Art Meaning and Interpretation
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CHAPTER 3
MEANING and INTERPRETATION
WHO LEARNS FROM ART? (60)
Suppose that the faculty of a large state polytechnic university is
revising the institution's general education require-ments to
ensure that all students receive a sound education that will be
useful to them in their later lives. Until 1974, all students had to
study the same traditional great works of literature, music, and
visual art. Since 1974, they have been permitted to take any
course about anything now thought of as art, whether it be a
course on Shakespeare's plays, Chaplin's films, Bach's music,
rock and roll, Renaissance painting, or American textiles and
quilts. The Dean of the School of Agriculture insists that even the
more recent requirement be dropped:
Agriculture majors are serious students who come to this
university to learn, and nothing much can be learned from art.
Before 1974, our students were required to study so-called great
poetry and plays and paintings and music. These seem mean-
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ingless to me, but, even if they do mean something, students
could never learn what they mean because the experts disagree
about it. The requirement we've had since 1974 is not much use,
but at least our agriculture majors can fulfill it by caking a course
specially designed for them by the Art History Department. (61)
This course is relevant for future farmers. It focuses on agricul-tural art, like
paintings of fruit by Caravaggio, Chardin, and Cezanne; orchards painted
by Van Gogh; pictures of barnyard animals and fowl by Cuyp, Stubbs,
Audubon, and Hicks; flower pictures by Rcdon; and even pictures of
processed food, like Vassallo's The Larder. Even so, learning from art is
not efficient because artistic representations of agriculture, whether in
paint-ing or in such literature as William Langland's Vision Concern-ing
Piers the Plowman, Edward Thomas's "Haymaking," or H.D.'s "Orchard,"
are not as instructive as, and arc harder to understand than, standard
agricultural science textbooks. Is the Dean right that nothing much, or
perhaps nothing at all, can be learned from art, and that, consequently, art
should have no place in a university's core curriculum?
Should we value art because we learn from it and use it to
enhance our understanding of some aspects of the world in which
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we live? If art does have value for cognition, what sorts of things
can be learned from it? Do art objects acquire cognitive value by
teaching us about mundane matters of the world, such as facts
about farming? Suppose that those things could also be learned
from other sources, would it not be more efficient to acquire
knowledge from textbooks, for example, than from the less
straightforward process of interpreting works of art? Why should
the study of art be thought of as an appropriate university-level
subject? Some people believe that artworks can instruct us about
certain matters more effectively than standardized teaching
methods. For instance, some think of art as an effective vehicle
for moral education. Others think that art teaches us how to
recognize and deal with emotional states. But those who hold
such views should be prepared to explain how words or pictures
or sounds, when organized intdrcoems or paintings or music,
acquire a special capacity to teach morality or to give us insight
into the nature of our emotions. Moreover, anyone who thinks that
art objects are capable of teaching should also offer criteria for
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determining whether what an artwork appears to teach is true.
Our usual tests for truth and falsehood are designed to apply to
statements of theory or fact. Do these tests have any application
to a medium, such as poetry, in which metaphors and other
modes of figurative language are given a larger role than
straightforward state-ments? Can the standard tests for truth be
extended to apply to pictures, including nonrealistic pictures and
pictures that are so abstract as not to be representational at all?
What about music? Can music be used to convey truth? If art has
cognitive value, how can we learn to learn from it? In order to
understand different works, must we learn special symbol
systems or the iconographies of different cultures and stylistic
periods in the histories of the different arts? Or does
understanding a work of art require reference to what the artist
intended the work to mean? Perhaps art's value for cognition
differs so much from our usual methods of learning that we
confuse ourselves by invoking such familiar cognitive concepts as
"understanding," "meaning," and "truth"?
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PICASSO'S PORTRAITS
It is said that Pablo Picasso, in response to complaints that his
portrait of the writer Gertrude Stein did not look like her, replied,
"Everybody thinks she is not at all like her portrait, but never
mind, in the end she will manage to look just like it." Roland
Penrose, who reported this remark, added that in later years the
portrait was acclaimed by all as an admirable likeness.'
