Verbum – the Merit of Art in XVII Northern and Central Europe – Laconic Introduction

It was years ago when I dwelled in the world of art of 16th and 17th century Nederlanden painting. It will sound strange, but it’s like witchcraft to me. And now I feel as a wanderer again… Its main purpose was focus on moral education, mostly because it’d been heavily rooted in the tradition of devocio moderna of XIVth and XVth century – the world as the mirror of God’s world full of religious themes and moral lessons, but the same time …the same world was perceived as a vain and empty and illusionary, deceiving place, a theatre stage, dust and smoke, just a dream, just a moment, a short lying picture…

Franciscus Gysbrechts - Vanitas (2d half of the 17th century, Oil on canvas, 115 x 134 cm)

Franciscus Gysbrechts - Vanitas (2d half of the 17th century, Oil on canvas, 115 x 134 cm)

So, it was ethics over aesthetics. Always. It was truly unimportant whether this or that work of art had any sensual effect on a viewer. Truly, painting had no place in Luther’s but especially in Calvin’s concept of world if it had no moral message.
And yet, in this protestant world, where as I said aesthetic aspect of art seemed to have no value, most astonishing pieces of artworks were created – blicks of light, composition, perfection of detail…all of those and more could make you feel dizzy. You – being the man of XXIst century art freak…

Exilium Melancholiae, painting by Bartolomeus Hopfer

Exilium Melancholiae, painting by Bartolomeus Hopfer

But it was not technique or beauty of lines and colours that 16th-17th century people saw, it’s what modern art admirers see nowadays whereas people of those past times, saw and understood the art in verbal way. Art did not exist for art, it existed for God, it was made to serve God. It transmitted transcendental world through the mirror-art into our world. Verbum (and Verbum Dei) was the meritum of Art. Work of art was not seen but read.

Looking and Seeing

…are two different things, are they not? By looking at something you can recognise figures or objects. In Art; If you’re familiar with the history, the aspects of culture or iconography, you can recognise the scene. Seeing the Image from the Past is to be able to look at it through the eyes of the Time in which it was created. Seeing such Image is to put off the glasses of XX1st century man.

Now. Look…

Jan van Eyck, Madonna of Chancellor Rolin 1435

What do you see?
I see the impossible. I am the witness of Rolin’s vision… Vision reserved for the mystics, vision – a mystical ecstasy. I see the Unseen. Tell me more stories like that…

Look again…

Hans Memling, Diptych of Maarten Nieuwenhove 1487

What do you see?
Look again…

What do you see? Where are we..inside or outside the vision?
We’re both. It’s happening now forever.

Musing or Art historian’s dilemmas

The theory of Art is an exhausting subject. The more you learn the more annoyed you become. The adequacy of Socrates adage seems so painfully true at the moment that it makes studying, not just art, everything so trivial. What is Art and is its definition? These questions are as important as questions of human existence. To me, of course, the questions about art are more important that those philosophical ones. Why? Because I’ve always believed Art to be an ultimate exit from Plato’s cave…with which Plato wouldn’t agree. I am comforted by the fact that Aristotle didn’t agree with Plato on the matter of Art.

I remember, although it seems like ages ago , that it took much courage to be able to say in the company of noble and experienced art historians – my teachers, some of them my mentors, to whom Baroque is the golden time of Art, that “the virtuosity of Baroque forms means nothing if it glorifies marble.” And later: “can we ‘verbalise’ Infinity through complicated forms which ‘gesamtkunstwerk-ness’ overwhelms the Eye with formal beauty, yet unveils nothing?” Of course, my statement was terribly fiddly and backed up with 26 pages of , I shall say, Trial which I managed to recapitulate in 130 minutes.

“Miss Anne, your views are seditious and terribly interesting. I believe it’s not due the fact you’re being young.” That was the feedback I got from Professor Wrabec who was my mentor years ago.

Most severe critics of Baroque said that that style is just a savage bastard son of Renaissance. It takes courage and doze of arrogance, as well as eloquence, to put the most majestic examples of Gothic Architecture over brilliant works of Borromini or Guarini; saoring interiors of Gothic churches over fussy Baroque sacral architecture, without falling into argument about personal tastes and style preferences. I have in mind complexity of the XVII century mindset in mind, after all the spirit of an époque has always been seen especially in Art, and through that we see its manifestation to these days.

Nevertheless, there seem to be an interesting confusion, whether this what we worship is art or its formalities? It comes down to rather old and prosaic dilemma, we look but do we see? And, is there anything to see except, like I already said, virtuosity. I am used to calling it “visual seduction” – an innocent and not trained eye bombarded with sophisticated, hmm, recherché impulses – forms that leave no place for the child’s question “why”. If we fall in love with what we look at, we often identify it with beauty, and beauty with Art. And there’s a trap hidden in this reasoning.
Do you know what this trap is?

I had to reconcile myself with the fact that Art has no one ultimate definition, no unchangeable hmm indication which would give some form of objective starting point – some objective datum point. Every époque had its own vision of Art. We do have two definitions of art – normative and relative. The normative being; “the conscious production of things according to certain rules” This definition excludes coincidence and lack of artisanship. It was the definition popular in the Ancient Greece and Rome as well as in Renaissance Europe. You’ve got to keep in mind that to Romans or Greeks – this what we think as Art was called “techne” and was neither noble nor “high”, art was not one of so called intellectual disciplines. In Renaissance the standard of workmanship determined if something was called “good”, but even then, classifying something as art…was a rather problematic issue.

The relative definition of Art, which is the child of the end of XIX century and has been popular to this day, says that Art is everything what is claimed or said to be art. And here you’ve got a total Licentia Poetica – from Art being self-expression through emotional boasting, through destruction to live performance, messing in photoshop, creating personas et cetera.

People look at things and call everything that’s pretty, shocking or moving – Art. Courbet was right! I know now; very few people understand Art, they do understand images though, naively taking one for the other. If you become sentimental about Art, you’re no longer an art historian; you become a lover. Believe me when I say that Art is dangerous. If you don’t see a medium in Art, you’re in danger. Understanding Art can only be done through reconciliation reason with heart. It is not as impossible task as it may seem.

But then again, do we need to understand Art? I suppose not. It matters only to us – art historians. Hah. I’ll drink for that.