Remembering
Beauty: Reflections on Kant and
Cartier-Bresson for Aspiring Photographers
by Stuart Richmond
In the past few decades beauty
has become something of an endangered species in the Western art world.
Indeed, beauty has never been a central aim of contemporary art, which
has tended to focus on meaning and politics rather than formal values,
conceptual art being a case in point. Feminist artists and critics, reacting
to the objectification of women in society have rendered attention to
women's beauty, especially the nude, impolitic. This is perhaps understandable
given the persuasive emphasis on beauty in marketing, that many argue
socializes an unhealthy self-image in young people and distracts attention
from important social issues. As well, techno-globalbusiness practices
increasingly invade our lives and private spaces with a virtual culture
of information and efficiency. We do not know how this retreat from the
sensual, concrete present will affect human sensibilities and values in
the long run, although there are some disturbing signs. Seen as un-cerebral
and allied with pleasure, beauty and its alter ego, appreciation, have
acquired a decided regressive air. Having said that, for many people at
the level of ordinary life — in human relationships, arts activities,
and love of nature, for example — beauty never really went away
because beauty is a source of pleasure and well-being that we cannot help
wanting. As Plato pointed out, beauty is the only visible quality that
inspires love. A life of beauty in a free and ethical environment is an
invitation to a life worth living. Though I cannot pursue the matter here,
it is noteworthy that we often call a person of courage, goodness, and
humility, a beautiful human being. Around the world people find many paths
to beauty and of late in the Western artistic and academic worlds, beauty
seems to be making a comeback. But beauty is a difficult thing to talk
about, partly due to its being an experiential concept, partly because
it has a long and complex philosophical history, and also because there
is the risk in analysis of reducing it to something small and formulaic.
Words in the end cannot replace the experience of beauty. Despite these
concerns, however, I believe that now, more than ever in the arts and
education, we need to develop capacities for creating and appreciating
beauty, if only to bring us back into contact with what is sensual and
intrinsically worthwhile after so much arid theorizing, conflict in the
world, and technocratic obsession. Through beauty we might be able to
regain a stronger sense of human values and pleasure in living. Therefore,
my aim here is to re-examine beauty in order to strengthen its role in
aesthetic education. I do not expect to develop any precise definitions
but I shall aim for a few signposts.
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