The Jeffrey Rubinoff Sculpture Park

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The Artist and the New Humanism: an Evolutionary Model for Art History By Jenni Pace Presnell Presented at The Jeffrey Rubinoff Sculpture Park MAY 2010 COMPANY OF IDEAS FORUM 24

Synopsis of Jenni Pace Presnell s Paper Jenni Pace-Presnell s presentation entitled, The Artist and the New Humanism: an Evolutionary Model for Art History, argues that art has the power to shape consciousness: that the image precedes the idea. Her argument rests on the work of Herbert Read, who locates key turning points in the evolution of human consciousness in its externalized artistic forms from the beginning of the Age of Agriculture into the post-world War II period. Pace-Presnell thus argues for the perception of art as a major contributor to the evolution of human consciousness, in opposition to post-modern art theory which holds that art will not change human actions. This essay is available at http://www.rubinoffsculpturepark.org/coi/2010pace-presnell.pdf Summary of the Dialogue Dr. Jay Winter starts the dialogue by questioning the origins of Read s conception that the image comes before the idea. Dr. Jeffrey Foss offers that this concept has ancient Greek provenance, which held that the pure form of an object enters our mind, through its visual image, and becomes an abstract idea independent of particular permutations of that form. This, Dr. Foss says, contrasts with our current understanding that a word (or symbol) conjures up many concrete images from which we choose the subjectively most relevant. Karun Koernig asks Dr. Winter to expand on a conversation they had about the insights of neuroscience on our conception of memory. Dr. Winter explains that the neurophysiologic view of memory is a collage which changes with each recall, and that the old metaphor of the mind as a computer databank is obsolete. Jeffrey Rubinoff proposes that we also add to our discussion of memory the concept of evolutionary and aesthetic memory. Dr. Winter counters that adding categories just illustrates the impossibility of defining a collective memory. Rubinoff offers his definition of collective memory as the total knowledge of the human beings, only the extents of which can be known. This differs from same term that Dr. Winter has adapted from sociologist Maurice Halbwachs. Dr. Lawrence Badash asks about the context of Read s ideas, and how he was received by other artists of his time. Melba Dalsin comments that sculptor Henry Moore was very supportive of Read s work in the mid 1950 s, and Read considered Moore the pinnacle of artistic achievement. Rubinoff points to another current in 1953: the propaganda battle for the cultural allegiance of Europeans between the US and Soviets during the cold war. Read, a European was legitimating American Abstract Expressionism, as the concomitant of the kind of modern social order America had and was fighting for. Rubinoff points out that this cultural struggle underlined the history of the contentious transition of visual art into abstraction, one that musicians made without much controversy. In music the transition to abstraction was enabled by the characteristics of instruments that evolved to the stage of enabling layered contrapuntal composition. He also pointed to the contrast of this to the history of visual art, in which illustrations were used to give permanence and thus immortality to those ruling class patrons of artists. The visual arts were historically part of the system that maintained the immortality and thus right to rule of the warrior class, and thus had a terrible time transitioning out of prescriptive narrative. 25

Key excerpts of the dialogue On interrogating Read s notion that perception comes before conception First, I wonder where does Read get the notion that perception comes before conception, that image comes before idea? It s so arresting and so challenging and, in some ways, so perverse, that I wonder where it comes from. Dr. Jay Winter On ancient and modern conceptions of how the image relates to the idea About the notion that the image comes before the idea that this is something that has an ancient history. Let s take the Ancient Greeks, for example The notion was that we are informed that is the form of the thing has come into us. What s in our head, we want to say, is pictures. Ideas are pictures. And then the thought comes that ideas themselves are somehow or other abstractions from those original pictures. This was replaced, about the time of the British empiricists by David Hume. That is, the word dog as a sound, calls into your mind various images of dogs, and then you will pick the one that seems most relevant. This is the modern notion. So the image comes into the mind as the form of the object, leaving behind its matter but containing its form. And then that image itself is the stuff out of which ideas are constructed. Dr. Jeffrey Foss Question on the insights of neurobiology on our concept of memory Jay Winter and I had a conversation on the ferry about memory as a collage, Jay I wonder if you could maybe expand on the advances in neurobiology that have changed our conception of memory. Karun Koernig On neuroscience seeing memory as a collage The notion of memory as a computer data bank is totally discredited by neurophysiology. Most of the neurophysiologic research is about the associative collage. It s bringing different senses to bear upon the reconstruction of an event which always changes at every reconstruction. Every memory is different from every previous one. So the old computer metaphor is just completely out the window among scientists. Dr. Jay Winter On proposing a category of aesthetic and evolutionary memory But that was something that I wanted to raise from one of your three forms of memory. I wanted to add aesthetic memory. I also wanted to add evolutionary memory. Jeffrey Rubinoff 26