Describing the painting that eventually became known as La
Femme-Fleur. Francoise Gilot reported that Picasso orig-inally
began a fairly realistic portrait of her—indeed, the underpainting
of that form is still visible beneath the final version. But, according
to Gilot, after working a while on the painting Picasso said: "No, ...
a realistic portrait would not represent you at all." Gilot relates:
Suddenly he remembered that Matisse had spoken of doing my
portrait with green hair and he fell in with that suggestion.
"Matisse isn't the only one who can paint you with green hair," he
said. From that point the hair developed into a leaf form, and once
he had done that the portrait resolved itself in a symbolic floral
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pattern.... The face had remained quite realistic all during these
phases.... He studied it for a moment. "I have to bring in the face
on the basis of another idea," he said.... "Even though you have a
fairly long oval fact, what I need, in order to show its light and its
expression, is to make it a wide oval. I'll compensate for the
length by making it a cold color—blue. It will be like a little blue
moon." He painted a sheet of paper sky-blue and began to cut out
oval shapes corresponding in varying degrees to this concept of
my head.... Then he pinned them on the canvas, one after
another, moving each one a little to the left or right, up or down,
as it suited him. None seemed appropriate until he reached the
last one.... He stuck it to the damp canvas, stood aside, and said,
"Now, it's your portrait."' If we want to acquaint ourselves with the
looks of Gertrude Stein and Francoise Gilot, will we learn more
from Picasso's
(left) Francoise Gilot. Photo: Robert Doisncau/Rapho/Photo
Researchers. (right) Francoisc Gilot, La Femme-Fleur by Pablo
Picasso. Photo: Robert Doisncau/Rapho/Photo Researchers.
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portraits of them or from photographs of them? Will the portraits
or the photographs be better representations?
How do we determine what the subject of a picture is? At first
glance, the answer in at least some cases seems simple and
clear. A picture's subject is what the picture looks like. A
photograph is a picture of you, not just because you were what
the camera captured on film, but because it looks like you. You
are the subject of your portrait because your portrait imitates your
looks. However, when Gertrude
Stein's friends complained about the discrepancies between her
fea-tures and Picasso's picture, would they have been justified in
using the lack of resemblance to conclude that the painting was
not a picture of Stein? Picasso used a blue moon-shaped oval as
Gilot's face. Why is his picture a picture of Gilot rather than a
picture of a little blue moon? Do the leaf forms he used to
represent her hair picture leaves, or do they picture hair? What
could Picasso be showing or teaching us by picturing Gilot's hair
as green rather than black?
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PICTURING HISTORY
One of John Heartfield's photomontages shows Hitler giving the
Nazi salute and receiving in his raised hand some money from a
German capitalist. Heartfield obviously tampered with the actual
photographic image, but it often is said that, by doing so, he
created a truthful statement about a source of Hitler's power.
Edouard Manet was not present when the Emperor Max-imilian
was executed in Mexico in 1867. Manet based his historical
painting Execution of Maximilian on eyewitness reports printed in
European newspapers and portrait photo-graphs of Maximilian
and his generals. Although Manet's painting is not literally a "true"
account of what took place,
- Edouard Manet, The Execution of Maximilian, third version,
1867-68. Stidische Kunsthalle, Mannheim.
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it has been said to reveal the "true" synthesis of the impersonal
forces that resulted in Maximilian's death with the personal
sympathy and admiration he elicited in France.'
What can we learn from a picture whose creator does not or
cannot picture what actually occurred? Would the cognitive value
of Manet's painting diminish if the newspaper reports that
informed him were false? Suppose you encounter Manet's
painting in a museum but you cannot find out its title, or have
never heard the story of Maximilian. If all you see is a picture of
three people being shot by a firing squad, can you fully appreciate
the painting and benefit from its cognitive value? And what if you
do not recognize Hitler in Heart-field's photomontage, so that all
you see is a photograph of a man with a mustache who is being
handed some money? How much historical knowledge is needed
to understand works of art? Are we unable to grasp their
meanings or appreciate them if we do not know the historical
contexts in which they were created or to which they refer? And
what if a picture's subject is mythological or fictional, such as
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Botticelli's Birth of Venus, which depicts Venus stepping out of a
giant seashell? Can this be a picture of Venus's birth, since
Venus is a mythological entity who never existed and thus never
was born? Given the nonexistence of the event of Venus's birth,
can we learn or understand anything from Botticelli's painting?
