1
Beauty has its own holiness.
2
A life devoid of the contributions which the arts
can make is an arid life. Aridity is not the same as simplicity.
3
Philosophy includes no narrow type of asceticism. It
does not reject, like some of the forms of religious mysticism or Oriental yoga,
but gratefully accepts the ministrations of Nature's beauty and man's art. It
knows that what calls forth our attraction toward fair scenes and our
appreciation of lovely sounds is, at its final degree, nothing other than the
exquisite beauty of the Overself. Therefore the productions of talented artists
are to be welcomed where they are true responses to this call, true aspirations
to answer it, and not mere representations of the artist's own diseased mind.
For the same reason, the introduction of art into the home and of artistic
design into industry is also to be welcomed.
4
I cannot separate, as the old Greeks could not
separate, the love of beauty in Nature and art from the love of Truth in thought
and experience.
5
Art and Nature may so be used as to enlarge us, to
give us less egoistic ideas and greater hearts.
6
Aesthetic appreciation of art productions, no less
than harmonious rapport with Nature, leads us nearer and nearer to the divine in
us, until our inner being is wholly absorbed in its ecstatic joy or unutterable
peace.
7
In our own era many people are unable to come to
Spirit through religion but are able to do so through art.
8
I believe, as the Platonists of Alexandria believed,
that "beauty nourishes the soul." But we may need to learn what is really
beauty.
9
Any creative art which opens up an entrancing world
of beauty to us, if it refines and uplifts us, opens up a spiritual path at the
same time.
10
Anyone who is susceptible to beauty in music or
place has a spiritual path ready-made for him.(P)
11
The cultural arts offer a path to reality, whether
one can actually create or can only enjoy their products. Through good inspired
drama, painting, writing, poetry, or opera, there is the possibility of
achieving contact with its transcendental source.
12
To bring man to the Real, art must become more and
more refined.
13
It is the higher, more refined forms of art which
at times reveal this authentic note of inspiration. The low forms lack it
because they belong to the grosser, more primitive cultural levels where mere
physical activity is the prime concern.
14
Although it is true that aesthetic appreciation is
relative and not absolute, it is also true that the process of evolution has set
up standards within us which are progressive from a lower to a higher, a vulgar
to a finer one.
15
Art opinions and reactions are more than just a
matter of personal taste. They are also indicators of evolutionary status.
16
It depends on a man's taste, which in turn depends
on how mature he is, how rich an experience garnered in former lives he
possesses, how developed and balanced is his judgement, and, lastly, how refined
are his feelings.
17
Only out of a beautiful heart or mind can a work
of true beauty be produced.
18
The first test of a piece of art is, "Is it
beautiful?" Many minds today, especially the younger ones, will vehemently deny
the truth of this statement; but that is because they do not know who they
really are, what the universe really is, and why they are here at all.
19
The stage epitomizes and dramatizes human
experience. This offers us the chance to draw some of its lessons. Serious
literature interprets human life and offers some of its meaning. Music's
incantation can draw us up to exalted levels, and the other arts can show us a
beauty which refines feeling and uplifts emotion. But all these possibilities
can be realized only if the creators of these productions are themselves open to
true inspiration.
20
The refined works of art come out of the
refinement of the artists. The coarse, crude, and materialistic workers in this
cultural area are simply that - manual workers.
21
There are moods when the aesthetic feeling in some
individuals rises to the surface and expresses itself as the beauty of lofty
aspiration or the beatitude of nurturing reverence.
22
In scholarship, in the arts, in precious classics
of poetry and literature and music, wide-ranging over the entire world and back
to ancient eras but not deserting the latest knowledge of science, he will find
nourishment for his mind and feelings. Culture, real education, makes man
man, puts him over the animal.
23
Despite all the degradation which art, literature,
and music have suffered in our time, their work will be carried on by the
sensitive. They will continue to use imagination to create beauty or to copy
Nature and, with its help, to refine human beings, to draw them away from and
above the beasts.
24
Art cannot be expelled from human culture, any
more than thought. Just as all attempts to stop the followers of religion from
exercising the faculty of reasoning do not succeed in the end, so all attempts
to stop them from making sacred figures likewise fail. The first Buddhists were
without statues for at least two hundred years. The first Romans did not venture
to carve figures of their gods for the same period. The Muhammedans still do not
dare to imitate sacred sculpture - neither Allah nor Muhammed is ever depicted,
so fierce would the opposition be - but their artists put their skills into
geometrical patterns to build mosques of striking beauty. Art cannot be
dismissed as mere embellishment. It answers a human need. As Plato saw, the
search for the beautiful is only another aspect of the search for the true and
the good.
25
He will be told by the ascetic-minded that he will
have to shed the arts on his upward way because simplicity of possessions and
freedom from desire for outward things are essential. This is true. But he can
learn to shed them inwardly by becoming unattached. If he does this then he may
accept them into his life again. The cult of ugliness is not a necessary part of
the spiritual existence.
26
Culture rebelled against those ascetic doctrines
and fanatic teachers misusing the virtue of simplicity for the propagation of
hatred for beauty.
27
For us it is not enough to search for reality. We
search also for the Beautiful Reality. We need its presence as enjoyably visible
here and comfortably felt now.
28
A creative work of music, pictorial art, or
literature which kindles an inspired mood in the audience, the beholder, or the
reader has justified itself. It has made a contribution to humanity not less
valuable on its own different plane than that which is made by the engineer or
the builder.(P)
29
No nation can call itself truly civilized which
does not encourage the teaching, the practice, or the appreciation of the arts.
30
A country without culture, without music,
painting, poetry, drama, and literature, is a country without a soul.
31
If more persons can be stimulated to create these
works, and more beholders encouraged to view and appreciate them, the country
benefits.
32
Beauty is as much an aspect of Reality as truth.
He who is insensitive to the one has not found the other.(P)
33
We must call in the services of art to give
religion its finest dress. Music must show its triumphs in the individual soul,
architecture must create the proper atmosphere for communion, painting and
sculpture must give visual assistance to the mind's upward ascension.(P)
34
Judge a work of art by analysing its effect. Does
it leave you feeling better or worse, inspired or disturbed, calmed or restless,
perceptive or dulled? For every opportunity to behold great paintings or listen
to inspired music or read deeply discerning literature is itself a kind of Grace
granted to us.(P)
35
When art or literature inflames negative passions,
it renders a disservice; but when it purifies, redirects, and exalts them, it
renders not only a cultural service but also an evolutionary one.
36
A gracious and refined style of living might be
disapproved by those of ascetic tendencies and even decried as materialistic.
