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dianna
3rd June 2014, 22:52
http://static.lockerz.com/decalz/W600/image001332185782485vtdnxz.jpg

Whatever its benefits for the prolongation of human life, material progress has exacted a high price from the earth and its inhabitants. Of the many crises that threaten us today—environmental devastation, geopolitical chaos, natural disaster, climate change—one tends to get short shrift in the litanies of the apocalypse: the replacement of culture by the ethos of the market. Granted, in a time of global crisis, any discussion of the importance of “mere” culture, let alone the place of the arts in society, will seem superfluous to many. Yet even a brief glance at the scintillating landscape of our age will reveal how vital a role the aesthetic plays in reshaping the world in the name of progress.

In so-called open societies, ideology is propagated using the techniques of art. That is to say that the aesthetic realm—the domain of feeling—is the locus where the potentialities of the social system are actualized or condemned. Freedom of thought finds its counterweight today in the systematic control of feeling. One of the primary functions of the mediasphere is to concoct moods, which then become determining factors as to what is deemed possible or impossible for society as a whole. As Slavoj Zizek has often pointed out, we are constantly told that our wildest dreams are about to come true, that modern science is poised to cure cancer, allow us to live to 150, and remake our bodies at the molecular level. However, the mere suggestion of global financial reform is met with scorn across the mainstream, even though the idea of such reforms is both sounder and simpler, from a strictly rational point of view, than the wild promises of transhumanists and TED talkers. In other words, the prevailing mood dictates that while everything is possible within the perimeters of the market, any alteration of the perimeters themselves is unconscionable.


…..


http://rcgale.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/beauty.jpg

So in a very real sense, mass media is a spiritual machine for colonizing the psyche. It establishes an emotional climate favoring the replacement of living thought by the memes of the market. Achieving this has less to do with outright censorship than with aesthetic framing. It isn’t the content of what is presented that matters, but how that content is portrayed. The secret lies in the theatre that encodes an event, the smoke and mirrors that are used in framing it, the implicit judgments it can be made to serve and the poetics that narrate it. In the course of the last several decades, modern media has woven around us a tangled web of clamorous illusions and dancing lights whose function is to divert, confound, and bewitch an increasingly anxious populace while inuring it to the realities of life outside the “green zones” of Western privilege.

We have all experienced the dissociative power of modern media. The more our media interfaces act as intermediaries between ourselves and our world, the harder it gets to distinguish between what is important and unimportant in a situation. For example, when faced with an unpleasant news exposé on the corruption of municipal politics, there is nothing easier for a discouraged viewer than to switch the channel or URL to the latest reality TV series or kitten video. The result is an instantaneous mood change. The fact that both types of content—the unpleasantly urgent and the pleasantly irrelevant—exist on the same plane is the result of an ingenious feat of aesthetic design. Media levels everything down to the same neutral mass of stuff we call “information.” Each person is asked to navigate the seas of information according to the dictates of tastes and moods which are themselves influenced by the media machine. Thinkers such as Soren Kierkegaard and Walter Benjamin saw some of the implications of this “leveling process” long before they became as evident as they are now. But it was Gilles Deleuze, drawing on the work of William S. Burroughs, who perceived that in a true information society, the mode of domination shifts from the ideal of discipline to the ideal of control. In a society of control, the prime directive isn’t to punish those who transgress anymore, but to limit the possibilities of thought, feeling, and action in such way that real change feels absolutely impossible. And control is largely an aesthetic project.

The nineteenth century believed that modern communication technology would complete the Enlightenment project by banishing the ghosts and superstitions of the medieval past once and for all. Instead, it opened the floodgates of the underworld, filling the world with automated intelligences, flickering specters in magic mirrors, disembodied voices in the middle of the night. The novelist William Gibson is right to find the locus of our “spook country” in aesthetic design, since social life has literally become a form of spectacle. Politics has become indistinguishable from aesthetics.