"DARK SATAN IC MILLS"
"AND DID THOSE FEET IN ANCIENT TIME" From Preface to
MILTON by William Blake
And did those feet in ancient time Walk upon England's
mountains green? And was the holy Lamb of God On England's
pleasant pastures seen?
And did the Countenance Divine Shine forth upon our clouded
hills? And was Jerusalem builded here Among these dark Satanic
Mills? Bring me my bow of burning gold! Bring me my arrows of
desire! Bring me my spear! 0 clouds, unfold! Bring me my chariot
of fire!
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I will not cease from mental fight, Nor shall my sword sleep in my
hand, Till we have built Jerusalem In England's green and
pleasant land.
-WILLIAM BLAKE
The interpretation of the phrase "dark Satanic mills" in this poem
occasioned a vehement argument between critics John Wain and
F. W. Bateson. Bateson charged that Wain's attempt to make the
poem relevant to modern readers resulted in an anachronistic
interpretation:
To Mr. Wain . Blake's mills arc a nineteenth-century textile-
factory: "dark" with the soot from its steam-engines, "Satanic"
because of capitalism's indifference to human suffer-ing.
Aesthetically this interpretation may perhaps be preferable to
Blake's ... There can be no question of Blake or his original
readers giving "dark Satanic mills" ... the sense that Mr. Wain
prefers. There were no grim steam-driven textile factories when
Blake wrote, ... nor apparently did capitalism, as a coherent
economic theory, ever penetrate his consciousness. To sub-
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stitute for the Old Testament hand-mills (a civic institution) the
steam-driven mills of the nineteenth-century (the children of the
capitalist entrepreneur) is . . . to re-write Blake's poem. And, in the
last analysis, this is what Mr. Wain is really encouraging the
modern reader to do.'
Wain takes the modem interpretation of "dark Satanic Mills" as an
aesthetic improvement on what the words meant to Blake. Does
that make it the right meaning? If the modem meaning is right,
was Blake's meaning wrong? Could both meanings be right, even
though they differ and may not be compatible?
Does the fact that Blake cannot have been referring to the textile
factories of the industrial revolution mean that the poem ought not
be read as if he had? Or does the fact that readers in later
historical periods are familiar with these factories justify Wain's
assigning a transformed meaning to Blake's poem? Should we
establish the meaning or inter-pretation of an artwork by reference
to the artist's intentions or by trying to discover how the artist's
contemporaries understood the work? Do the meanings of
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artworks remain the same throughout history, or does the
meaning of each work change to reflect the changing experience
and interests of audiences in different historical periods? Should
we talk as if artworks possess meaning, thereby suggesting that
art is analogous to language and that its primary purpose is as a
means of communication, or is it misleading to conceive of art in
this way?
IMITATION AND REALITY Although both Plato and Aristotle held
the imitation theory of art, taking artworks to present likenesses of
things, they drew different conclusions about whether art could
contribute to knowledge. Plato thought one acquired knowledge
only by directly encountering the Forms or Ideas that, in his
philosophy, constitute true reality and make it possible to
understand ordinary physical objects. Thus, since art-works arc
merely imitations of ordinary physical objects, which themselves
participate only derivatively in the Forms, they are, as he said in
Book 10 of the Republic, "at the third remove" from reality and
cannot provide us with knowledge. Indeed, artworks are
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distractions that divert us from learning about true reality, the
Forms. Thus, art for Plato was not a source of knowledge or even
of reliable opinion. Plato also believed that, because an artist
cannot possess expertise about all the many different kinds of
things imitated in art, artworks cannot even provide reliable
practical knowledge. For instance, a painting may portray
animals, plants, rock, sky, sea and sun, but it is implausible that
the painter could be an expert in husbandry, botany, geology,
meteorology, oceanography, and astronomy. Similarly, a drama
may depict military strategy, shipbuilding, civic life, domestic
organization, or death, but one would scarcely expect the
playwright to be an expert general, shipwright, statesman,
domestic authority, and doctor too. Because Plato found it
impossible to believe that either painter or playwright had the
knowledge to render accurate imitations, he concluded that art
could provide neither intellectual nor practical knowledge. Like
Plato, Aristotle also held that artworks were imitations, but he
claimed that it is natural and beneficial for humans to learn by
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imitating and also to learn from imitations that are artistically
made. In circumstances where it is impractical or unilluminating to
try to learn about real things directly, imitations can teach us.