But aesthetic feeling can be quite compatible with spirituality.(P)
37
One of life's objectives is to develop in us these
aesthetic feelings, for they lead to the Overself.
38
Why should culture be abandoned at the bidding of
a harsh, anti-intellectual, anti-aesthetic asceticism? It need not be so. One
can become spiritual, detached, and even enlightened without depriving oneself
of those enrichments of mind and heart which culture can bring.
39
A work of art which awakens in its beholder or
hearer or reader a deep feeling of reverential worship or inner strength or
mental tranquillity thereby gives him a blessing. It enables him to share the
artist's inspiration.(P)
40
To the extent that the beholder immerses himself -
that is, concentrates on - a work of art, to that extent he partakes of the
artist's inspired state.
41
The inspired beauty to which a true artist
introduces the world is an aspect of the same power to which a true priest
introduces his flock.(P)
42
A philosophic temperament, well-developed and
sufficiently rounded, has little taste for the ugly bareness propagated in the
name of simple living, or for the dreary denial of the beautiful arts in the
name of anti-sensuality.(P)
43
Tolstoy, in his ascetic recoil against his own
handiwork, called art "a beautiful lie." Well, it often is so. But it is quite
often not so. It can arouse either devilish or divine feelings. It can lead men
to that higher beauty which, Keats saw, is one with truth. Whenever its
influence is bad, it is the artist who is to be blamed, not art.
44
A mind caught up with spiritually significant
meanings, or attentively held by highly beautiful sounds, is a mind that one day
will respond to Truth.(P)
45
Beauty is one side of reality which attracts our
seeking and our love. But because it is so subtle and our perceptions are so
gross, we find it first in the forms of art and Nature, only last in the pure
immaterial being of the intangible reality.(P)
46
The way to benefit most by an inspired production
is not only to recognize it for what it is, but also to greet it with love.
47
If it is an inspired, worthwhile piece of art -
whether it be music, composition, or painted picture - it will be able to shift
one's attention from other and personal things to itself and hold that
attention, however briefly. In short, it helps him to forget the self and to
become the other. Now if he could make that same transition from the self to a
higher level of consciousness where the highest part of his being resides though
it is seldom brought within the circle of consciousness, he will achieve the
greatest blessing he could give himself.
48
If a work of art or a piece of writing cleanses
the heart or stimulates the search for truth, it is worth what it costs if you
have to pay for it, or worth your time if you do not.
49
Art should evoke an atmosphere. It should transfer
an emotion; if it merely transmits a thought, it is but half art.
50
It is true that we get experience at second hand
if we get it through art, but it is also true that we are then able to get
experiences of a kind that otherwise we would never have had at all.
51
True art is successful to the extent that the
artistic production guides the listener's, reader's, or viewer's thoughts into
the mood in which it was itself created.
52
Creative art demands concentration if it is to be
taken seriously. This is achieved by entering at least a half-meditation.
53
The need of aesthetic surroundings which once was
felt by few is today felt by many more. With the democratic spread of education
this is as it should be; this is an evolutionary gain. This is one area where
the craving for beauty can satisfy itself. What is still needed is a refinement
of this craving, of the taste it engenders, to the border of elegance. With the
desertion of vulgarity and grossness must come the appreciation of quality and
refinement.
54
The interest in making or in seeing good paintings
among classes previously indifferent towards them is in a way a symptom of
everyman's search for spiritual integrity; it is another signal of a half-aware
dissatisfaction with a merely materialistic life. Beauty in art and Nature is
one side of spiritual appearance which, through the ages, has in poems, stories,
paintings, drawings, and sculptures attracted man. But because it is so subtle
and our perceptions so obscured, we find it first only in the forms of Nature,
then in the forms of art, and finally in the intangible experiences of the
deepest feeling.
What calls forth man's attraction toward fair scenes is in the end nothing other than the exquisite beauty of the spiritual link which he there has with God. This is why the productions of talented artists are to be welcomed and valued, but of course only to the extent that they are responses to this inspired call from within.
55
The difference between creative art and the
sterile copying of art is to be learned in sitting humbly at the feet of the
higher self.
56
Beauty of form without nobility of soul misleads
its beholders.
57
Art is the culture of the Beautiful. Yet there is
no art greater than that of living.
58
The Beautiful necessity is not only an aesthetic
demand but also a practical asset.
59
Men follow the vision of beauty because it is an
attraction of the Divine and not, as they believe, merely because they happen to
like it. Art can be used to ennoble and inspire man, and to revive divine
memories in his mind.
60
To deny spiritual worth to art because it is
created to meet physical sense is shortsighted. It starts with the physical
response but, in its highest form, it transcends that level. Beethoven set as
his loftiest mission the exaltation of man to a harmony with sacred ideals, to
joy in the triumph of good over evil, to peace and goodwill on earth. Bach comes
near him in certain works which are more specifically concerned with religious
themes, whereas Beethoven was more favourable to humanitarian ones.
61
However enjoyable an aesthetic experience may be,
its possibilities are limited by the presence or absence of inspiration in the
artist who made it possible. If his own creative work failed to lift him, its
result will fail to lift others, too.
62
It is true that men learn through disappointment
and develop through suffering. But this need not cause us to forget that they
also learn and develop through joy and beauty.(P)
63
It is too much an Oriental tendency to regard
suffering and unhappiness as the principal causes of turning to the quest. We
Westerners must put a better balance on this idea. The love of beauty can also
be a step towards the quest. This love can express itself through an
ever-increasing refinement of manners or appreciation of nature, and through art
and poetry.
64
Why are so many so attracted by the beautiful in
Nature and Art, in creatures and ideas, and so repelled by the ugly in form and
thought? Did Plato the cultured Greek and Baal Shem-Tov the unlettered Hebrew
share the same truth when they asserted that beauty, rightly understood and
properly regarded, could lead us Godward? For different persons react to the
Divine differently, because it has - like themselves - different aspects or
attributes. If some are attracted to the Truth-side and others to the Love, why
not also to the Beauty?
65
To live with inner death all the time, as
unfeeling asceticisms and dried-up metaphysical systems would have men do, did
not appeal to the ancient Greeks. Their attraction to the arts, to culture, and
to philosophy prevented that. Perhaps that is why their contact with Asia gave
those beautiful figures of the Buddha to that vast continent but did not give
Greece the fakirs in exchange.
66
The interest taken by the young people of today in
the various arts, both creatively and publicly, at exhibitions and in galleries,
would be a good sign and one beneficial to their evolution if the object of
their admiration were really worthy of it. But too often this is not the case.
We find productions which are senseless, almost insane, or ugly and sinister or
sensual and degrading.