…..

This phantasmagoria of spectacle and illusion needs a continual investment of creative energy to keep going. The decades following the Second World War saw the deployment of artistic technique on a global scale to concoct and administer the powerful narcotic. Religion may have been the opium of the people, but entertainment is now its DMT, and aesthetic theory is the chemistry behind it. Interestingly, it is precisely at the moment when aesthetic production became central to the organization of power that public discourse began to dismiss art as a frivolous activity, useful as a source of amusement and perhaps a mode of communication, but ultimately dispensable. This is no coincidence. We sense that art has its own ethic, and that this ethic, if recognized, would pose a grave threat to the system that governs our lives.

Authoritarian societies recognize the power of art, which is why they so brutally censor their best artists. Free market societies, on the other hand, adopt a strategy of suppression by appropriation. We tolerate artists so far as they make themselves useful as purveyors of distraction or producers of luxury commodities to be hawked in staid galleries and concert halls. Artworks that criticize the tenets of the system are accepted precisely because by their very powerlessness, they implicitly condone the practices they outwardly condemn. The fight is fixed: you can say anything because whatever you say won’t make a difference. Nonetheless, the lure of success is like the lodestone on the pyramid, and we fall for the pipedream of reaching the top. Those who don’t succeed in the highly competitive cultural sector are welcome to join the legions of designers, advertisers, jingle writers, and creative entrepreneurs who put the techniques of art to work for the gods of the market. Among the minority of artists who refuse to join the ranks of the entertainment, media, or marketing industries, many flee to the dim halls of academia or activist circles. There, cloistered in impenetrable theoretical language, these bookkeepers of art, in their infinite resentment, reject beauty as the dead idol of the dying bourgeoisie. They see in art only communication, only the transmission of a political idea, an opinion, a “concept.”

We as a society have lost sight of art. We have forgotten what it can do, what it can reveal. No sooner do we dare think of its transformative potential than we chide ourselves for our naiveté. Perhaps we are too tired for art, we tell ourselves. Perhaps it is too late. Even so, every now and then, out of the fog of signs and specters, there emerges a film, a novel, or a piece of music that astounds us, that wakes us up from the trance induced by the bland media that surrounds them. In those moments we remember, however fleetingly, that art holds a secret power.

Alexandr Solzhenitsyn once took up Fyodor Dostoevsky’s prediction, from the novel The Idiot, that “beauty will save the world.” Though they lived a century apart, both of these writers uttered this phrase after having endured tremendous suffering as political prisoners in Siberian labor camps. One might expect men who have suffered so much to put little stock in such a flimsy thing as beauty. The fact that they both found their experience to be the source of their belief therefore gives us something to ponder.

Art is neither a system for transmitting information nor a mode of self-expression. It does these things no better than any number of activities. Art is the seizure of a vision that exceeds language. It captures a slice of the Real and preserves it in an artifact. The work of art is fractal and open—an inexhaustible well of meaning and image overflowing the limits of the communicable. It is a way to the wilderness of the unconscious, the land of spirits and the dead. If great works of art are prophetic, it is because they disclose the forces that seethe behind the easy façade of ordinary time. I am not just thinking of the plays of Shakespeare and Sophocles here, but also of the poems of Emily Dickinson, the songs of Bob Dylan, the choreographies of Pina Bausch, the films of David Lynch. All of them are oracles.

The shaman enters the priestly society of the ancient world and is called a prophet. She enters modern industrial society and is called an artist. From the shape-shifting sorcerer painted on the cavern wall to Mr. Tambourine Man jangling in the junk-sick morning, a single tradition flows—backwards, like an undertow beneath the tidal thrust of history. This tradition tears us out of the system of codified language and returns us to the dreaming depths where language first rose as the idiot stammerings of poetry. The shaman, the prophet, the artist: each knows the way lies not in the dry processes of logic but in the snaking courses of the heart. If art makes use of ideas, concepts, and opinions, it is only to subsume them in the realm of the senses, to push them to the knife-edge of lunacy where the primal chaos shows through the skin of objects, where all judgments are silenced and beauty, naked and terrible, is revealed.

