Beauty is the purpose of Art
72TITIAN
THE PAINTINGS IN MY HOME
I want share some of the paintings in my home and here are a few examples. They are all copies, of course. Above is a photo of one of my favorite paintings, which is a replica of an alterpiece created by Titian in Venice, Italy. The painting in my home is the original size—13 feet tall.
I am not fond of much art that has been produced in the 20th Century. I believe art has lost its way. I am not a trained art critic but I have always known art I loved the minute I first saw it. Most of my life I never questioned why this was. Now, late in life, I have begun an investigation to try to discern why I love the art I love—and why most of the art of last 100 years or so just doesn't do it for me.
Giovanni Bellini
Beauty was the purpose of Art
Beauty was the purpose of art before the 20th Century. In the past 100 years or so, art has change completely and its new goal is to create the unbeautiful—to disturb, shock, subvert and transgress in increasingly original ways. In fact, the beautiful art that has been created, such as by Thomas Kinkaid and Norman Rockwell, has been laughed at by art critics—who are animated by an entirely different spiritual force—as pure kitsch. Scenes of beauty give way to scenes of destruction and sacrilege. I believe there remains a great hunger in the human soul for beauty in art. Just compare "Piss Christ" with the painting above, which hangs in my living room.
Giovanni Bellini
The desecration
The postmodern theme of critically praised art is to desecrate and despoil what it means to be a living loving human being alive in the world. All of the sacred things we held dear in the world are to be destroyed through the spirit of modern art, in particular anything held to be Holy—set apart for God. We can see this spirit in film (only in the last 50 years) with its focus on rampant sex, violence, gore, the objectification of women—as objects instead of women created in the Image of God—and the ridicule of people who believe in God as superstitious rubes .
LEONARDO DA VINCI
The Purpose of Art
The purpose of art is beauty, truth, goodness, and transcendence; to create joy in the recipient. The Creator of the Universe granted Humankind the gift to mimic His omnipotent creativity (as well as recreate His gift of producing life itself! by reproducing ourselves—another gift we honored as sacred for thousands of years that we now flush down the toilet—the most incredible, amazing, astounding gift humans possess. Think carefully about it before you laugh, you who are not yet convinced, and you scoffers: YOU can produce another YOU).
MICHELANGELO
Recreation is our greatest gift
Below is my favorite sculpture ever created. Out a block of marble this image came forth. Michelangelo said that this image was already present—the word means gift—in the block of marble and all he had to do was reveal it to us.
MICHELANGELO
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Fantastic, James!
Doug
Hi James - everyone's taste in art is personal. For example, I have never liked the Titian work that heads this hub. The Michelangelo sculpture is great and my Sistine Chapel visit is still fresh in my memory after many years. Also on that visit, I went to a Caravaggio exhibition. He's among my all time favourites. I'd prefer to say that beauty is one of the purposes of art. Throughout history, art has been used for many purposes. I am with you in regretting the sensationalist version of modernity typified by the Turner Prize, but I still see a great deal of beauty in much of the art being produced today. All is not lost :)
I'm not particularly enamoured with any of your artistic choices but, as always, I enjoy reading what you have to say. Thanks.
Your taste is impeccable:) I'm an extreme lamen when it comes to art. I've only recently found it interesting (at age 32) because I never thought about the artist, or the story behind the art. Now it "grabs" me, as it does you. I certainly cannot afford a Michaelangelo painting, but I do buy prints and paintings that make ME happy. Things that I understand. I also enjoy affirmation plaques, I have many of them. Like the AA Serenity prayer (not only because I've lived around addicts my entire life but because change has to do with life, period, not just an addiction), and several other short phrases that keep me smiling and positive.
Thanks for the little art lesson here, I enjoyed it very much:)
Great hub, James. Thanks for sharing these fantastic works. I love the St. Francis in Ecstasy - the light is incredible! I have heard that Michaelangelo saw the work that existed within the rock, and "merely" chipped away the excess. It's mind boggling to even look upon his works, let alone in the context of thinking about the way he personally viewed it.
I too have found myself frustrated with the stigmatization of art that is beautiful just for beauty's sake. It guess its not 'cool' but it will always be timeless. In a thousand years, the ironic, angsty, hip art may lose its relevance but a thing of beauty is a classic across the ages.