67
Goethe discovered during his Italian journey that
the common people seldom had what he called "disinterested admiration for a
noble work of art. It was utterly beyond them." Just as Emerson was left quite
unimpressed by the uniforms and ceremonials of the religion he found in Italy -
a "mummery" he called it - so was Goethe, who wrote of his stay in Rome and
visits to the churches: "I felt that I am too old for anything but Truth. Rites
or processions, they all run off me like water off a duck's back; but Nature
like the sunset seen from the villa or a work of art like my revered Juno leaves
a deep impression."
68
Through art man can create images of those
qualities and attributes he finds in the Overself: its beauty, its order, its
intelligence. Whether these images come through the medium of music or painting,
of sculpture or poetry, they may bring their audience into a mood, a glimpse, or
a thought closer to their source.
69
Why should the enjoyment of beautiful
surroundings, things, clothes, music, poems, and moods be sinful, as they are to
puritanical minds? Is not the infinite Being the hidden source of the True, the
Real, the Good, and the Beautiful? To the philosophic mind their blessings and
inspirations are bestowed on man.
70
Where the faith in, or feeling of, God's reality
does not exist, then morality, art, metaphysics may be taken up instead.
71
The Moors put only a single rug on the floor of a
room, as the Japanese put only a single picture on a wall. The aesthetic effect
is at its highest when attention is concentrated; but at its lowest when
scattered.
72
The concentration of attention instead of the
dispersal of it - this is the guiding rule which is behind the Japanese custom
of displaying a single picture for a period of time instead of several competing
with one another. There is a precise remembered effect in the first case but a
confused one in the second.
73
Just as art when applied in one's own personal
life, environment, and work is an expression of the person himself, so can art
also be used as a kind of therapy to refine taste, harmonize character, and
uplift moods. So, too, can even a useful craft like handwriting and penmanship
be used for the same higher purpose. To turn a clumsy, ugly, half-illegible
script into a symmetrical, graceful, easily read one needs good observation,
self-discipline, and careful training.
74
He should refuse to crush his aesthetic instinct.
75
There is the heat of rapture, the feeling of
ecstasy, when we touch this Spirit of Beauty that draws us through and beyond
all beautiful things.
76
Correct taste is more easily and correctly formed
if we deliberately seek for the best and continually ignore the worst - that is,
if we discriminate under proper guidance.
77
Art is at its best when it is adventurously
creative, but it still serves useful purposes when it is imitative.
78
Let him expose himself to the best
influences in art and spirituality. If they are not available in persons, they
may be in books and periodicals, in pictures and statues, in records and
concerts.
79
Art may be the mere embellishment of a drab human
existence, or it may become a veritable approach to divine existence.
80
I am old-fashioned enough to believe that beauty
ought to be the aim of art.
81
It was not all Greeks who were deeply sensitive to
beauty, but only the educated ones.
82
A man may possess metaphysical wisdom yet truly
lack aesthetical taste.
83
If through lack of faith people cannot bring
themselves to look upward to the Higher Power, or inward to the spiritual self,
and if the experiences of life are not interpreted as exhortations to do so,
then the other means of reorientating them which is still left is art.
84
The lack of artistic taste is not a thing to be
proud of: yet when it appears as ascetic indifference to beautiful things, it is
considered a virtue!
85
The practice of art requires qualities which the
discussion of art does not. In the first case, we get actual knowledge whereas
in the second we get only mere opinion.
86
For the majority, Art ought to be a path toward a
higher level of being, and for the enlightened an expression of it.
87
The writer who has something worthwhile to
communicate, the artist who has an offering of beauty to contribute, blesses his
world, but the other kind pollutes it.
88
Even Buddha never condemned art; that was left for
his misguided followers to do: he even recommended, as one exercise to help
attain goodness, "the contemplation of the beautiful."
89
He is thankful for the crocus's purple or mauve
colours, for the thrush's song, for the inspired poems and the uplifting books.
He appreciates them all the more because he is well aware of the evils and
shadows, the horrors and uglinesses.
90
To recognize, appreciate, or create beauty is to
bring gladness into life.
91
There was a professional landscape gardener (he is
not now alive but his work is very much so) who laboured in a public park for
thirty-five years. His toil was his spiritual path, a karma yoga. It gave him
inner satisfaction, and gave us who visited that park a chance to share it. He
was a true artist, with a pure love of Nature.
92
The leading fashion models show the kind of female
beauty admired today - high facial bones, deep eyes set wide apart, slim bodies.
The ancient Greeks admired this kind, too, and added the straight line along
forehead and nose.
93
It is better to make efficient yet beautiful
things than those which are only functional, better to provide serviceable yet
handsome towns than those which offer shelter alone.
94
If an artistic style makes great ideas seem
greater still, let us honour it for the enrichment given us.
95
We have only to compare a muddled, bewildering
statement of truth with a clear, carefully phrased one to learn the value of
verbal accuracy. We have only to put a prosaic record of inner experience
written by an ascetic side by side with one written by an artist - that is, one
devoid of all distinctive style and beautiful form alongside of one that
possesses them - to feel which is more likely to stir emotion, inspire action,
or affect thought.
96
He may find beauty in the productions of man, as
in the graceful architecture of Muhammedan lands, the elegant harmonious temples
of Greece, the prints of Japan, the crafts of China, and many pictures of our
own Western painters. He may find it in the music of the Viennese trio - Mozart,
Haydn, Beethoven - and in scintillating gems of the poetic art. He may find it
in Nature, what she has to give through the season, through a day even, through
the forms and colours she shows.
97
The beautiful symmetry of the public and esoteric
buildings put up by ancient Greek architects fulfilled that part of their
purpose which was to create a certain high atmosphere. This also happens with
the finest artwork of any era or country.
98
Any piece of musical composition or literary
material which has inspiration will also have impact. But not all the hearers or
readers will feel this impact. Some amount of sensitivity is called for in those
who would patronize the arts, as well as in those who would work creatively in
them.
99
He will achieve at best what the artist or author
has himself achieved in the production placed before him, but only if he can put
himself in the mind of its creator.
100
Art is a help to spiritual perception.
101
The man who has discovered the mentalistic
source of beauty does not need to disdain its physical expressions. He can
accept them because he has adjusted his life to the practice of inner freedom in
the outer world.
102
He does not have to be a creative artist to
possess the pure love of beautiful moods. They may come to him from admiring
landscapes, listening to music, appreciating decorative things. But they may
also come entirely from within.
103
The love of Nature and the appreciation of art
follow easily from, or equally lead up to, Philosophy.
104
Let those who want a bare ascetic spirituality
have it. But let us inheritors of the culture of the whole known past enrich our
lives with their arts, their literatures and music, their educational knowledge.
