Monday, January 20, 2020
Rene Magrittes Ceci nest Pas Une Pipe and Les Deux Mysteres :: Art Painting Artist Essays
Rene Magritte's Ceci n'est Pas Une Pipe and Les Deux Mysteres The aesthetic value of Rene Magritteââ¬â¢s paintings is driven by a relationship manufactured by the artist. By specifically targeting an audience who can recognize that a set of established artistic interpretations are being challenged in his paintings, Magritte generates a dialectic argument that attempts to deconstruct Platoââ¬â¢s mimetic interpretation of art. As a result, the painting of a negated representation contained within a painted representation of that same object necessarily appeals to a subjective and not objective desire to comprehend Magritteââ¬â¢s intent. In other words, because we (the audience) know that you (the artist) know that your breaking the ââ¬Å"rules,â⬠a specific interest rather than a disinterested idea of beauty influences the aesthetic judgment of Magritteââ¬â¢s work. The we know that you know concept in Magritteââ¬â¢s paintings Ceci nââ¬â¢est Pas Une Pipe and Les Deux Mysteres effectively illustrates the nebulous connotations of beauty and the difficulty of determining an objects aesthetic value. Because of the complexity of ideas created by the different perspectives inherent in all creative endeavors, critics and philosophers, such as Joseph Addison and Immanuel Kant, have attempted to define the parameters of aesthetic judgment. Consequently, Addison and Kant each developed an argument that identified the parameters of aesthetic judgment and highlighted the sense of taste necessary for the recognition of beauty. As a result, in the interpretation of Magritteââ¬â¢s paintings, both Addison and Kant would conclude-- from different reasons drawn from their respective arguments--that Magritteââ¬â¢s work fails to attain a level of achievement consistent with the beautiful. At the top of Addisonââ¬â¢s triarchy of aesthetic judgment or taste is the idea that ââ¬Å"true witâ⬠(an Addison synonym for beauty) is grounded in the ââ¬Å"resemblance of ideasâ⬠¦ that gives delight and surpriseâ⬠to an individual (Addison, 264). Working primarily as a source of literary criticism, Addisonââ¬â¢s argument about the judgment of taste appears in his Spectator essays that are nonetheless dedicated to the defense of all ââ¬Å"higherâ⬠forms of artistic endeavors and to the supremacy of ââ¬Å"polite societyâ⬠as the guardians of true wit (Lecture). For Addison, the ability to recognize true wit represented a necessary prerequisite for an individualââ¬â¢s acceptance into polite society. Further more, Addisonââ¬â¢s argument implied that the judgment of beauty, although based on an ideal of objectivity, is in part an empirical knowledge gained from the ââ¬Å"rules and arts of criticismâ⬠that provided the ââ¬Å"accuracy and co rrectnessâ⬠for contemporary true wit to exist (Addison, 261).
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