anything, from a toaster to a tractor.                     As Donald W. Buchanan, Secretary of the National Industrial                     Design Committee, says, &#8220;Good design in manufactured articles                     means a combination of simplicity, fine proportions and functional                     utility.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The Power of Beauty<\/h3>\n<p>It is true that we can create an atmosphere of beauty and                     grace with the wealth of goods that modern ingenuity and manufacturing                     have developed and perfected, but the very first seeds of                     beauty lie within ourselves.<\/p>\n<p>If we cultivate the many attributes of beauty in our relationships                     with our families and our associates, we can achieve a happiness                     and a spiritual content such as no possession of material                     goods can give us. The understanding ear, the appreciative                     eye, the open mind and the generous heart are not only blessings                     to us who possess them, but their benefits extend to all those                     whose lives touch ours, no matter how slightly. By beautifying                     our social and domestic existence, we can all be artists in                     life.<\/p>\n<p>We can educate ourselves intellectually and spiritually                     to see the maximum of beauty&#8230;in the world of nature, of                     art and of human beings. By this aesthetic education we will                     achieve not only that general sense of steadfastness and resource                     which is perhaps the kernel of happiness, but a new joy and                     meaning in living.<\/p>\n<p>It is a fundamental truth that nothing but the good enters                     into the beautiful In this largest sense of the word, beauty                     &#8211; the yearning for it, the search for it, and the contemplation                     of it &#8211; has civilized mankind.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[30],"class_list":["post-3697","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-30"],"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>December 1950 - Vol. 31, No. 12 - The Search For Beauty - 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\/december-1950-vol-31-no-12-the-search-for-beauty\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"December 1950 - Vol. 31, No. 12 - The Search For Beauty - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Beauty is as much a necessity of our everyday life as bread. 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If our lives are to be more than mere existence, they demand something besides a weekly pay cheque, three meals a day and a roof over our heads. There must be food for the mind and the eye, the soul and the spirit. 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