Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/04/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Jeff Moore wrote, "It's...important not to be too absolute in this insistence that the capacity for...appreciation is somehow intrinsic, not learned. Perhaps...one needn't know Bach's musical forebears for a first-level appreciation of the music, but I betcha someone who hadn't been exposed to any notion of...a major or a minor key just wouldn't 'get' the music too well. I bet a monolingual (American?) person...wouldn't 'get' a...poem written in Mandarin...[and]...even with a dictionary, but without cultural referents,...wouldn't get it too deeply." And in response to my statement that "one appreciates art...simply by experiencing it (and...ONLY by experiencing it)," Jeff asked "Is this meant to imply that any analytic component to one's interaction with a piece automatically invalidates the experience?...and...would you... contend that a recent escapee from a Skinner box is necessarily just as fully able to appreciate any 'true' art as someone who's grown up in the same culture as the artist? I'm sorry for not having been more clear about this in my original message. Although it is true that "the CAPACITY for...appreciation is...intrinsic, not learned" (emphasis added), I did NOT mean to suggest that an appreciation itself is not learned. It is certainly learned! But---and this is what I MEANT to convey---whereas, on the one hand, one may learn to appreciate artists' techniques by studying technical matters, and one may learn to appreciate art history by studying historical facts; on the other hand, because works of art are communications, one can LEARN TO APPRECIATE the art itself simply, and only, by experiencing it (sometimes over and over again). A poem is different because its medium is VERBAL language. Whereas the "language" of music, like the depictive "language" of paintings and photographs, is abstract, a verbal language is not abstract, but rather comprises many specific verbal symbols (words) of very concrete meanings, and so these symbols must all be mastered separately before one can "get" the communication. Conversely with music (e.g., Bach) one need NOT be separately "exposed to any NOTION of...a major or a minor key" (emphasis added), but only to the major and minor keys THEMSELVES AS HEARD IN BACH'S MUSIC. So while I would NOT "contend that a recent escapee from a Skinner box is ...as...able to appreciate any...art as someone who's grown up in the same culture as the artist," I do agree that one learns to appreciate music and photography, and I do contend that the way one learns such appreciation is only by listening to the one and looking at the other. And I would add that, once one knows a language (as an adult would his native language, for example), then the one and only way one learns to appreciate literary works of art (Shakespeare's sonnets or Faulkner's novels, to cite two supreme examples) is only by reading them. BUT I did NOT mean to suggest that "any analytic component to one's interaction with a piece automatically invalidates the experience." Quite the opposite: the experience is the one and only requisite, and nothing can invalidate it! Again, I'm sorry for not having stated all this better originally. I tried to be clear but did not succeed. I hope I've done better here (and if the above is overwritten, it's from striving for clarity). Art Peterson