105
But however much we appreciate aesthetic
feelings or cultivate artistic talents, we must also recognize that we cannot
stop with these activities. It is not enough to paint pictures or play music. We
must still rise to our godlikeness.
106
Inspired art should carry one upwards, should
enable the soul to soar to higher levels of feeling and thought.
107
All rare and inspired art is to be received as
the Overself's voice uttering a message and calling us back to our true
homeland.
108
Feeling refines itself if he pursues the true
ideal of art, until it attains a delicate exquisite grace like a ballet's in its
best moments.
109
A man may welcome and enjoy any aesthetic
enjoyment obtained by the physical senses from Nature's beauty or art's
creativity. But if he stops there he serves the body only; it is not enough.
What about the soul?
110
They insist on looking at the shaded side of
life - its brevity and instability, its infirmity and mortality - and then
assert that there is no joy, no happiness in it. But the man who has risen into
the consciousness of beauty through art finds the clue which can one day lead
him to these things.
111
When Nature's beauty or man's art moves you
deeply, be grateful for their help and appreciate their service. But do not stop
there. Use them as aids to transcend your present level and come closer to the
god within you.
112
The closer he draws to the Overself's beauty,
the more will he feel the necessity of linking it with his physical
circumstances; the more will his taste, senses, outlook, and desires become
refined. His home and clothes, his furniture and speech, even his diet, will
begin to improve aesthetically and be touched by a delicate grace. An
environment that is dirty and ugly may be an ascetics's delight but it will not
be his: it will, in fact, affront his finer feelings.
113
The intimate association which is built up with
a beautiful environment satisfies the finer instincts. And if the objects in it
are themselves associated with spirituality, then higher instincts are
encouraged. Moreover, to the extent that the creator of a decorative scheme or
work of art possesses a measure of mystical experience or intuition - or, rarer
and even better, philosophic insight - something of this quality may be seen or
felt in the production.
114
A beautiful home helps to introduce beauty and
refinement into thought, feeling, and even character.
115
The use of pseudo-antique furniture and
classical reproductions today in architecture is a tragic sign of bankrupt
artistic creativeness. The use of newly designed furniture and contemporary
architecture, of up-to-date materials and methods and inventions, is a
praiseworthy sign of true inner vitality. Modernist home, office, factory, and
public buildings, furnishings, decorations, fitments, appliances, and machines
are strong in their own right because they have stemmed from modern developments
in thinking, feeling, and living. The antiquated past products, with their fancy
decorations rather than functional design, were useful and attractive to former
generations but have now fulfilled their mission. Today their imitations sound
futile and untimely notes, whereas the twentieth-century creations, styles, and
productions are harmonious parts of the symphony of our very existence in this
twentieth-century world. Nevertheless, they too fall into a one-sidedness which
is the defect of their own virtue.
The modernist architecture and merchandise, furniture, airplanes, and automobiles, which express themselves in streamlined but plain clean-cut forms almost entirely devoid of ornament, do so in the belief that the purpose of a structure should dictate its form and that the mechanical function of a household article should govern its appearance. This leaves little room for aesthetic feeling. These designs are highly efficient for their purpose. But does not integral living call for something more than such monotonous efficiency - something more than such severity? What harm is there if a touch of the picturesque is introduced? The cold bare undecorated lines of modern productions are as extreme as the tropic ornate lines of baroque architecture. The one seeks comfort and utility, the other grace. Why not combine both in the philosophical manner?
116
An artistic and refined environment is a
dispensable luxury to those of coarse unevolved stuff, but a spiritual necessity
to those of sensitive evolved fibre.
117
Will it make a sensitive man more dull if he
lives in a dull surrounding? Will it increase his desires if he shapes and
colours it to suit a refined taste and puts comfortable furniture inside it?
Will a plain and homely hut conduce to greater so-called spirituality? Will the
daily rendezvous with his higher self through meditation be adversely affected
one way or the other by the amount of money and care he spends on his
environment? The answers must depend on the kind of man he is, not on other
people's opinions.
118
To surround oneself with beauty in materials and
designs, in clothes and carpets, in pictures and decorations, is not necessarily
to be snobbish and ostentatious, nor is the cultivation of taste and refinement
necessarily accompanied by revelling in luxury. And to assert that elegance and
quality and beauty must be abandoned for the simple life when one enters the
path of spirituality is to raise the question: what is simplicity? Is it utter
barrenness, the caveman's life? Is it mere ugliness? Is it squalor and dirt? Is
it discomfort? And further: How many could agree on the basic needs of a simple
life? In any case, let us not force all spirituality into a single groove. The
philosophic way is to seek a quality of consciousness which transcends the
ordinary, which is enriched by one's spiritual development and not impoverished
by it. Both thought and feeling must be able to meet in the Silence, bow down
and worship It. Both of them should enter into this final act as a consequence
of their own growth and creative fulfilment.
119
Refined and gracious living is an expression of
refined taste. It does not necessarily need great wealth to support it, for even
within a modest income it can still be expressed in a modest way. A few plants,
soft lights, fine porcelain, pleasantly patterned carpet, brightly coloured
pictures, and a minimum of decorative furniture will give a man comfort and
beauty.(P)
120
The home, be it room or house, is both an
extension and an expression of oneself. It tells, to some extent, what one has
made of oneself.
121
Small narrow minds find fit expression in
cramped living quarters, but spacious refined minds need spacious and beautiful
homes if they are to feel at ease.
122
A dingy room in a squalid slum will not obstruct
the saint or sage in feeling the Spirit, but it is hardly inspiring to less
evolved persons.
123
Two hundred years ago life was dressed in
colours, and a walk through the town's streets was like walking through a fancy
dress parade.
124
Drab, tasteless, and mediocre rooms do not
contribute toward spiritual uplift merely because they cost less to decorate and
furnish. A refined sensitive nature will feel depressed rather than uplifted in
them.
125
Bright colours in a room where cheerfulness,
warmth, and vitality are needed are most apt decoration and furnishing, as soft
pastel hues fit better to one where quietude is desired.