Exploring these matters in the Poetics, Aristotle pointed out that
tragic poetry, unlike history, tends to express general truths, that
is, not just the facts of what has actually happened as history
does, but the kind of thing that is likely or certain to happen.'
History, he said, describes individ-ual, often coincidental, events
that have actually taken place, whereas poetry discovers
generalizable truths about the sorts of things that "probably or
necessarily" occur. These truths govern what happens to us in
reality. But when we are living in the midst of events that accord
with these general truths, it may be difficult to understand them in
their entirety, to discover their patterns, and to draw lessons from
them. So, Aristotle suggested, by composing an imitation of an
action to be acted out on stage, the tragedian can exhibit the
same truth as is displayed by real action, but in circumstances
conducive to learning. Whereas a real action, replete with real
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death and real destruction, might distract us from the opportunity
to learn, a suitably idealized replica of the action—for instance,
Sophocles' Oedipus Rex-permits us to comprehend those
principles of probability or necessity that govern human activity. It
is somewhat as studying a plastic laboratory model of a human
heart might facilitate learning about the typical structure of the
heart more effectively than dissecting the heart of a randomly
selected, perhaps diseased, corpse. In such a case, the model
reproduces and emphasizes the heart's essential structure and
general features but eliminates both the idiosyncrasies and
distracting repul-sion of an actual specimen. Viewing classical
thought from the perspective of postmodern art, Arthur Danto
suggested that the Greek tradition established that art's essential
character resided in its difference from real things, and that this
contrast between imitation and reality continues to influence our
concept of art.' Indeed, according to Danto, not only classical
Greek sculpture and tragedy but later artworks as diverse as the
religious paintings of Raphael, the plays of Shakespeare, the
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portraits of Joshua Reynolds, the novels of Emile Zola, and the
painting of Renoir all can be seen as unabashedly imitative in the
sense that they seek to represent the real world without posing
any danger of being mistaken for real things. If you go to a
production of Shakespeare's Othello, for instance, and during the
crucial scene in which Othello strangles Desdemona someone
jumps up on the stage shouting, "Call the police! Save that lady!"
you would be astonished that anyone would mistake the acting in
a play for the real act of murder. So, it seems reasonable to hold
that one element crucial to understanding art is realizing that art
objects must be different from "real" things. According to Danto,
however, postmodern artists try to reduce the distance between
art and real things. For instance, as we noted in Chapter 1,
Marcel Duchamp used a real shovel as the artwork In Advance of
the Broken Arm. However, if you needed to dig your car out of the
snow and used In Advance of the Broken Arm to do it, your using
an artwork as a real thing would not be the same sort of mistake
as interfering with the actor playing Othello when he imitates
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stran-gling the actress playing Desdemona. The cases arc
different because In Advance of the Broken Arm is a real shovel,
whereas the actor merely imitates strangulation. According to
Danto, postmodern artists characteristically create objects that
are, ambiguously, both art and real things. For instance, Robert
Indiana paints pictures of bull's-eye targets that are imitations of
targets and, at the same time, real targets (since the concentric
circles of the paintings are indiscernible from the concentric
circles of a target). Such cases raise interesting questions. For
instance, if a Robert Indiana painting and a target made for
archery practice were to hang next to each other in a museum,
would it be appropriate for the museum director to object to your
shooting arrows into the Indiana painting? Could he or she
reasonably urge you to restrict your shooting to the target, when
the painting and the target look exactly alike? Not only is it
traditional in Western thought to believe that art tells or shows us
about reality by imitating real things, but it is commonsensical to
think this way. It may seem that the simplest explanation of why
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we know that a portrait is a picture of its sitter, or that Gone with
the Wind is about the American Civil War, is that the portrait
imitates in paint the facial shape and features of the person
portrayed, and the novel imitates in words how someone who was
there would describe the clothing and houses and social and
military events of the Civil War. But there are problems in thinking
that whenever anyone understands what a work of art is about, he
or she is learning from the work as from a model or imitation of a
real thing. First, some artistic media, such as music and textiles,
are difficult to conceive of as imitative, that is they do not lend
themselves to resembling other kinds of things. Even in music like
Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf, where an instrumental theme is
assigned to represent each character in the narrative, it is
implausible to say that the sound of each theme imitates the
sound of the animal it represents. (The duck theme comes
closest, but even here Prokofiev sacrificed faithful imitation of a
duck's quacking to musicality.) Meaning in music seldom is
achieved through direct imitation (one rare exception is
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Prokofiev's use of drums to imitate the sound of the hunters
shootingL• the wolf). But even in these cases the imitative sounds
are typically a very small part of the musical composition. There is
another difficulty in analyzing one's understanding of an artwork in
terms of one's recognition of it as an imitation. If artworks
functioned by imitating, then accuracy would seem to be the
appro-priate standard for judging a work's success. The more
accurate the imitation, the more we might expect to learn from a
work, and the easier it might be to do so. Yet in cases like the
Picasso portraits of Gertrude Stein and Francoise Gilot,
representation does not seem to be a matter of accurate imitation.
