What is beauty in art?

Posted by Jhan Dudley on

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. A popular quote from the 3rd century and true to anything you happen to be beholding.

Literary genius, Shakespeare expressed this perfectly, in his play Loves Labours Lost of 1588 –

Good Lord Boyet, my beauty, though but mean,
Needs not the painted flourish of your praise:
Beauty is bought by judgement of the eye,
Not uttered by base sale of chapmen’s tongues
When it comes to art, some may say that not all art is beautiful, that, in fact, it should not be beautiful, always.  As with many aspects of life, such as peace, faith, love and happiness, one man’s view is vastly different to another.

Opinions vary

What is peace?  A nice quiet day spent with family or a day without bombs exploding around you?  What is faith?  Is faith believing in something so deeply that nothing else matters or believing that you will have a wonderful day today?

The options are vast, and the interpretations are many.  And that is, perhaps, what it comes down to – interpretation.
From a subjective stance, beauty is what you make of it, what your preference is, what calls to your heart, soul and mind.

Art as an emotional compass

Objectively, the harshest of views, and not necessarily the truest, beauty means perfection, absolute precision and the essence of purity.  Object views are often what society has decided is so.
The debate can continue until the cows come home.  But maybe we can look into history to decide what beauty is and whether art is, in fact, beautiful.

Famous definitions – What is Beauty?

Leo Tolstoy, a Great Russian author, coined this phrase, which sums up art beautifully –

“The activity of art is based on the capacity of people to infect others with their own emotions and to be infected by the emotions of others. Strong emotions, weak emotions, important emotions or irrelevant emotions, good emotions or bad emotions – if they contaminate the reader, the spectator, or the listener – it attains the function of art.”

So, if we take these words to heart, it would appear that art should evoke a feeling inside of us.  Whether it is a bad feeling or good, it must bring about a change of being.

What is Beauty in Art?

Art can be so powerful an influence, that we could be inspired to produce a work of art ourselves.  Art as therapy could instill a sense of well-being for some and not only relax them but allow them to think clearly about troubling matters.  Some art may have the opposite effect.  An art piece may just have us building up feelings of anger, of pure rage and we may just react differently to people after being subjected to those graphics.

But isn’t that also the beauty of art?  If something can arouse such powerful emotions within us, cause us to behave in a certain manner and perhaps say things that we normally would not say, and then surely this makes art a beautiful expression of our inner emotions

How the experts define beauty

Winckelmann, a German Art Historian, claimed that beauty boiled down to three key factors

  • The beauty of form
  • The beauty of an idea
  • The beauty of expression, which, he says, is only possible in the presence of the first two factors.
So then, beauty must be the highest form of expression and in turn, the highest aim of art.

Another visionary, Victor Cherbuliez, saw art as an activity which

  • Satisfies our innate love of images
  • Introduces ideas into these images
  • And gives pleasure simultaneously to our senses, heart and reason. Beauty is just an illusion, there is nothing called absolute beauty, but we think beautiful that which we think is characteristic and harmonious
By his interpretation of art, beauty is then just an illusion. Beauty, possibly, doesn’t exist and there is no absolute beauty in this world. Beauty is what we see as characteristic and harmonious.

Art is beautiful

Whatever you believe art to be, and many art pieces will bring about different reactions in you, it is clear that the explanation is complicated and not definitive.

Every piece of art, whether a painting, a vase or a statue, will have different colours, lines and textures which will appeal to your soul and heart.

What feelings these art pieces bring about in you, will, in turn, help you to decide whether the art is beautiful or not. Take a look through our gallery and see what is beautiful to you.

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