On the impossibility of talking about collective memory But the more levels we get, I think the more likely it is that we appreciate the sheer impossibility of talking about collective memory. Dr. Jay Winter On the notion of collective memory as the total memory of human beings What I mean by collective memory is the sum of total human knowledge that makes up the human soul... The artist who is mapping it or moving it in evolution is actually effecting the universal knowledge base for all of human beings. It moves forward, and it s not fixed in time. It moves forward and grows. It evolves. Jeffrey Rubinoff Questioning the reactions of other artists to Read s ideas Read was a philosopher or historian of art. Can you give us some idea of how his ideas were received by artists? Did artists react to the things he was saying about their occupation? Dr. Lawrence Badash An example of a relationship Read had with sculptor Henry Moore In response to your question about how artists responded to what Herbert Read was doing and the ideas that he was putting forward. One artist in particular, the sculptor Henry Moore and Herbert Read were great friends and proponents of each other s work. They really supported one another. And Read really held Moore and his work up as sort of a pinnacle of artistic achievement and did a lot to further his career and promote him. Melba Dalsin On the relation of political and art historical context of Read s argument to its purpose This was the lecture in 1953, wasn t it? Part of it is, there was a very painful transition that art went through for about five different reasons. But two of the major ones are that Europe collapsed and by 1945 America became the ascendant culture. And Americans weren t much interested in art at all. Read brought a legitimacy to American abstractionism, not the least because he came from England. So he knew what he was doing giving the panoply of art history to the then publicized avant-garde American art. If he couldn t prove that Sam Francis and Jackson Pollock et al were at the apex of the evolution of art, then he had no future either.... Jeffrey Rubinoff On the historical basis of the differences in the transition of music and art into art abstraction What was a very painful transition for visual art seems to be significantly less painful in music: to move from a liturgy or a pictorial or a verbal or a storytelling narrative in music, into the abstract world. Musicians managed to make transitions that didn t seem to have caused a major argument among their patrons. But nobody seemed to think that this was a very significant problem, partly because they were using prosthetics. The composers made their living from selling their 27

written music to patrons who as adults could generally sing no more than three notes. So they, in turn, bought the written music to be able to play it on instruments. Somehow that was acceptable, and that happened over a couple of hundred years. As instruments developed so that they actually could tune them to play with each other and achieve a tonic and play them in tune and keep them in tune, then we get this great expansion of layered music that is totally abstract. And you can add singers and narrative or not. It doesn t really matter. For one thing, if you don t understand the language it s being sung in, it s just another voice within the music itself That evolution does not seem to be painful from our historical viewpoint. For the visual arts, this is a very tricky business. The very tricky business for the visual artist began with illustration. That s what you got paid for: the innate ability to draw and reproduce something. So the ability to illustrate did something that was very important to anyone who demanded permanence. The artists gave permanence through drawing and sculpting to the warrior ruling class. And by giving them permanence, they also gave them immortality. And that immortality was all part of the system of maintaining the oligarchic structure. No matter where that structure happened to be, perception of immortality maintained the right to rule. So this has been a terrible transition because once visual art became abstract, it didn t matter whether there were figures in it or not figures in it, whether there were patterns in it or not patterns in it. That just simply doesn t matter. It s, Does it work as art? This is now the artists serious question, not the patrons quest for their own permanence. Jeffrey Rubinoff 28