Indeed, on Picasso's own testimony, part of the Gilot portrait
imitates a moon, but the picture does not represent or mean or
teach us about anything having to do with moons. The picture is a
portrait of Gilot, but not by virtue of being an accurate copy of her.
(70) ICONS, SYMBOLS, FIGURATIVE MODES Since the
imitation theory appears not to provide a sufficiently general
explanation to cover all or even most cases of understanding
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works of art, philosophers and other theorists have attempted to
develop more illuminating approaches. One proposal is that
artworks arc a means of communication, roughly analogous to
languages, codes, or the pictorial symbols used internationally.
An example of the last category is the red circle with a line
through it: when the line is drawn through a picture of a cigarette,
it is easily understood to mean No Smoking; when the line is
drawn through a picture of a car, it means No Automobile Traffic.
In fact, this symbol is so widely understood that its meaning is
transparent even when adapted to new or bizarre uses. Are
artworks symbols, and, if so, how do we learn what the symbols
mean? Some people think there are natural symbols whose
meanings we understand without learning any rules or
conventions. Imitations might be considered natural symbols
because the resemblance be-tween imitation and imitated object
is obvious and need not be learned. However, the evidence about
whether people naturally see resemblances, or whether they need
training to do so, is inconclusive. For instance, there is some
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anthropological research to show that people who have never
seen a photograph cannot recognize clear photographs of the
most familiar objects—even humans. But there is also evidence
that the objects become recognizable when compensa-tion is
made for such features as the distractingly shiny surface of
photographic paper. Other examples of natural symbolic relations
are the use of a picture of fire or the color red to symbolize heat.
In these cases, it is claimed, people naturally associate fire with
heat, and red with fire, so no one needs to teach them the
meaning of the symbols. But even if this were true, natural
symbols are likely to have meaning only for those who have had
the opportunity to learn to make the associations. If people were
no longer to use matches, gas stoves, and fireplaces, or, indeed,
ever to see a fire burning, a picture of a fire would likely be
ineffective in getting them to think about heat. Clearly, some
learning is needed to understand the symbolic dimensions of
many artworks. John Milton's poetry, for instance, is full of
references to biblical texts, and readers will fail to apprehend the
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full impact of his work if they do not understand these references.
For instance, in Milton's famous sonnet on his blindness, "When I
consider how my light is spent," the line "And that one talent
which is death to hide" refers not only to Milton's despair at failing
to exercise his own talent for writing, but also to the parable of the
talents in Matthew 25, in which the third servant buries the gold
coins that his master had entrusted to him. By grasping both
references, the reader understands Milton to be drawing attention
to similarities between the spiritual emptiness occasioned by
being unable to use one's creative talent and the spiritual
emptiness occasioned by denying Christ. Similarly, in much
Western painting, Christian divinity is sym-bolized conventionally
by the halo. A viewer who had not learned this convention would
not understand that the gold rings around the heads of certain
figures in Renaissance paintings signify that the figures represent
holy persons. Nor would someone completely unfamiliar with
Renaissance painting conventions be likely to recognize that the
figures with wings on their shoulders are not freaks or hybrid
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human birds, but angels, spirits, or divine beings. Sometimes,
learning a special fact about a particular work, rather than the
conventions of the style or cultural period in which the work was
made, helps us understand it. In Bach's secular cantata "Lasst
uns Sorgen, Lasst uns Wachen: Hercules auf dem Scheidewege,"
the words "for the snakes which tried to seize me with their
lullaby" are accompanied by rising and falling music in the bass.
