The National Value of Art
THERE is a tendency in modern times to depreciate the value of the beautiful and overstress the value of the useful, a tendency curbed in Europe by the imperious insistence of an agelong tradition of culture and generous training of the aesthetic perceptions; but in India, where we have been cut off by a mercenary and soulless education from all our ancient roots of culture and tradition, it is corrected only by the stress of imagination, emotion and spiritual delicacy, submerged but not yet destroyed in the temperament of the people. The value attached by the ancients to music, art and poetry has become almost unintelligible to an age bent on depriving life of its meaning by turning earth into a sort of glorified ant-heap or beehive and confusing the lowest, though most primary in necessity, of the means of human progress with the aim of this great evolutionary process. The first and lowest necessity of the race is that of self-preservation in the body by a sufficient supply and equable distribution of food, shelter and raiment. This is a problem which the oldest communistic human societies solved to perfection, and without communism it cannot be solved except by a convenient but inequitable arrangement which makes of the majority slaves provided with these primary wants and necessities and ministering under compulsion to a few who rise higher and satisfy larger wants. These are the wants of the vital instincts, called in our philosophy the prānakosa, which go beyond and dominate the mere animal wants, simple, coarse and undiscriminating, shared by us with the lower creation. It is these vital wants, the hunger for wealth, luxury, beautiful women, rich foods and drinks, which disturbed the first low but perfect economy of society and made the institution of private property, with its huge train of evils, inequality, injustice, violence, fraud, civil commotion and hatred, class selfishness, family selfishness, and personal selfishness, an inevitable necessity of human progress. The Mother of All works through evil as well as good, and Page-231 through temporary
evil she brings about a better and lasting good. These disturbances were
complicated by the heightening of the primitive animal emotions into more
intense and complex forms. Love, hatred, vindictiveness, anger, attachment,
jealousy and the host of similar passions,
-
the citta or
mindstuff suffused by the vital wants of the prāna, that which the
Europeans call the heart - ceased to be communal in their application and, as
personal wants, clamoured for separate satisfaction. It is for the satisfaction
of the vital and emotional needs of humanity that modern nations and societies
exist, that commerce grows and Science ministers to human luxury and convenience. But for these new wants, the establishment of private
property, first in the clan or family, then in the .individual, the institution
of slavery and other necessary devices, the modem world would never have come
into existence; for the satisfaction of the primary economic wants and bodily
necessities would never have carried us beyond the small commune or tribe. But
these primary wants and necessities have to be satisfied and satisfied
universally, or society becomes diseased and states convulsed with sedition and
revolution. Page-232
of national wealth, pride, lordship, rivalry, war, alliance, peace, once the
privilege of the few, the higher classes, of prince, burgess and noble are now
claimed by all humanity. Political, social and economic liberty and equality,
two things difficult to harmonise, must now be conceded to all men and
harmonised as well as the present development of humanity will allow. It is this
claim that arose, red with fury and blinded with blood, in the French
Revolution. This is Democracy, this Socialism, this Anarchism; and, however
fiercely the privileged and propertied classes may rage, curse and denounce
these forerunners of Demogorgon, they can only temporarily resist. Their
interests
may be hoary and venerable with the sanction of the ages, but the future is
mightier than the past and evolution proceeds relentlessly in its course
trampling to pieces all that it no longer needs. Those who fight against her
fight against the will of God, against a decree written from of old, and are
already defeated and slain in the kāranajagat, the world of types and
causes where Nature fixes everything before she works it out in the visible
world. Nihatāh pūrvameva. Page-233
kind do not think, they have only thought-sensations; a large minority think
confusedly, mixing up desires, predilections, passions, prejudgments, old
associations and prejudices with pure and disinterested thought. Only a few, the
rare aristocrats of the earth, can really and truly think. That is now the true
aristocracy, not the aristocracy of the body and birth, not the aristocracy of
vital superiority, wealth, pride and luxury, not the aristocracy of higher
emotions, courage, energy, successful political instinct and the habit of
mastery and rule,
- though these latter cannot be
neglected, - but the aristocracy of knowledge, undisturbed insight and
intellectual ability. It emerges, though it has not yet
emerged, and in any future arrangement of human society this
natural inequality will play an important part. Page-234 corrosive effect throughout the world. The value of the other side, more subtle and profound, has been clouded to the mass of men by the less visible and sensational character of its workings. Page-235 2
Page-236 use and articles of pleasure, have done more than anything else,
to raise man from the beast, to refine and purge his passions, to ennoble his
emotions and to lead him up through the heart and the imagination to the state
of the intellectual man. That which has helped man upward, must be preserved in
order that he may not sink below the level he has attained. For man
intellectually developed, mighty in scientific knowledge and the mastery of
gross and subtle nature, using the elements as his servants and the world as his
footstool, but undeveloped in heart and spirit, becomes only an inferior kind of
asura using the powers of a dewgod to satisfy the nature of an animal.