Art doesn’t begin when you realize that you have something to say. It begins at the hour when there is nothing left to say, when everything has been said, when what must be said is unspeakable. Deleuze described the artist as a shapeshifter and a seer. He or she “has seen something in life that is too great, too unbearable also, and the mutual embrace of life with what threatens it.”* Art, in other words, is a way to the sacred. It places the aesthetic in the service of something that transcends instrumental reason. This is true of all great works, regardless of whether they deal with explicitly spiritual topics. There is infinitely more shamanism in Moby Dick, for instance, than in Avatar. The sacred doesn’t originate in the subject matter of a work so much as in the play of forces that its entire composition reveals: the whale and its whiteness, the visionary madness of Ahab, the oceanic nature of space and time. Whether we’re talking about a poem, a painting, or a song, the sacred comes through the configuration of tone, style, character, color, and intensity as well as content. It is the result of an encounter between a particular consciousness and a particular creation that breaks down the subject-object divide.

The ancients knew the dangerous revolutionary power of the sacred. It is the sudden revelation of the chaosmic forces steering the Real, the dissolution of all manmade categories, the opening of the divine eye that destroys as it creates. The disclosure of the sacred is the secret power of all great art, and what distinguishes art from other forms of aesthetic production. Only by reclaiming this power, as makers and receivers of art, can we stop the forces that are now devastating the surface of the earth from doing the same in the depths of the soul.

http://realitysandwich.com/219719/beauty-will-save-the-world/

Melinda
4th June 2014, 03:09
...
http://realitysandwich.com/219719/beauty-will-save-the-world/

Wonderful.

GuyFox
4th June 2014, 04:13
Thought-provoking

And when I saw this:
http://rcgale.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/beauty.jpg

I thought: How is this Art?
(Since it seems to be awakening me to something that I find disharmonious, and therefore ugly.)
But I did have the thought long enough to carry it through, and ponder:
Well, maybe some others may find in harmonious and therefore beautiful.
So I give it a grudging acceptance in the end as maybe having something to do with beauty.
But it does not really work for me, and seems to be more Political, than Artistic.

I hate the fact that so much of Modern Art has nothing to do with Beauty,
but is mainly designed to deliver political messages and brain-washing.

Might there be some way to unravel these mixed messages, without falling into the
stupid gutter of political correctness (which I wind up attacking in about 1/4 of
my posts on P-A.)

onawah
4th June 2014, 04:53
I love this idea, that beauty will save the world.
In Goddess traditions, many based on the wisdom of indigenous peoples, Butterfly Woman is she who transforms and heals from rape and desecration by walking the Beauty Path.
When we remember and honor the beauty of our Mother Earth and all Her creations, then we will rise up and cleanse and heal her body from all pollutants and wounds so that all may dwell here in health and harmony once again.

"La Mariposa" from Women Who Run with The Wolves by Clarissa Pinkola Estes

Clarissa Pinkola Estes tells the story of waiting to see the "Butterfly Dancer" at a ceremony. Tourists, unused to Indian Time, wait throughout a long, hot, dusty day to see the dancer emerge, expecting, no doubt a slender, ephemeral Indian maiden, and they are no oubt they were shocked out of their patronizing cultural fantasy to see at last the grey haired Dancer/Pollinator emerge, slow, not young, with her traditional tokens of empowerment.

"Her heavy body and her very skinny legs made her look like a hopping spider wrapped in a tamale. She hops on one foot and then on the other. She waves her feather fan to and fro. She is The Butterfly arrived to strengthen the weak. She is that which most think of as not strong: age, the butterfly, the feminine."