The winding figures of the bass are often described as
representing snakes, yet what "winds" is not the sound of the
music but the appearance of the notation in the music's score. A
somewhat similar case is that of the fifteenth-century French song
"Belle Bon Sage" by Baude Cordier. Someone who does not
understand the words or the notation can nevertheless
understand that it is a love song—the score is written in the shape
of a heart. In both cases, the meaning of the music is enhanced
for those who have seen, even if they cannot read, the musical
score. These cases, and many others, illustrate how under-
standing the conventions of a stylistic or cultural period, or
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knowing enough historical information to decipher allusions, helps
us to grasp the symbolic meaning of artworks or to comprehend
what certainl,.. works are about. Some contemporary
philosophers, such as Nelson Goodman, believe that
representation and description in art are completely conventional.
According to Goodman, nonlinguistic systems differ from
languages, depiction from description, the representational from
the verbal, and paintings from poems primarily with respect to
certain properties of the symbol schemes. Goodman writes in
Languages of Art:
A picture in one system may be a description in another; and
whether a denoting symbol is representational depends not upon
whether it resem-bles what it denotes but upon its own
relationships to other symbols in a given system. ... A symbol is a
representation only if it belongs to a [symbol scheme which has
certain structural properties)? If Goodman is right, to understand
artworks is to understand which symbol systems are relevant and
how they work. (71)
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(72) Some of the ways in which artists convey their meaning
undoubt-edly rely on our understanding of nonartistic symbol
systems, such as the conventions of ordinary language.
Figurative language, for example, metaphor and simile, seems to
work this way. From Aristotle on, almost all theories about
metaphorical language (and about pictorial metaphor as well)
have presumed that figurative expressions gain force by operating
in contrast to standard or literal expression. Thus, we understand
the figure of speech "He fought with the heart of a lion" not as
literally asserting that "He had a lion's heart transplant" or "He
used a lion's heart as a weapon," or even "He and a lion's heart
battled against each other," but rather as metaphorically
attributing courage to the way the subject fought. It appears that
we first must understand the usages of literal assertion in ordinary
contexts to recognize when these conventional usages are being
employed figuratively. What else has to be understood to
understand metaphor and other types of figurative expression is
best revealed by careful analysis of a great variety of cases.
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EXPRESSION
In response to those who, like the Dean of the School of
Agriculture in the beginning of this chapter, complain that art
objects are not very efficient vehicles for communicating
knowledge, some theorists, par-ticularly in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries, have proposed that art is expressive of
human feelings, and some insist that what art teaches us about
emotions cannot be learned in any other way. What does it mean
to say that an artwork "expresses emotion"? Among expression
theorists, Leo Tolstoy and II G. Collingwood held very different
views, but both said that artworks communicate because artists
make objects that express their feelings, which in turn are
experienced by those who appreciate the works. But whether we
can appreciate artworks only if we actually feel the emotions they
express is problematic. On the one hand, if someone in the
audience laughs heartily throughout a production of Oedipus Rex,
particularly during the part in which Oedipus first discovers that he
is the murderer of his father and then hears that his wife has killed
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herself, the laughter is evidence of an emotional response so
inappropriate to the situation that we may think the person does
not understand the play. So it seems as if experiencing the
appropriate feelings is relevant to comprehending at least some
art. On the other hand, the requirement that one must have
certain feelings to fully grasp the meaning of a work may be too
strict. If you have seen and read Oedipus Rex many times, and
you are seeing it once again to prepare for a literature test, you
may not feel the
(73) emotions you experienced when you were just appreciating
the par rather than making notes and memorizing the plot. In this
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case, eves if you do not feel any emotion, it is hardly fair to say
that you do not understand the play. Some expression theorists
do not believe that audiences need feel the feelings of the artist,
or any particular feelings at all, for artworks to express emotions.