According to dim traditions and memories of the old world, of such a nature was
the civilisation of old Atlantis, submerged beneath the Ocean when its greatness
and its wickedness became too heavy a load for the earth to bear, and our own
legends of the asuras represent a similar consciousness of a great but
abortive development in humanity. Page-237
right standpoint, not only a truth but the fundamental truth of existence.
According to our own philosophy the whole world came out of ānanda and
returns into ānanda, and the triple term in which ānanda may be
stated is Joy, Love, Beauty. To see divine beauty in themhole world, man, life,
nature, to love that which we have seen and to have pure unalloyed bliss in that
love and that beauty is the appointed road by which mankind as a race must climb
to God. That is the reaching to vidyā through avidyā, to the One
Pure and Divine through the manifold manifestation of Him, of which the
Upanishad repeatedly speaks. But the bliss must be pure and unalloyed, unalloyed
by self-regarding emotions, unalloyed by pain and evil. The sense of good and
bad, beautiful and un-beautiful, which afflicts our understanding and our
senses, must be replaced by akha1:u!a rasa, undifferentiated and
unabridged delight in the delightfulness of things, before the highest can be
reached. On the way to this goal full use must be made of the lower and abridged
sense of beauty which seeks to replace the less beautiful by the more, the lower
by the higher, the mean by the noble. Page-238 be given a much lower place than in the past. Its limits must be recognised and the demands of a higher truth, sincerity and freedom of thought and feeling must be given priority. Mankind is apt to bind itself by attachment to the means of its past progress forgetful of the aim. The bondage to formulas has to be outgrown, and in this again it is the sense of a higher beauty and fitness which will be most powerful to correct the lower. The art of life must be understood in more magnificent terms and must subordinate its more formal elements to the service of the master civilisers, Love and Thought. Page-239 3
Page-240 or nomos, the law, custom and standard of humanity based on the sense of fitness and on the codified or uncodified mass of precedents in which that sense has been expressed in general conduct, - in other words the just or lawful; thirdly, the agathon, the good, based partly on the seemly and partly on the just and lawful, and reaching towards the purely beautiful; then final and supreme, the kalon, that which is purely beautiful, the sup- reme standard. The most remarkable part of Aristotle's moral system is that in which he classifies the parts of conduct not according to our idea of virtue and sin, pāpa and punya, but by a purely aesthetic standard, the excess, defect and golden, in other words correct and beautiful, mean of qualities. The Greeks' view of life was imperfect even from the standpoint of beauty, not only because the idea of beauty was not sufficiently catholic and too much attached to a fastidious purity of form and outline and restraint, but because they were deficient in love. God as beauty, Sri Krishna in Brindavan, Śyāmasundara, is not only Beauty, He is also Love, and without perfect love there cannot be perfect beauty, and without perfect beauty there cannot be perfect delight. The aesthetic motive in conduct limits and must be exceeded in order that humanity may rise. Therefore it was that the Greek mould had to be broken and humanity even revolted for a time against beauty. The agathon, the good, had to be released for a time from the bondage of the kalon, the aesthetic sense of beauty, just as it is now struggling to deliver itself from the bondage of the euprepēs and the dikaion, mere decorousness, mere custom, mere social law and rule. The excess of this anti- aesthetic tendency is visible in Puritanism and the baser forms of asceticism. The progress of ethics in Europe has been largely a struggle between the Greek sense of aesthetic beauty and the Christian sense of a higher good marred on the one side by formalism, on the other by an unlovely asceticism. The association of the latter with virtue has largely driven the sense of beauty to the side of vice. The good must not be subordinated to the aesthetic sense, but it must be beautiful and delightful, or to that extent it ceases to be good. The object of existence is not the practice of virtue for its own sake but ānanda, delight, and progress consists not in rejecting beauty and delight, but in rising Page-241
from the lower to the higher, the
less complete to the more complete beauty
and to delight. Page-242 which man arrives at his higher fulfilment, and, if it can be shown that poetry and art are powerful agents towards that end, their supreme importance is established. They are that, and more than that. It is only one of the great uses of these things which men nowadays are inclined to regard as mere ornaments of life and therefore of secondary importance. Page-243 4
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worth the name. Plato in his
Republic has dwelt with extraordinary
emphasis on the importance of music in education; as is the music to which a
people is accustomed, so, he says in effect, is the character of that people.