126
The human being is played upon by various
influences at various stages of his life in the body. We all know what climate
and music will do to create different moods, but one factor often not understood
or neglected is the influence of colour. It is always there in our surroundings,
in a room, apartment, or house, in our clothing and in our furnishings. It can
contribute towards health or take away from it; it can cheer or depress the
emotions; it can invigorate or devitalize the body; it can give pleasure to the
eyes or irritate them. Red, for instance, colour of the planet Mars and
associated in astrology with war and anger, can be stimulating and life-giving
if it is in its pure clear form. But in its undesirable darkish shades, it
simply stimulates the lower desires, the animal feelings. However, it is a warm
colour and for those who are old in years and in whom the circulation of blood
is poor, the presence of pure red in the decorations and furnishings will help
to keep them warmer. Orange will give the beneficial side of red and less of its
negative side. Yellow is the colour of reason and helps to lift a man above his
lower desires. In its pure golden sun-coloured phase, it is the colour of
spiritual attainment, of the master who has achieved rulership over his emotions
and body and passions. Green, which is Nature's colour, is restful, soothing,
cheerful, and health-giving. The pure azure blue of Italian skies is associated
by astrology with the planet Venus, the star of art, beauty, and sympathy
verging almost on love. In its purest form it denotes devotional love, spiritual
aspiration. It is not enough to know the meaning of colours; one must also know
two other things about them: first, how to blend different colours and second,
how to contrast them.(P)
127
A view which offers pictorial pleasure helps to
give those conditions which favour meditation.
128
The craving for a little natural beauty in their
home, a flower, a tiny garden, which the humblest of families may have, is
subtly nostalgic. Through Nature it is an echo of longing for the spirit.
129
Any object of decoration, furnishing, or other
figure in our surroundings which helps to remind us of the Unchanging Goal in
this changing world is desirable.
130
Why should the wish to live in physical comfort
be opposed to the wish to live in mental calm? It is indeed a blind form of
asceticism which does not see that the two can be kept in a harmonious
equilibrium.
131
If the philosopher - in contrast with the
ascetic - calls for beauty, refinement, even elegance in his surroundings, this
is not a weakness for luxury or a pandering to vanity. It is a genuine response
to aesthetic feeling, a sense of its value.
132
A refined, artistic, simple way of life, such as
the more cultured Japanese have practised for centuries, is a fitting
accompaniment or prelude to the philosophic way.
133
A simple environment, even an austere one, is
understandable and acceptable in the case of those who have outwardly renounced
the world, as well as of those who try to live in the world and yet be inwardly
detached from it. But an ugly environment, even a drab one, is neither
understandable nor acceptable in the case of those who profess to worship the
Spirit. For its attributes are not only Goodness and Truth, among others, but
also Beauty. To cultivate an indifferent attitude toward material possessions is
one thing, but to show an insensitive one toward beautiful creations and to feel
no repugnance toward ugly ones is not a spiritual approach; it is
anti-spiritual.(P)
134
When, as often, I mention art as having a high
mission, a sacred one, I do not necessarily mean the portrayal of anecdotes from
the history of any particular religion.
135
The mission of the artist is to admire and
embody the beautiful, so that others may be brought into the admiration and
appreciate the beautiful too.
136
There is a two-way possibility in art. It can
lay a pathway to the divine for the untalented seeker, and it can become a
manifestation of the divine in the hands of the talented artist.
137
The technique of art is important, but the
mission of art - to communicate and awaken the intuitive feeling of Beauty - is
still more important.
138
It is the business of an artist, poet, or writer
(of the more serious kind) to lift a man out of himself, his little ego, by
presenting beauty, truth, or goodness so attractively that the man is drawn and
held by it to the point mentioned - of forgetting himself.
139
It is the proper business of an artist to find
the highest beauty in Nature and then to reveal it, through his medium, to
others. But this he cannot really do until he has first found it within himself.
140
The higher mission of art can only be fulfilled
by a higher calibre of artists. They must look to something more than skill for
results, must prepare themselves to be worthy of being used as channels.
141
Those who are able to bless society with a
talent or gift which is truly inspired and uplifts people are themselves blessed
in its use and uplifted in turn. With this comes a responsibility to purify
themselves and thus bring the work to a higher level.
142
The artist may work to earn his livelihood. But
if he is also to consult his conscience, he must at the same time strive to
become a servant of the Holy Spirit.(P)
143
What is the final call of true art? Not to the
work which expresses it but to the spirit which inspires it, the divine source
of which it reminds us.(P)
144
Ever since art separated itself from religion
there has been confusion about art's relationships. Ought it preach, teach,
propagate a message, be moral, be amoral, or only stand aloof from these things?
The answer is that it can do or be any or all of these things, so long as it
does not forget that primarily it is art, wedded to the Beautiful, and only
secondarily, indirectly, concerned with religion, morality, and the other
things. Let people make their own sermons from the mental pictures they are
presented with, draw their own morals from the stories they read, and provide
their own religious moods from the musical sounds they hear. Such work the
artist ought not do for them.
145
Whether it be applied in the home (furnishing
and decorating), expressed through sound in music or paint in pictures, in
poetry or prose, drama or dance, the mission of art is to create images of
beauty which attract man to refinement ever-increasing.
146
Art can take the place of and be a substitute
for religion only when it is truly inspired.(P)
147
When they fulfil their highest mission, painting
and sculpture try to make visible, music tries to make audible, prose literature
tries to make thinkable, poetic literature tries to make imaginable the
invisible, inaudible, unthinkable, and unimaginable mystery of pure Spirit.
Although it is true that they can never give shape to what is by its very nature
the Shapeless, it is also true that they can hint, suggest, symbolize, and point
to It.(P)
148
An art production whose form derives from
spiritual tradition or symbolism, whose content derives from spiritual
experience or understanding, is at least as worthy of veneration as a religious
relic.(P)
149
If art has only an ornamental value, if it is
merely something with which to decorate our clothes and our homes or to
titillate our senses of sight and hearing, or if it is an escape in order to
forget the burden of our cares, it has justified itself. But it has not found
its highest mission, which is achieved when men are so affected by it, by the
feeling of refined beauty which it awakens, that they accept the clue thus
offered them and follow it up until it leads them deep within to their higher
Selves.
150
Art, like spiritual cults, is infected with
charlatanism. The truly beautiful in art and the really noble in cults are too
often missed because the quacks are more aggressive.
151
The inspired mission, the higher purpose of art
is not only to create in us the heavenly mood, but also to celebrate it, not
only to tell, but to tell joyously.
152
Art is a channel to the lower or the higher, to
ugliness or to beauty, to the gross or to the spiritual. When inspired, it is at
its best level, but it can not be self-sufficient. Even art must fit into a
place in the Whole, must not remain the sole fulfilment of life.
153
It is open to the artist, as also to the man of
thought, to use his work to uplift himself - quite apart from the question of
what it may do for others. When he was twenty-one years old, and as he prepared
himself for his first post as a minister, Emerson wrote in his diary, "My trust
is that my profession shall be my regeneration."