Thanks so much for sharing!
Michelangelo certainly had few rivals. Being the connoisseur that you are; is the anecdote true, concerning striking his completed image of Moses on the knee with a hammer and saying... "I command you to speak"?
Just beautiful. I really appreciate art so this was divine. Thanks James. :)
I agree with you that art is for beauty. Have you read "How shall we then live?" by Francis Shaeffer? Nice hub.
Perhaps you've heard the comment by Buckminster Fuller? He said, "When I am working on a problem, I never think about beauty but when I have finished, if the solution is not beautiful, I know it is wrong." I wouldn't say that beauty is the purpose of art but a by-product of the energy that flows through an artist as he is working. The more the artist can get himself out of the way, the more beautiful the work. Just a thought. . .
I think some people like art for beauty, but the production of art has been an expression of religion, politics, and art for hire. Dick Dale, the fabulous guitarist (father of surf music) said about art 'I want to make you feel how I feel' I really liked that.
the paintings that you feature in this hub are beautiful. Did you ever check out old masterpiece work for sale? I've always thought of the old masters as producing beauty but there was some downright ugly stuff there.
James has a way of saying the things others think but fail to elucidate - and does so with delightful insight and the occasional well-placed twist of the proverbial knife.
Keep up the great work!
art should incite riots
not physical ones, but when you look at a true piece of art, it should create momentum inside of you.
nah just momentum the core of life, but i dig what your doing here man. keep being awesome
It is all very simple really. The sacred vacated art at the time of the Enlightenment because it generally doesn't stay where it is not wanted,... even before that indeed, when humanism reached its apogee at the end of the Renaissance and man got too big for his boots. The sacred, being what art was meant to serve, having been banished from the universe, the art world and the shrewdies who run it had nothing left but aimless inventiveness (Picasso et al) to worship and gimmickry or novelty which is where art has pitched its tent for the forseeable future. On the back of that of course is ego-mania. The artist now elects to walk in the Messianic sandals brandishing his brush of self-delusion with utter conviction aided and abetted from the wings in the manner of Don Quixote egged on by faithful dependent Sancho Panza. Ergo, your successful 'artist' today is an ego-maniac hell bent in upsetting people with the novel or the plain revolting in order to make a name for himself and keep his supporters and himself laughing all the way to the bank. Your granny's fireside embroidered hankie is closer to the meaning and purpose of art than Mr.Hirst and his ilk and all their overpriced vacuous works.
I agree with you and Paraglider that art is very personal. I can see that you tend towards classical and religious art. Like you, The Pieta is also my favorite sculpture.
I have a very simplistic criterion on art. If the work moves me and I can say "wow!" then I love it. Then I take a 2nd or 3rd or nth look at the piece and when I can still say "wow!" - then I'm hooked forever.
Hi, this is the post I was telling you about: I really like to know that there are still people that enjoy the classics, and are not bored of them. Take a look at my vision of the art evolution over the years: I wrote it in an article called "The Purpose of Art Changed". This was actually inspired in this article of yours. Beacuse Beauty was the purpose of art. Nowadays it is no longer...
I thoroughly enjoy all you share James. Your home seems as filled with awe and inspiration as the Louvre - how do you ever leave?
I believe your assessment of the masterpieces vs. today’s art is accurate in many ways. There is even a difference in definitions of art from today and decades ago. Today’s primarily: a “human effort to imitate, supplement, alter, or counteract the work of nature.” Yesteryear’s: “human contrivance or ingenuity, as in adapting natural things to man’s use.” In the past, most masterpieces were commissioned based on the artist's degree of skill and experience. These days, most art is churned out with an emphasis on production, pieces being sold after the fact with their value based on PR (little of which reaches the artist).
I would however, beg to differ that all created in the last 100 years lacks glory. I have a piece by Anthony Casay that is so gorgeous and real, I swear one can hear the ocean’s thunderous power. There is such a depth that every slight change in lighting seems to move the wave rhythmically. Clearly, not the same as celebrating the natural emotions as a loving, living human being, but instilling joy and awe none-the-less.
