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We, the Aristocrats
Art and Faith in the 21st Century: Part 1
BY MELINDA SELMYS
August 19-25, 2007 Issue |
Posted 8/14/07 at 1:15 PM
In his reflections on art and the media in his theology of
the body, Pope John Paul II draws attention to the often neglected fact that
the moral dimensions of art are not confined to the artist, but also to the
recipient of the work.
Although he addresses this only to the problem of
representations of the human body in works of art, it is a point that has
broader implications that are worthy of consideration.
In the past, art was produced under the patronage of rich
aristocrats. The obligations of this class were relatively clear: The
aristocracy knew that they were the aristocracy, that without their
involvement, sophisticated art would be impossible, and that they were accountable
for the moral content of the art that they commissioned.
Today the situation is similar, but the division of
responsibility is less clear.
Most people living in the modern West have a tendency to
think of themselves as “hard-working, middle-class” folks. There are a few
people at the top of the social hierarchy who have the resources to act as
artistic patrons in the traditional sense, but most of this patronage is
devoted to the preservation of the “great works” of the past.
So how do we produce the great works of this century, and on
whom does the onus fall to ensure that it happens?
It has been argued that we have come, more and more, to live
in a “global village” — a world where national boundaries are blurred; where
cultural and economic life no longer exist in a localized way.
If this is the case, the idea of the average North American
being part of the working class or middle class is slightly absurd.
Almost all of us enjoy the highest income and highest
standard of living available in the world. We are, in a sense, a continent of
aristocrats.
This is borne out by the fact that we, more than anyone else
in the world, enjoy leisure.
Most of us have heard that the average American watches
about four hours of television a day. We usually respond either by feeling
guilty about our own viewing habits or by throwing out the TV and moralizing
about how people should get off the couch and do something useful with their
lives.
There is a false assumption here. The person who “wastes”
four hours a day vegetating in front of a sparkly screen doesn’t do it because
he is lazy or stupid, but because he is seeking a genuine good. He is trying to
fulfill a part of the purpose for which God has given us free time: He is
trying to appreciate art.
Some might be inclined to wonder why this is worthwhile in
the first place. When there are people starving around the world, people living
in the streets of our own cities, why should we bother with movies, television
and concerts?
This objection falls into the error of thinking that man can
live by bread alone. Like communism and commercialism, it reduces man to a
creature that consumes goods.
Art holds up a different notion of the dignity of the human
person. It declares that we are created in the image and likeness of God, and
it strives to realize this image in a variety of ways.
First, it shows the image of God looking down on his
creation and declaring it to be “good.” The artist does not merely represent
the created world, he represents his attitudes towards it, and grapples with
the mysteries and meanings that lie beneath the surface.
The artist lifts away the film of concupiscence and drudgery
that has settled over the created world since the Fall, and he gives us a
glimpse of the world as it ought to be. In this way, he unearths the potential
of creation to serve as a testimonial to the existence and genius of God.
The revelation of beauty in the arts is like a finger
pointing towards heaven. It gives us a taste of the sublime, and reflects some
small part of the vision of God which we hope to enjoy in heaven.
The arts also grant us a foretaste of the communion of
saints. In the highest forms of art, we are able to actually participate in the
subjective experiences of another person, almost as though these experiences
were our own. We are allowed to “get inside another person’s head,” and through
this, to come to love him as we love ourselves.
Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment, for example, draws the
reader into the world of a murderer. Instead of justifying murder, it shows us
that same concupiscence that draws us towards small vices draws others towards
great sins.
We become able to sympathize, and we no longer want to see
the murderer punished so much as we want to see him saved.
This does not mean that we should enjoy only “serious”
works. Comedy, also, has its place in revealing human nature. Properly done,
the comedic genius neither mocks nor induces us to scorn. It reveals the
foolishness of human life, and helps us to take our own lives less seriously.
The artist does not create solely from the powers of his own
self: He does not usurp the prerogatives of God. Instead, like a mother, the
artist is privileged to participate in the creation of beauty.
What he creates he offers to the world as a gift that springs
from the wedding of his self and the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. What is
created in this manner possesses a kind of life. One might almost say that it
is an incarnation of the Good and the True.
Solzhenitsyn, in his Nobel lecture on literature, tells us
that, “Works steeped in truth and presenting it to us vividly alive will take
hold of us, will attract us to themselves with great power — and no one, ever,
even in a later age, will presume to negate them. … If the too obvious, too
straight branches of Truth and Good are crushed or amputated and cannot reach
the light — yet perhaps the whimsical, unpredictable, unexpected branches of
Beauty will make their way through and soar up to that very place and in this
way perform the work of all three.”
This is the power of art. Goodness can be made to seem like
puritanical drudgery. Truth can be defeated by sophistries. The testimonial of
beauty is unanswerable.
As recipients of art, we have an obligation to receive the
gift that is given to us, to cultivate it, and to preserve it for future
generations. The arts are like talents which God places in our hands.
We ought not to bury it in under a pile of the puerile,
insipid entertainments with which the culture of death invites us to squander
our leisure.
Next week, we’ll examine the “art” of the culture of death
in more detail, so that by better understanding the disease that eats at the
roots of civilization, we may prescribe a fitting cure.
Melinda Selmys writes from Etibicoke, Ontario.
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