These theorists typically observe that we most commonly assume
that emotions are being expressed when outer behavior shows
what is felt. Art, they say, is believed to express feelings when it
has features that are characteristic of human beings expressing
emotional states. Thus, if a piece of music is slow and hushed, it
exhibits the same observable features as humans do when they
are sad. By virtue of these features, we perceive the music as
expressing sadness, even if we do not actually feel sad. Similarly,
horizontal lines appear restful, and vertical and jagged lines do
not, because humans typically assume a horizontal position when
they relax or sleep. Undoubtedly, much great (and minor) art
concerns human emo-tion. The emotion to be understood is
conveyed by a complex set of factors, which may vary from
artwork to artwork. Indeed, in some instances, the emotional
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expression we attribute to a work may be affected by other
artworks we have perceived. The following case, cited by Eduard
Hanslick in On the Musically Beautiful, illustrates this point:
How many works by Mozart were declared in his time to be the
most passionate, ardent, and audacious within the reach of
musical mood-painting. At that time, people contrasted the
tranquillity and wholesomeness of Haydn's symphonies with the
outbursts of vehement passion, bitter struggle, and piercing agony
of Mozart's. Twenty or thirty years later, they made exactly the
same comparison between Mozart arid Beethoven. Mozart's
position as representative of violent, inspired pas-sion was taken
over by Beethoven, and Mozart was promoted to Haydn's
Olympian classicism.°
MEANING, INTERPRETATION, AND TRUTH How can anyone
who experiences an artwork be assured that he or she
understands its real meaning? In some cases, we comprehend
what a work is about in a direct, immediate revelation that occurs
during appreciation of the work. In other cases, a work's meaning
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is pieced together only after we notice how various features of the
object all contribute to that meaning. Interpretive critics differ in
the method-ologies they employ to construct accounts of the
meanings of artworks Some concentrate on the text, visual
surface, or sounds that constitute (74) the work—that is, on the
art object itself—and draw attention to perceived patterns. Others
investigate the social context in which the work was created, or
examine biographical facts about the artist. Quite often
interpretive critics using different methodologies arrive at quite
different accounts of what a work means. As mentioned earlier in
this chapter, John Wain found a pattern in Blake's poem known
as "And Did Those Feet in Ancient Time" that makes it particularly
meaningful to modern readers. He saw the poem as showing,
among other things, how England's green countryside had been
blighted by the factories of the industrial revolution. This
interpretation of the phrase "dark Satanic Mills" can make the
other things Blake says in the poem especially poignant to the
modern reader concerned with the undesirable effects of
32
industrialization. Bateson objected to this reading, however,
because his own method of inter-pretation emphasizes historical
fidelity, not the concerns of modem readers. Even though Wain's
account enriches the poem by providing an additional level of
meaning, Bateson said, Blake and his intended audience could
not have understood the poem as a criticism of pollution from
factories because they lived before England's industrial
revolution. Are there cases in which the meaning of art should be
determined by artists' intentions? If so, must the work's meaning
in these cases be limited to what the artist intended? How do we
establish what artists intend? Are there cases in which learning
about the artist and his or her society contributes to our
understanding? Or would historical or biographical evidence
distract us from attending to the timeless significance of the work
itself? Henry James's novella The Turn of the Screw is about a
young governess who comes to an isolated house to take care of
two children. Some strange events occur. According to one
interpretation, fully compatible with the text, James related a story
33
in which certain strange events are caused by the ghosts of
wrongdoers. If this is the case, the lesson of the story may be
construed to be a moral one about the nature of good and evil.
