Description

Book Synopsis
This collection of philosophical essays addresses important issues in the arts, encompassing painting, sculpture, photography, film and architecture. The author’s point of departure is the conviction that art in all its manifestations is an extremely significant cultural practice because it embodies a creative, reflective appropriation of social, political, economic, religious, historical and ecological developments, and as such merits close philosophical scrutiny, reflection and interpretation. The question of whether painting is still a viable artistic practice in our technocratic society is considered here, and it is no accident that both this issue and that of artificial intelligence are approached from the perspective of the phenomenological thought of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, among other thinkers. Equally important is the consideration of the relationship between art and the ethical, as highlighted by significant recent artistic events, as well as discussion of the transformational influence of ecological art and the culturally symptomatic meaning of kitsch. Other themes discussed include play and artistic tradition, formulating a suitable model for art ‘beyond’ Kierkegaard’s aesthetic and ethical models, the meaning of 9/11 for architecture, and Lyotard’s claim that today only an aesthetic of the sublime, instead of the beautiful, can help us make sense of art.

Table of Contents
Contents: Merleau-Ponty and painting – Gadamer, Heidegger, play, art and the appropriation of tradition – Architecture as consumer space – Kitsch and contemporary culture – ‘Passive’ nihilism in Clark’s Kids and Hardwicke’s Thirteen – Beyond Kierkegaard’s aesthetic and ethical models as paradigms of art – Dada and the ethical need for revolt in art – Art and the ethical today – Ecological art and the transformation of society – Beauty, ugliness, the sublime, and truth in art – Body, thought, being-human and artificial intelligence: Merleau-Ponty and Lyotard.

Philosophy and the Arts: Collected Essays

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    A Paperback / softback by Bert Olivier

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      View other formats and editions of Philosophy and the Arts: Collected Essays by Bert Olivier

      Publisher: Verlag Peter Lang
      Publication Date: 29/06/2009
      ISBN13: 9783039119035, 978-3039119035
      ISBN10: 3039119036

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This collection of philosophical essays addresses important issues in the arts, encompassing painting, sculpture, photography, film and architecture. The author’s point of departure is the conviction that art in all its manifestations is an extremely significant cultural practice because it embodies a creative, reflective appropriation of social, political, economic, religious, historical and ecological developments, and as such merits close philosophical scrutiny, reflection and interpretation. The question of whether painting is still a viable artistic practice in our technocratic society is considered here, and it is no accident that both this issue and that of artificial intelligence are approached from the perspective of the phenomenological thought of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, among other thinkers. Equally important is the consideration of the relationship between art and the ethical, as highlighted by significant recent artistic events, as well as discussion of the transformational influence of ecological art and the culturally symptomatic meaning of kitsch. Other themes discussed include play and artistic tradition, formulating a suitable model for art ‘beyond’ Kierkegaard’s aesthetic and ethical models, the meaning of 9/11 for architecture, and Lyotard’s claim that today only an aesthetic of the sublime, instead of the beautiful, can help us make sense of art.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Merleau-Ponty and painting – Gadamer, Heidegger, play, art and the appropriation of tradition – Architecture as consumer space – Kitsch and contemporary culture – ‘Passive’ nihilism in Clark’s Kids and Hardwicke’s Thirteen – Beyond Kierkegaard’s aesthetic and ethical models as paradigms of art – Dada and the ethical need for revolt in art – Art and the ethical today – Ecological art and the transformation of society – Beauty, ugliness, the sublime, and truth in art – Body, thought, being-human and artificial intelligence: Merleau-Ponty and Lyotard.

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