154
Whoever accepts the higher mission of art and
comes nearer and nearer to it through his creative activity, will then go on
from art to the Spirit deep within his own self.(P)
155
Art and poetry must rouse the most delicate
feelings, must enchant us, if they are to fulfil their highest mission. For the
highest state of man's nature is a mysterious feeling, blended though it is with
understanding, knowing - that is, intelligence. But when art and poetry
titillate only the sensual side of man they fail to render this service.
156
Art succeeds in its true mission and highest
objective when its quality is technically developed enough to induce
concentration in the recipient, and spiritually profound enough to awaken
inspiration in him.
157
Only those artists and writers, priests and
gardeners who are authentically inspired can give us real beauty. Only work born
from such a state of grace fulfils art's loftiest mission.
158
The artist, and especially the writer, who is
sensitive and talented to a high degree will have to choose between working to
please the mass taste or working to please his highest idea of art and
literature.
159
It is sometimes said that the artist who clings
to his ideals and refuses to degrade both his aims and his art at the bidding of
a harsh commercialism will most likely find scorn and starvation for his lot. I
am not inclined to accept this statement, although I know well that it is partly
true. It is not fair to make such a hasty, all-sweeping generalization. I think
it fairer to say that the genius often has to content himself with some crumbs
gathered by working for the appreciative few, rather than earning a better
subsistence at the expense of the wider clientele which naturally prefers
mediocrity. Nor is the latter always to be blamed.
160
The inspired artist, the inwardly-led writer,
does not have to see the effect of his production upon others. It is really
enough that he has brought this addition to the world's cultural wealth into
being. But if these others feel this effect, and if some among them recognize
its beneficence, they will be willing to pay for the service rendered - and thus
help to keep him alive for further work!
161
Art is a form of communication; it is not and
cannot be (if it is true to itself) an end in itself. It is a way of imparting
to others what one thinks or feels about anything. Whether it be music or
poetry, sculpture or literature, art presupposes an audience.
162
Wallace Stevens once wrote, "I am the necessary
Angel of Earth, since in my sight you see the earth again." He thus
unconsciously described the mission of philosophically inspired educators,
composers, artists, poets, and writers.
163
If an artwork engenders some kind of elevation,
if it extends the recipient's consciousness, it has fulfilled art's highest
purpose.
164
The artist who has left his audience, beholders,
or readers as much the victims of their little personality as they were before,
may have amused, interested, or titillated them, but he has not rendered them
any higher service by the capacity in him to create.
165
Whoever produces an idea which penetrates
another man deeply and brings him a new sense of harmony and peacefulness is one
of that man's benefactors. But this can only be so if the idea is a true one,
not a misleading fantasy ending nowhere or, worse, a mischievously false one.
166
The picture in art and the word in literature
may be dark hindrances to truth or real helps. It depends on how much
illumination, or how little, there is in the artist or writer.
167
We may find that the arts too may enlighten our
way because they may give us glimpses and not just bring everyday life to its
full refinement of culture. And out of these glimpses - with the purification
and uplift they give - we may be led to the supreme way of liberation,
redemption, and peace.
168
A composition - be it written or painted, played
on instruments or carved in stone - has done its most vital work if it opens our
hearts to the rare feeling of tranquil harmony.
169
Behind the work of a poet or composer true to
art's higher mission is this hidden power of his own higher self. It bestows the
inspiration which permeates his work.
170
Only as art lifts man to higher concepts of
beauty does it fulfil its best service to him. For it then lifts him to
spirituality too.
171
The artist susceptible to fine shapes and lovely
colours or to whispering, melodious, and exultant sounds, or to words which
transform the mind by alchemy, fails himself, his best self, unless he rises to
this high service of holy communion with Overself for us all.
172
To be creative, to bring something new, better,
or worthwhile into the world, is the privilege of inspired persons. To bring
something beautiful into the world is the inspired artist's mission.
173
In the squalor of Verlaine's personal life and
the beauty of his poetry we see a startling contrast. It illustrates the need to
remember that however grand the higher mission of art is, it does not quite
attain the goal of human existence; it does, however, rise to the level next
below that goal. It is a genuine spiritual path but not the ultimate final one.
174
The real worth of an artistic production, a
piece of writing, a painting, or a song is attained only if it succeeds in
giving others a Glimpse. Otherwise it is merely a form of entertainment, a
passing pleasure, or an escape to kill time.
175
If art fulfils itself when communicating beauty,
it transcends itself when the communication lifts a man into ecstasy.
176
The new modes in art have attracted and excited
some people, especially younger people, but others have found them ugly and
undisciplined and repulsive. Is modern art as insincere as its critics claim? Is
it pseudo-art? Whatever else it be, it certainly shows the spirit of ferment in
this period.
177
Those artists who are truly dedicated and
occasionally truly inspired will not be found in the contemporary mass movement
of those who mistake their bizarre subconscious nonsense for sublime creation,
their excessive mercenary motives for an authentic mission.
178
It is not abstraction itself that is
objectionable and insufferable but ugliness and meaninglessness.
179
Ill-informed persons or those with confused
minds have produced pieces of work under the heading of abstract art or of
avant-garde poetry which they allege to be mystical productions following a
tradition of Chinese, Japanese, and Indian mysticism, when in fact they are
nothing of the sort.
180
We may grant that colours have their own
independent offering to make to us. We can understand that, in a search for
being different, forms and images derived from the world are rejected and that,
in a revolutionary protest against enslavement by the past, chaos and anarchy
seem preferable, even though most of us would emphatically disagree. But who can
understand why so many people have come to accept and live with modern abstract
art in the numerous instances where charlatanry and commercialism masquerade so
blatantly under this title?
181
We are promised a meaningful intellectual
perception and an emotional experience if we continue to study these spatterings
which pass under the name of non-objective or abstract pictures. We are told
that the intuition will be awakened, since the painter created his or her work
by intuitive direction, and we shall receive even a mystical revelation. But
although all this would certainly be true if the painter were actually illumined
and inspired by the Overself at the time, it is quite untrue if he or she were
not. The fact is that almost all these artists are undeveloped souls with
confused minds, quite incapable of receiving inspiration because unfit for it.
182
The "art for art's sake" school wanted beauty
and form even when they rejected intellectual meaning and spiritual purpose. But
today's abstractionist school wants none of these.
183
Most of this modern abstractionist painting is
done from the head and not from the heart. Its claim to be uncontrolled
subconscious automatism is a self-deluded one. Its ugly splashes and smears, its
crude splotches and stains fitly belong to the machine age, but totally lack the
symmetry, the rationality, and the elegance which are not seldom found
associated with the modern machine.
184
When song and melody go out of poetry in the
name of liberty for the poet, of freedom from rules, laws, and systems, poetry
itself becomes a half-mute, its spell half gone.