The importance of painting and sculpture is hardly less. The mind is profoundly
influenced by what it sees and, if the eye is trained from the days of childhood
to the contemplation and understanding of beauty, harmony and just arrangement
in line and colour, the tastes, habits and charac- ter will be insensibly
trained to follow a similar law of beauty, harmony and just arrangement in the
life of the adult man. This was the great importance of the universal
proficiency in the arts and crafts or the appreciation of them which was
prevalent in ancient Greece, in certain European ages, in Japan and in the
better days of our own history. Art galleries cannot be brought into every home,
but, if all the appointments of our life and furniture of our homes are things
of taste and beauty, it is inevitable that the habits, thoughts and feelings of
the people should be raised, ennobled, harmonised, made more sweet and
dignified. Page-245 other. Between them music, art and poetry are a perfect education for the soul; they make and keep its movements purified, self-controlled, deep and harmonious. These, therefore, are agents which cannot profitably be neglected by humanity on its onward march or degraded to the mere satisfaction of sensuous pleasure which will disintegrate rather than build the character. They are, when properly used, great educating, edifying and civilising forces. Page-246
5 THE value of art in the training of intellectual faculty is also an important part of its utility. We have already indicated the double character of intellectual activity, divided between the imaginative, creative and sympathetic or comprehensive intellectual centres on the one side and the critical, analytic and penetrative on the other. The latter are best trained by science, criticism and observation, the former by art, poetry, music, literature and the sympathetic study of man and his creations. These make the mind quick to grasp at a glance, subtle to distinguish shades, deep to reject shallow selfsufficiency, mobile, delicate, swift, intuitive. Art assists in this training by raising images in the mind which it has to understand not by analysis, but by self-identification with other minds; it is a powerful stimulator of sympathetic insight. Art is subtle and delicate, and it makes the mind also in its movements subtle and delicate. It is suggestive, and the intellect habituated to the appreciation of art is quick to catch suggestions, mastering not only, as the scientific mind does, that which is positive and on the surface, but that which leads to ever fresh widening and subtilising of knowledge and opens a door into the deeper secrets of inner nature where the positive instruments of science cannot take the depth or measure. This supreme intellectual value of Art has never been sufficiently recognised. Men have made language, poetry, his- tory, philosophy agents for the training of this side of intellectuality, necessary parts of a liberal education, but the immense educative force of music, painting and sculpture has not been duly recognised. They have been thought to be by-paths of the human mind, beautiful and interesting, but not necessary, there- fore intended for the few. Yet the universal impulse to enjoy the beauty and attractiveness of sound, to look at and live among pictures, colours, forms ought to have warned mankind of the superficiality and ignorance of such a view of these eternal and important occupations of human mind. The impulse, denied Page-247
proper training and self-purification, has spent itself on the tri- vial, gaudy,
sensuous, cheap or vulgar instead of helping man upward by its powerful aid in
the evocation of what is best and highest in intellect as well as in character,
emotion and the aesthetic enjoyment and regulation of life and manners. It is
difficult to appreciate the waste and detriment involved in the low and debased
level of enjoyment to which the artistic impulses are condemned in the majority
of mankind. Page-248
tions, aims and traditions of Asia. Asia's future development, will unite these
two streams in one deep and grandiose flood of artistic self-expression
perfecting the aesthetic evolution of humanity. Page-249 this immortal nectar poured into a man's heart transfigures life and action. The whole flood of it pouring in would lift mankind to God. This too Art can seize on and suggest to the human soul, aiding it in its stormy and toilsome pilgrimage. In that pilgrimage it is the divine strength that supports. Śakli, Force, pouring through the universe supports its boundless activities, the frail and tremulous life of the rose no less than the flaming motions of sun and star. To suggest the strength and virile unconquerable force of the divine Nature in man and in the outside world, its energy, its calm, its powerful inspiration, its august enthusiasm, its wildness, greatness, attractiveness, to breathe that into man's soul and gradually mould the finite into the image of the Infinite is another spiritual utility of Art. This is its loftiest function, its fullest consummation, its most perfect privilege. Page-250 6
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methods and English predilections in the so-called national education
rendered nugatory the initial advantage. The students had faculty, but the
teaching given them would waste and misuse the faculty. The nation and the
individual can gain nothing by turning out figures in clay which faithfully copy the vulgarity and
ugliness of English commercial production or by multiplying mere copies of men
or things. A free and active imaging of form and hue within oneself, a free and
self-trained hand reproducing with instinctive success not the form and
measurement of things seen outside, for that is a smaller capacity easily
mastered, but the inward vision of the relation and truth of things, an eye
quick to note and distinguish, sensitive to design and to harmony in colour, these are
the faculties that have to be evoked and the formal
and mechanical English method is useless for this purpose. Page-252 |