Because in the agricultural ritual these dances symbolize and invoke, call in, the forces that initiate the vital work of pollination, this is no job for for an inexperienced girl, no trivial token flight for a pretty child. It's a job for one who has lived through many cycles, and can seed and generate the future from a solid base.

"Butterfly Woman mends the erroneous idea that transformation is only for the tortured, the saintly, or only for the fabulously strong. The Self need not carry mountains to transform. A little is enough. A little goes a long way. A little changes much. The fertilizing force replaces the moving of mountains.

Butterfly Maiden pollinates the souls of the earth: It is easier that you think, she says. She is shaking her feather fan, and she’s hopping, for she is spilling spiritual pollen all over the people who are there, Native Americans, little children, visitors, everyone. This is the translator of the instinctual, the fertilizing force, the mender, the rememberer of old ideas. She is La voz mitológica."

"La voz mitológica". The mythic voice. The Mythic Voice re-enchants the world around us, lending luminosity to each footstep, and pollinates, energizes, en-chants those who hear. It is transparent, permeable. And one way to walk the Pollen Path.

There are a couple of beautiful threads on Avalon that are uplifting, featuring art by Avalonians here:
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?35206-Post-your-drawings-artwork
and photographs from Nature here:
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?52010-Beautiful-Nature-pics


There is a collage of mine of Butterfly Woman here:
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?35206-Post-your-drawings-artwork&p=366300&viewfull=1#post366300
and another collage featuring butterflies by Rahkyt here:
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?35206-Post-your-drawings-artwork&p=361945&viewfull=1#post361945

GuyFox
4th June 2014, 05:04
"Her heavy body and her very skinny legs made her look like a hopping spider wrapped in a tamale. She hops on one foot and then on the other. She waves her feather fan to and fro. She is The Butterfly arrived to strengthen the weak. She is that which most think of as not strong: age, the butterfly, the feminine."

Yes - the Strength in the Feminine - is something to meditate upon.

If Males are so "strong", why do we die so much younger?
And why do men without a female partner die younger still?

Part of their strength lies in their "Beauty" in the sense of women knowing that just by existing and representing an ideal - in a less active way, they are delivering something useful (call it "Beauty"), and they do not need to "prove" anything else.

We used to say: To make a Date, a woman simply needs to show up (and look good)

However...
If taken to an extreme, it can be highly Narcissistic, and a trap.

genevieve
4th June 2014, 17:17
Guyfox--

When I was building my house I began noticing things around me in a different light: Everything I saw (other than nature) had been created and constructed, mostly by men. Men do the "heavy lifting" and use their bodies in ways most women don't. I think this might be a reason they have shorter life spans.

I became very grateful to men.

Peace Love Joy & Harmony
genevieve

dianna
9th June 2014, 21:58
Art Continues its Prayer: On Neil deGrasse Tyson, Scientism, and the Need for Philosopher-Artists

http://www.tattoostime.com/images/355/art-science-and-philosophy-ambigram-tattoo.jpg



Recently, Salon writer Steve Neumann has taken on Neil deGrasse Tyson on why he gets philosophy wrong, and how our time really needs poet-philosopher-scientists.


…..

Throwing the First Stone

Now, the whole debate started with Neil deGrasse Tyson dismissing (via The Nerdist podcast) the relevance of philosophy to help us understand our world (and it isn't the first time). Salon's Steve Neumann, in return, debunks this argument pretty thoroughly, and suggests an alternative idea borrowed from Nietzsche called the "artistic Socrates," or people who are both scientific and philosophical. One part scientist, two parts philosopher-poet.

This, Steve proposes, could help us combat the recent trend of philosophically and artistically impoverished scientism in popular culture:

The late poet Denise Levertov once said that it is only when the bitter truths of nature, and of our human nature, are mediated through the artistic imagination that our conscience and resolve can be activated. In other words, the aesthetic impulse engenders that synthesis of reason and emotion that enables us to muster the will to transcend the reality of those bitter truths. The individual who wants to resolve her ambivalence toward life must be equal parts scientist, philosopher and poet, cultivating a wholehearted, meditative disposition within herself.