185
With all their insanity and futility and
ugliness, these modern movements in art possess a dynamic spirit, a youthful
vigour, a readiness to discard the debris of the past, a forward-looking
attitude which knows that the artist cannot remain creative if he or she stops
rigidly with the copying of old petrified forms.
186
The aesthetic aberrations which are offered to
the public as works of art show, first, a misuse of language; second, a blatant
commercialism; third, a soulless materialism; fourth, an affinity with lunacy;
and lastly, a cynical contempt for all the finer ideals of humanity.
187
Painters who reject all the training of the
schools but make no effort of their own to replace it are like pianists who
reject the mastery of their instrument. The confused noises which would be
played out by such pianists' fingers are paralleled by the absurd pictures such
painters offer.
188
So much modern art lacks both design and beauty,
that its frequent failure to command respect is understandable.
189
The free creativity which may follow inspiration
will be none the worse if it is expressed through a training in the art
concerned, if it is disciplined by traditional forms. It need not be limited
entirely by them, but it cannot do without them without losing its power of
proper communication. Those who reject such education entirely not only reject
art itself but exhibit a touch of madness. There is a case for pointing out the
danger of inspiration's being suffocated by too much pedantic and academic
erudition, but the young rebels not only overstate the case and make it sound
ridiculous: they destroy it.
190
Abstract art, which reproduces nothing to be
found in Nature, or represents no meaningful concept, may have its place. But it
is not exempt from the primary responsibility of all art: to lead mankind along
the path of beauty. If abstract compositions are ugly they no longer come under
the category of art. They belong elsewhere.
191
It is true that interest in bold new ideas and
experimentation with daring new procedures have accompanied the artistic and
intellectual work of our time. But they have also accompanied its disintegration
and deterioration.
192
Those modern artists, writers, and composers
whose productions seem utterly senseless confound the irrational with the
inspirational. They regard the two terms as interchangeable.
193
It is a common mistake among artists and writers
to regard inflammation as inspiration, and to take inflamed feelings for
inspired revealings.(P)
194
An art which, in the name of intuition,
non-objectivism, and non-representationism, substitutes meaninglessness, chaos,
anarchy, and ugliness and rejects form, order, beauty, and discipline is only a
pseudo-art.
195
We may say of this kind of pseudo-art what
Santayana said in another context: "It is not true that deformity expresses the
Spirit."
196
Be original, yes, be creative, but not at the
price of becoming insane and spreading insanity.
197
Why go back to the primitive peoples for models
to copy or to be inspired by when they were either the deteriorated remnants of
earlier Atlantean-Lemurian races or the beginnings of our own later ones - both
living in Nature like half-animals or semi-savages? Why ignore all the
creditable history of art, culture, aesthetic taste, refined perceptions, and
intellectual quality which has been our glorious possession and memorial through
the work of seven thousand years? If some of this new art led to a higher degree
or a further improvement of what we now have, it would justify its existence.
But instead we see only a horrible deterioration. Its fruits are ugly
monstrosities which can have only a bad influence on its beholders. Let us
welcome the less advertised but more sincere work of those among the moderns
who, while remaining faithful to art's lofty mission as illustrated in so many
classics, yet have not hesitated to let the spirit of the times touch their
hand, throw out the unsuitable debris of the past, and open their eyes to fresh
visions which shall guide their creations.
198
The modern Western art movements such as cubism
and non-objective painting have used geometrical forms in an ugly way. If
anything attractive has ever appeared in their pictures, it has come through the
colours used. The Oriental Muhammedan artists and architects have likewise used
geometrical forms, because this was the restriction laid upon them by the
prophet Muhammed; but they have used them in a beautiful way. A mosque is a
thing which is a joy to see whatever one's religion may be. What further comment
need be made?
199
Whether it is a book, a landscape, or heard
music, whatever it is it provides us with an opportunity to discover our own
higher self - but it can do so only if it is itself functioning on that higher
level. This is why so much of modern art, most of it in fact, fails to fulfil
the best mission of art. Nature's value to us as observers depends upon our
reactions to it. Feeling is as necessary as thinking, but it must be positive or
intuitive feeling, not negative or materialistic.
200
I have tried to indicate the importance of art
and to plead for the artist; but in these days not so many know what art really
is, nor do so many who claim to be artists understand what they are claiming. At
the very best most of them are craftsmen, technicians, even mechanics, but this
is not the same as being artists. At the worst they have no technique, no
talent, no sanity.
201
Let these new art forms take their place for
those who are attuned to them, who want them; let these forms coexist with the
older ones. But let not the Good, the True, and the Beautiful in the past be
thrown aside and trampled on by intolerant innovators.
202
If the art forms of today contain much that is
worthless, they will pass away unregretted with time. If there is excess and
absurdity in them, there is also vitality, youthfulness, and often colour.
203
Those alleged artists who are interested only in
technique and not in content, whose avoidance of representation has become an
obsessive mania, whose horror of meaning has run so far as to run into madness
may, if they are sincere, which many are not, be experimentalists or
technologists - but they are not real artists.
204
The freedom which allows greedy, mercenary, or
sensualist persons to poison literature, theatre, and other arts by stimulating
lust, is unethical and unhealthy. Its victims, whether young or old, are
stupefied by their own animality.
205
Modern art has exiled beauty and forgotten, not
fulfilled, its mission.
206
Much modern art and poetry, music and literature
is derived from sources that have nothing to do with genuine art. Neuroses,
psychoses, imbalances, and decadence itself are often its roots.
207
Those composers, playwrights, novelists, and
painters who use images of other people's horror render a disservice to their
audience. The result is a harmful flow back into their own selves.
208
When unpleasantness is called entertainment,
when excessive sadism, extreme violence, murder, homosexuality, promiscuity,
adultery, and pornography are the nourishment of leisure hours, then values are
very low. Audiences demand such strong sensations, the purveyors claim: they are
uninterested in moral innocence and find no attraction in calm characters. But
it is not less true that the entertainers deliberately set out to stimulate
these decadent attitudes.
209
The artist, the poet, or the musician who gives
nothing beautiful to the world may give everything else, may titivate,
excoriate, narrate, or adumbrate, may entertain or thrill, but he has failed to
fulfil the higher in the mission of art.
210
Note to PB: Investigate the possibility that the
hidden and real origin of abstract art - where it is genuine and drawn from the
Unconscious as is usually claimed, where it is not produced by the ordinary
conscious methods to profit financially by a current fad - is in past
evolutionary prehistoric periods, especially those which Subud meditations and
LSD drug-taking reveal.