According to another interpretation, also fully compatible with the
text, the strange events occur only in the mind of the governess
as she experiences a nervous breakdown. If this is the case, the
lesson of the story may have nothing to do with good and evil, but
instead concerns how a person can develop psychological
problems. Must we choose between these two interpretations? If
so, what kind of evidence would be relevant? Would any evidence
be decisive? Some contemporary theorists would resolve cases in
which more than one interpretation of an artwork is proposed by
insisting that each interpretation creates a new and different work
of art. We need not worry about interpretations being incompatible
with each other, with (75) the text, or with the visual surface or
score, in such a theory, because each interpretation creates
another aesthetic object. But there would be in principle no limit to
the number of works thus created, and The Turn of the Screw
34
would not be a single artwork, but as many different artworks as
there were critics and readers providing interpretations of it. In the
case with which this chapter begins, the Dean is concerned about
whether we can learn from works of art. Some theorists believe
that we can do so only if artworks are capable of being true or
false. Of course, in at least some of the artistic media, an art
object clearly can have elements or aspects that are capable of
being true or false. If the real Mona Lisa, the Renaissance woman
who posed for the painting called the Mona Lisa, had been a
curly-haired blonde, then there would be a sense in which
Leonardo's portrait falsely depicts her with straight dark hair. If the
recently advanced theory that the painting is a disguised self-
portrait of Leonardo is true, the painting can be said to depict
Leonardo falsely as a woman. Similarly, we can say that the many
Gilbert Stuart portraits of George Washington are true in
presenting Washington without a mustache, crossed eyes, or a
harelip, and that Dickens's novels contain true descriptions of
nineteenth-century English social practices. Does it make sense,
35
though, to speak of an entire art object as capable of truth or
falsity? Is Shakespeare's Hamlet true in addition to being
profound, enlightening, or revealing? What kinds of reasons
would be appropriate for demonstrating that Hamlet is true or
false? In Art and Illusion Ernst Gombrich makes the following
point: "a picture . can no more be true or false than a statement
can be blue or green."9 Just as the kind of thing statements are
logically precludes their having colored surfaces, the kind of thing
pictures are logically a. precludes their being true or false. But
even if art objects are not true and false in the way that the
propositions of science are true and false, there remain cases in
which we desire to raise questions about the truth or correctness
of what an art object conveys. John Berger, for instance,
denounces the whole tradition of Western representations of
women, both in painting and photography, on the grounds that all
the images imply a standard of femininity that is false.' In making
this charge, Berger is claiming not that Western pictures are false
because they contain inaccurate images, but rather that the
36
images they contain both result from, and contribute to, an
inappropriate standard to measure women. Some theorists
maintain that art can lead us to truths even though artworks
cannot contain or convey directly what is true or false. The
philosopher Martin Heidegger, for instance, believed that the
cognitive value of art lay in its capacity to stimulate thoughts that
(76) led far beyond what was depicted or portrayed. Heidegger
claimed that art revealed an object's truth of being—that is, art
"disclosed" an object's being as being, let it "emerge into the
unconcealedness of its being." For instance, Van Gogh's painting
of a pair of peasant shoes may depict nothing but two empty
shoes, yet
If from the dark opening of the worn insides of the shoes the
toilsome tread of the worker stares forth. In the stiffly rugged
heaviness of the shoes there is the accumulated tenacity of [the
peasant woman's[ slow trudge through the far-spreading and
ever-uniform furrows of the field swept by a raw wind. On the
leather lie the dampness and richness of the soil. Under the soles
37
slides the loneliness of the field-path as evening falls. In the
shoes vibrates the silent call of the earth, its quiet gift of the
ripening grain and its unexplained self-refusal in the fallow
desolation of the wintry field.... This equipment belongs to the
earth, and it is protected in the world of the peasant woman."
Thus, Heidegger said, Van Gogh's painting lets us discover the
"equipmental quality" of equipment—it lets us know what shoes
are in truth. But it does not do so, he claimed, by means of
propositions or descriptions. Are there good educational reasons
to support the proposal to make courses about art part of a
university's general core require-ments? Answering this question
depends, to some extent, on whether we maintain that everything
that is valuable to learn can be expressed propositionally—in
other words, by using statements that can be proven to be true.
We may be more inclined to include art in the university's
curriculum if we believe nonpropositional modes of learn-ing exist
for which truth and falsity are not appropriate criteria. But if art is a
nonpropositional mode of learning, can it function effectively in
38
organized educational settings? Are there ways of testing whether
people have been successful in learning from ail? Could someone
convey what he or she had learned from artworks to other people
without their actually experiencing the same artworks? If learning
from art requires direct experience of the artistic vehicle through
which the information is conveyed, what role does a teacher play,
and what are the teacher's contributions to learning from art? We
may note how much easier it would be to answer these questions
if we were addressing some part of the curriculum other than art.
But despite the complexities of understanding how art is related to
cognition, many people believe that an education is impoverish"
ed if art is omitted from it.