And what is needed in the public sphere is what Nietzsche called an “artistic Socrates,” someone in whom aesthetic feeling combined with the virtues of science “can reshape the disgust at the thought of the horrific or absurd aspects of life into notions with which it is possible to live.” Only this fusion of reason and imagination can reconcile our intellectual and emotional lives, giving us both claritas and gravitas – understanding and profundity.

We need Socratic men and women today as adept at communicating the virtues of the aesthetic imagination as they are the powers of reason, being ultimately inspired to do the same as Socrates while he was awaiting his execution — and practice poetry.

Knowledge-Art

http://blog.witness.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/Mask-of-Knowledge-670x383.jpg

Nietzsche's artistic-Socrates was further developed by William Irwin Thompson, a historian of consciousness who, arguably, embodies this poetic-scholar mutation in his term: "wissenkunkst," or "knowledge-art." Thompson writes:

As fiction and music are coming closer to reorganizing knowledge, scholarship is becoming closer to art. Our culture is changing, and so the genres of literature and history are changing as well. In an agricultural-warrior society, the genre is the epic, an Iliad. In an industrial-bourgeois society, the genre is the novel, a Moll Flanders. In our electronic, cybernetic society, the genre is Wissenkunst: the play of knowledge in a world of serious data-processors. The scholarly fictions of Jorge Luis Borges, or the reviews of non-existent books by Stanislaw Lem, are examples of new art forms of a society in which humanity live, not innocently in nature nor confidently in cities, but apocalyptically in a civilization cracking up to the universe. At such a moment as this the novelist becomes a prophet, the composer a magician, and the historian a bard, a voice recalling ancient identities.

The Artist as Shapeshifter, Oracle

http://rawvision.com/sites/rawvision.com/files/dawson01.jpg?1330609964

Similarly, R.S. author J.F. Martel recently argued that "beauty will save the world," in his upcoming Evolver Editions manifesto on art:

Art is neither a system for transmitting information nor a mode of self-expression. It does these things no better than any number of activities. Art is the seizure of a vision that exceeds language. It captures a slice of the Real and preserves it in an artifact. The work of art is fractal and open—an inexhaustible well of meaning and image overflowing the limits of the communicable. It is a way to the wilderness of the unconscious, the land of spirits and the dead. If great works of art are prophetic, it is because they disclose the forces that seethe behind the easy façade of ordinary time. I am not just thinking of the plays of Shakespeare and Sophocles here, but also of the poems of Emily Dickinson, the songs of Bob Dylan, the choreographies of Pina Bausch, the films of David Lynch. All of them are oracles.

The shaman enters the priestly society of the ancient world and is called a prophet. She enters modern industrial society and is called an artist.

Similarly, J.F. quotes Deleuze on the artist as shapeshifter and seer:

“[He or she] has seen something in life that is too great, too unbearable also, and the mutual embrace of life with what threatens it.”


Salon's Steve Neumann helped construct that bridge nicely by suggesting that the aesthetic impulse -- that which Tyson actually admits and uses as the foundation of the new Cosmos series -- is a philosophical impulse. The facts of the material universe don't instill meaning, but beauty, aesthetic arrest -- that creates meaning.

We don't need scientistic naiveté colonizing intellectual culture.We need robust and creatively infused philosophers who recognize that scientism is merely one ideological position, and certainly one that undervalues the power of the Imagination, a sea with no discernible shore in sight. Most of all, scientism occludes dimensions of the human psyche and renders the soul unfinished.

We need to, in other words, make room for the invisible and unknowable in our practice. Art reminds us of that, connects us with it, and, arguably (ultimately) is capable of transforming us.