211
The artist who degenerates into a sloppy, dirty,
and slovenly way of living which he or she calls "bohemian" possesses no
aesthetic sensitivity, no refined feeling, and is unworthy of the name. True art
requires a feeling for beauty which in turn requires the artist to follow a
finer, more fastidious, way of living than the average. Filthy surroundings, a
dirty body, and soiled clothes are not the appurtenances of such a way. True
bohemianism is simply the disdain for the conventional pursuit of money and
luxury at the cost of higher ideals. It is the willingness to live a simple life
rather than sacrifice those ideals.
212
Those among the surrealist painters and poets of
last century and the non-objective artists of this one who wanted to break away
from the materialist representations of their time merely discarded what they
found: their approach was negative and destructive. They could not arrive at the
farther step because they lacked the vocation, the dedication, the character,
and the knowledge. They could not enter the real source of inspiration and
beauty, the abode of authentic silence, but only too often the drug- or
alcohol-born caricatures.
213
To call such ridiculous productions art is to
misuse language and misguide the young. They are more properly called non-art,
even anti-art. They display a complete failure to understand the purpose of art.
It would be a waste of time to comment further upon them were it not for the
unbelievable number of spiritually minded persons who have been falsely led to
regard them as manifestations of the spiritual intuition! They are as miserably
negative as a true art is firmly positive. A single painting of a countryside
scene by Constable, derided as being "representational" by talentless
pseudo-artists, will be esteemed and honoured long after their worthless
productions are thrown away into the rubbish-can where they belong.
214
We have heard much of the polluting effects
which applied science and technology have brought into modern life. We have
heard less of the polluting effects which television's portrayal of violence,
the theatre's portrayal of sexual animality and perversion, and literature's
portrayal of all these, have brought into mental life.
215
Poetry without rhythm, music without melody,
prose without meaning, non-representational pictures without form, and
everything without beauty grace or charm never touch the source of inspired art.
216
Contemporary artists, writers, and poets who
violently reject the old forms and denigrate the great names of the past, who
find wisdom and beauty and genius only in their own times (and even then only in
their own particular coteries and partisan movements), are merely trying to be
different, and to be themselves. That is, whatever their physical age may be,
this is really one part of their general attempt to assert their freedom from
adolescence. They are emotionally young and intellectually immature persons who
lack the experience and balance to form sound judgements.
217
Writers and painters, musicians and sculptors
who are devoid of craftsmanship, technique, skill, care, and training take
eagerly to these contemporary movements which reject the need of such things.
Consequently their works lack form, orderliness, rationality, meaning, health,
beauty, charm, melody, and sanity.
218
An art which does not open the fountains of
beauty but instead releases decay, violence, destructiveness, negativeness,
nihilism, sickness, nastiness, and disease has missed its way, has lost itself.
219
Far too much of modern artistic production finds
its ultimate roots not in inspiration of any good kind, but in deliberate
commercial greed. Even the discussions, arguments, and interviews purporting to
expound the theories of the various groups have a hollow insincerity behind
them.
220
Even the untalented, the semi-literate, the
incapable, the untrained avoid the necessary disciplines of art and literature
on the excuse of completely free self-expression. This is mere verbiage.
221
What contemporary thinkers like Jean-Paul Sartre
say about "the loneliness of man" refers to there being no God to keep him
company, which is a false belief.
222
There is no attempt to evoke beauty, simply
because there is no capacity to do so.
223
The contemporary impertinence which flouts
Nature in order to present its own repulsive ugliness, which rejects the Real in
favour of the insane, will and inevitably must pass away into oblivion, as it
deserves.
224
Abstract painters lack direction yet glory in
the lack. Where this is just a means of hiding their lack of skill, it is
understandable but unpardonable. Where they have the skill, which is uncommon,
it is to be deplored as a surrender to unbalanced or unworthy influences.
225
Much of this pseudo-art suggests not the
primitivity which is perhaps intended, but a kind of insanity!
226
The false feminine prettiness which cosmetic
manufacturers and considerable advertising have created, the pretense of beauty
where there is little or none, is another symptom of the sickness of our era.
227
Out of African jungle-orgies there came to
Europe by transmission through, and modified by, Harlem and New Orleans a dance
or symphonic music which was intended to arouse erotic impulse, which was a
vulgar aphrodisiac.
228
To look at the pictures of criminals on
television or cinema and to follow their doings, just as to read about them in
novels, is to associate with them. To do this day after day is to keep company
with low debasing persons.
229
In these days when so much of art is nothing of
the kind at all, when true aesthetic and poetic inspiration becomes rarer and
rarer, it is more needful not to desert the best of the past while welcoming or
seeking fresh living creativity in the new.
230
Out of the gutters and sewers of human existence
has come a generation of writers, mostly working-class, who were never taught
any better because their parents knew no better, who take delight in using
filthy language or telling dirty stories. They reproduce in literature and drama
the only kind of society - quite a low kind - which they know. There are
unpleasant necessities connected with animal bodies, such as that of excretion.
The proper way to deal with them is taught in private to properly brought-up
children. They are not openly referred to in public among adults with the
slightest claim to manners. Yet these novelists and playwrights, who degrade the
name of artist, constantly use in literature words which pollute it by their
coarseness, vulgarity, and ugliness, or oaths which "take the name of God in
vain." Restraint, refinement, and good form are personal qualities unknown to
these writers. They claim to make transcripts from life. But to picture the
lowest levels of life serves no good purpose, only bad ones.
231
When artistic taste and human dignity are
missing, we are left unmoved or unhelped.
232
It is all to the good that the younger writers
and composers, painters and sculptors seek to produce new and different work.
But when they have to force their technique into unnatural arbitrary and
senseless forms, the result is only new and worse work from which a sensitive
taste must turn away in disgust.
233
How far down has that man himself sunk whose
work is intended to stimulate animality, shock conventionality, or propagate
hostility, who has lost sight of the higher mission of art, which is to uplift
and not to degrade mankind.
234
It is not art but a trick: each tries to outdo
the others in devising new tricks.
235
Art ought to be conducive to beautiful feelings,
graceful living, and sensitivity to Nature. If we do not find much of this in
modern art, we must look at the artists themselves to understand why this is so.
236
The exclusive concern of so many writers and
dramatists, novelists and film-makers, with sexual looseness and perversion is
unhealthy. The effect upon readers or audiences can only be to breed unhealthy
emotions leading in some cases to undesirable action.
237
A production which carries aesthetic irritation
to those who behold it is not a true work of art.
238
Mixed-up and confused as the minds and feelings
of so many artists are, the meaninglessness of their productions may yet be a
far-off precursor of a newer and truer art to come.