41
BEAUTY+ the BEAST

Lecture 8 231

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

http://tinyurl.com/26t7g3r

Citation preview

Page 1: Lecture 8 231

BEAUTY+ the BEAST

Page 2: Lecture 8 231

BEAUTY+ UGLINESS

Page 3: Lecture 8 231

symmetry + proportion + harmony

Page 4: Lecture 8 231

plato

proportion, harmony, unity

the material world as it seems to us is not the real world, but only an image or copy of the real world. not a particular thing that is beautiful, but is instead the essence or manifestation of beauty.

beauty of the body and in the soul .. beauty is in knowledge, knowledge being innate to all It has no relationship to ‘art’ or ‘design’ as known now.

As inherited from Socrates

’That any kind of mixture that does not in some way or other possess measure of the nature of proportion will necessarily corrupt its ingredients and most of all itself …… Well, then, if we cannot capture the good in one form, we will have to take hold of it in a conjunction of three: beauty, proportion and truth.’

Page 5: Lecture 8 231
Page 6: Lecture 8 231

aristotle

order, symmetry

the golden mean is the desirable middle between two extremes, one of excess and the other of deficiency.

an attribute of beauty and beauty was a form of truth … in all activities – science, techne, politics.

techne – rational knowledge of craft … tacit knowledge .. in the body

Page 7: Lecture 8 231
Page 8: Lecture 8 231
Page 9: Lecture 8 231
Page 10: Lecture 8 231
Page 11: Lecture 8 231
Page 12: Lecture 8 231
Page 13: Lecture 8 231

Fibonacci

Page 14: Lecture 8 231
Page 15: Lecture 8 231
Page 16: Lecture 8 231
Page 17: Lecture 8 231
Page 18: Lecture 8 231

middle ages

Page 19: Lecture 8 231

ravenna

Page 20: Lecture 8 231
Page 21: Lecture 8 231
Page 22: Lecture 8 231

renaissance

Page 23: Lecture 8 231
Page 24: Lecture 8 231
Page 25: Lecture 8 231
Page 26: Lecture 8 231
Page 27: Lecture 8 231
Page 28: Lecture 8 231

Aesthetics is the philosophy that deals with the nature of beauty, art …

Baumgarten 1735 first known or thought to coin the term aesthetics derived from the Greek translation of it meaning - to perceive-feel-sense

Baumgarten’s original meaning was The Theory of Sensuous Knowledge

as a counter to logic or The Theory of Intellectual Knowledge.

Page 29: Lecture 8 231

Immanuel Kant 1724 - 1804

Kant, beauty is objective and universal; thus certain things are beautiful to everyone

Page 30: Lecture 8 231

the beautiful + the sublime pain+pleasure

Edmond Burke’s (1729 – 1797) Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful was published in 1757.

Page 31: Lecture 8 231

beauty " " " " " " "

" " " " " sublime divine"

things that are smooth, unthreatening and pleasurable

burke, e (1757) A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and the Beautiful.

things that are huge, obscure or terrible, arouse feelings that invigorate or elevate the mind.

Page 32: Lecture 8 231
Page 33: Lecture 8 231

welsh oak rodney graham

1998

Page 34: Lecture 8 231

lee freidlander

Page 35: Lecture 8 231
Page 36: Lecture 8 231
Page 37: Lecture 8 231
Page 38: Lecture 8 231
Page 39: Lecture 8 231
Page 40: Lecture 8 231
Page 41: Lecture 8 231

robert irwin http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YajsEebw89g