We represented an artist in Hawaii who was third generation portrait artist. Recognizing how poor his predecessors were, he eventually turned to the more generically appealing ocean scenes. My choice was to purchase one of his earlier works of a male hula dancer, so real others would hide it in the gallery closet to avoid its watchful eyes. (Mona Lisa style) One can feel his humility as he honors and praises the glory of God. You are right, there is a difference.
I loved this Hub. I especially enjoy that someone else finds Pieta to be completely unique in it's beauty.
A 13 foot work of art is a massive covering at home. You must be cheerfully surrounded in beauty even in your shorts!
Without being too fleshly, how do you have the painting of the Assumption mounted?
I sugest that one of the best painters is HIERONYMOUS BOSH,the guy made thrillers.You might change some thoughts about painting
Excellent Collection James. I am much impressed on this hub.
Yeap. Perfectly said james. I have bookmarked it and check it once in day :)
James...
Fantastique! I particularly liked this line:
"YOU can produce another YOU!"
Yes, indeed ;)
MICHELANGELO is my favorite, "God touches Adam" There is such beauty in his brush strokes. He captures the human body like no other in my opinion.
Again, Great!
Beautiful hub, and I agree, recreation is our greatest gift.. The god given spirit in us is always ready for work and creation, it is us that don't always realize that and we spend ourselves in meaningless activities. I like the idea of Muses, that the ancient greeks had - the inspirations that appeared in the form of a woman giving the artist the chance to express himself :)
Yes-- "beauty is in the eyes of the beholder."
Yet, to me, there are real elements that go into constituting a perception of "beauty" in art for anyone: composition, use of light and dark for effect, use of colors for temperature and drama, clarity of purpose, and an evident mastery of the tools to accomplish it.
As I believe art to be a "light" shown onto what many believe to be a mystery-- the subject illuminated may not be perceived as "beautiful", but its presentation CAN be. "Beauty" is defined as an experience often involving the interpretation of some entity or object as being in balance and harmony with nature, which may lead to feelings of attraction and emotional well-being. That's subjective. to me, a more universal definition might be "any experience that evokes deep emotions that yields a balance between your inner self and your perceptions outside of yourself, allowing you to feel moved."
Fascinating thoughts presented here! Thanks for the hub!
Wow, some beautiful choices!
very2 awesome...
Thanks so much for sharing ...
Love it!
seems that you must have a pleasant living room, by the looks of things!
good hub, i share these sentiments about art, as well.
yeah, postmodernism just reduces everything to irony and meaninglessness alot of times.
Regards,
Zub
Sorry to say but yes, our culture values more of the unique and shocking and not the pure and beautiful. I miss that sentiment.
Oh James - Thank you for these magnificent works of art. I especially like Pieta, it touches me internally, spiritually. I am thrilled to find this type of hub and will bookmark it to come back to when I need inspiration.I appreciate this beautiful hub and I appreciate my beautiful James!
May this season as well as all seasons bring you joy, love and everlasting peace.
vocalcoach~
The modern art that is represented throughout the world is really just a rehash of the type of art that is in your home. It isn't just the idea that people would like to bring their heart and soul into it, it is partly training but its most likely hard to compartmentalize the ideaology that is interpreted through the renassaince era. I believe the modern artists are also behind in their own interpretation of modernity and feeling their cause is in disarray. Discovering the lost art is part of the new art or "C" styles as I call them that interpret to the highest degree the masterfulness of what art should be today. I hope you like the various artists presented by this new style to inhabit your old world paintings and maybe you'll convert. Ha Ha just kidding. Celebrity art is that which conveys the message Andy Warhol started and is beginning a new wave in this field. Professional or not its what's happening. Check out my "C" styles art , Search for "Start Up oil painting" by Penofone.
I'm glad you thought about visiting my site at least, I have much ado about getting the right traffic to might the cause if you know what I mean. Someday the right situation will come over to the right people.. If it is allowed in the artworld it could mean that people have some understanding of the underlying thinking behind it. Some cause for its dismayl may mean to enhance the characteristics of my work in general.. Nobody seems to die trying I guess...
Thanks,
Anish (50 cents disciple)

































mdawson17 3 years ago
I like this hub James it gives an expression of your personal self very expressive hub!!!
mdawson17