Art Is a Religion

http://static.artfire.com/uploads/product/8/768/32768/5332768/5332768/large/pop_art_graffiti_painting_by_mike_best_-_losing_my_religion_54_-_20x24_a38082a4.jpg

19th century French Occultist, artist and Symbolist Joseph Peladan weighs in here on the value of aesthetic impression as sacred initiation in his Artistic-Esoteric manifesto:

"[This is] the absolute rejoinder to pedantic quibbles : we doubt Moses, but here is Michaelangelo; we misunderstand Jesus, but here is Leonardo; we secularize everything, but immutable, sacred Art continues its prayer."

"Art is the totality of the methods of realising Beauty."

Entheodelic Storytelling

https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-prn2/t1.0-9/p370x247/10252183_672216652847520_5753746494870771150_n.jpg

Underneath appearances, we are always-already within "mysterium tremendum et fascinans." R.S. author Benton Rooks has recently been teasing apart pop cultural artifacts to unearth forms, and proto-forms, of this compulsion to encounter the sacred:

Entheodelic storytelling (a term I co-coined with Graham Hancock, Rak Razam, and Jeremy D. Johnson) is a new international transmedia paradigm led by many important scholars and artists interested in shamanism that recalls a time in which fables once served as specific symbolic reminders to initiates who were to undergo trials leading them to the spirit world. Within this framework, contemplative traditions and a multitude of spiritual paths are equally at home with the plant path. Entheodelic storytellers are also aware of the sensitive issues and dangers surrounding the appropriation of indigenous cultures—and neocolonialism in general—and therefore make a conscious act of deriving material for art from the pop-culture of the West, in addition to drawing upon the sacred wisdom of the ancients with proper due credit.

"To Think is to Follow the Witch's Flight"

http://culture.pagannewswirecollective.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/lancashire-witch-flight.jpg

Lastly, we can revisit Deleuze for one final comment on the nature of philosophical thinking itself: Joshua Ramey, in The Hermetic Deleuze, writes that:

"prior to the development of distinct concepts, there is a dramatic encounter with a region or domain of potential sense, which Deleuze calls a "plan(e) of immanence. These planes are multiple, and can be laid out within color, in painting, in sounds, even in scientific functions or philosophical concepts. In this way, art, science and philosophy all have peculiar modes of thought... In What is Philosophy? Deleuze and Guattari write of the necessarily hazardous and heretical dimension of thought, evoking the surly and twilit legacy outlying realms of experience."

All of that to say, before we get philosophy, we encounter the sidereal dream time. The untraceable horizons of heretical "drunkenness and excess." These states of consciousness had a privileged place outside of the jealous arrest of "ratio" in Western consciousness, and today they survive through our artistic mediums, however little they may iridescently shine through:

"Precisely because the plane of immanence is pre philosophical and does not immediately take effect with concepts, it implies a sort of groping experimentation and its layout resorts to measures that are not very respectable, rational, or reasonable. These measure belong to the order of reams, of pathological processes, esoteric experiences, drunkenness, and excess. We head for the horizon, on the plane of immanence, and we return with bloodshot eyes, yet they are the eyes of the mind. Even Descartes had his dream. To think is always to follow the witch's flight."

The point made, however, is that thought is intrinsically heretical. Philosophy begins on the witch's flight. The human being is, herself or himself, an artistic-Socrates, a wissenkunst, an oracle and prophet in-the-making. All of us are capable of traversing worlds. All art is entheodelic in-potentia. This is our primordial nature. So do we dare face ourselves? Will we try to actualize it? It's my hope and aspiration that you, and me, do the work to become what we are, and realize that in some degree with what we make in this world.

http://realitysandwich.com/219900/the-one-thing-neil-degrasse-tyson-got-wrong/

dianna
10th June 2014, 22:06
Dostoevsky doesn't misspeak often …

http://www.gss.ucsb.edu/projects/hesse/works/idiot.jpg


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ilgEIt2N4-k