My broken heart continues to hurt at the choice I made to study political science and law, even though I was accepted into a prestigious school to learn classical antiquity and ancient history, which has always been a great love of mine. I collect rare books and I have a fondness for classical art. When I went back to Italy again a couple of years ago, I nearly fainted when I saw the works of Titian or Carravagio. The choice to pursue a different study was not even for professional or financial purposes, but it was a moral one and paradoxically made because I spent my early teens and adulthood engrossed in old books. As a consequence, my moral attitude is very traditional and it reflects in the choices that I have made that completely contrast with the culture of my environment.Why do we still read Homer and other ancient writers? I think that there must be something timeless about them, something quintessential. Or, are we just recycling the canons of art due to someone else's tastes? I admit that with open canons we must agree that tastes play important roles in creating our interests, even if we end up opening our hearts and thoughts to other art. What say ye? — Preston
Classical work I feel holds it's reverence just because it's so original. — River
Is "Classical Music" any better than Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, Romantic, or late 19th/early 20th century music written for orchestra? No, but it's definitely not the same. — Bitter Crank
This Roman drinking glass was made about 1900 years ago. Nice. But... a glass is a glass is a glass. — Bitter Crank
In the ancient world I'm sure it was the same, insofar as classical works of all kinds were intended to conform to an archetype. Classical art always conforms to very strict proportions and measurements, which are thought to replicate the essential form - quintessence, as you have said.
I'm sure it never would have occurred to an individual in pre-modern times whether he or she liked or didn't like some classical form. — Wayfarer
a glass is not Julius or Augustus Cesear — TimeLine
You have reduced the history into a mere object so no, it is not just a glass. It is a gateway to understanding what people were like 1900 years ago. — TimeLine
At the risk of sounding deeply postmodern...to me our finding our foundations in ancient Greece and Rome - whether in art or in philosophy - is a sort of creation myth, a secular story that appeals to certain prejudices in us, which we then reinforce by constantly referring back to Plato and Aristotle, Polykleitos and Lysippos. I enjoy it, I engage it in it myself, but it's a myth. — mcdoodle
What is it about classical music that makes it classical? What do we mean by classical? — Preston
"Classical Music" per se belongs to a specific period: roughly, the late 18th and early 19th centuries. — Bitter Crank
In common parlance, classical music tends to mean "serious orchestral and choral music" — Bitter Crank
but what makes art and different art forms translatable into other epochs. — Preston
Why do we still read Homer and other ancient writers? I think that there must be something timeless about them, something quintessential. Or, are we just recycling the canons of art due to someone else's tastes? — Preston
we also fetishize certain epochs of art that align with our current philosophical obsessions. — Noble Dust
no one acknowledges the inevitable flow of how art evolves with consciousness. — Noble Dust
19th and early 20th century historians of art and architecture did, but they were wrong. For example, Wölfflin, Schmarzow, Gideon and others worked under the dubious assumption that art evolves with consciousness, say, from something simple to something advanced. — jkop
The most advanced consciousness was supposedly exemplified in the austere modern designs of the modern architects and their organisation for which Gideon worked as the secretary. — jkop
On a grand level art, according to Adorno, is (1) against the world and polemical towards society (“by crystallizing itself as something unique to itself, rather than complying with existing social norms and qualifying as ‘socially useful,’ it [Art] criticizes society by merely existing, for which puritans of all stripes condemn it”); (2) inherently affirmative (positive), and (3) aloof from the “culture industry” and commoditization.
his overall orientation is marxist materialist so not really my cup of tea. — Wayfarer
Adorno's posthumously published Aesthetic Theory, which he planned to dedicate to Samuel Beckett, is the culmination of a lifelong commitment to modern art which attempts to revoke the "fatal separation" of feeling and understanding long demanded by the history of philosophy and explode the privilege aesthetics accords to content over form and contemplation over immersion.
there's no "wrong" in art, there's only evolution. — Noble Dust
I disagree that art evolves. It doesn't evolve in the same way that sculpture, poetry or literature doesn't evolve. — Bitter Crank
Bach also composed in a particular milieu, and his imprint on music is much too big to count as "evolution". — Bitter Crank
And there is 'wrong' in art, or so musicians tell me. Haydn's scores are polished, because Haydn's position gave him time to perfect. Mozart, on the other hand, was frequently rushed, under pressure, short of funds, and so on. His scores have rough passages (so I am told). — Bitter Crank
Louis Moreau Gottschalk (1829-1869) Didn't evolve from Hildegard or Johan Sebastion; his music is clearly 19th century, but he is a forerunner of jazz. — Bitter Crank
Jazz didn't evolve from Gottschalk, he didn't cause jazz to happen, he just composed music which--looking back--has some aspects of early jazz. — Bitter Crank
So, Hildegard, Bach, Gottschalk, Adele: What evolutionary development do you see here? — Bitter Crank
I'm not familiar with von Bingen, and I'm not sure what your argument is, in regards to her. The music sounds great, reminds me of gregorian chant, etc. But I'm not sure what you're arguing. — Noble Dust
The Four Seasons is a piece I've always had a soft spot for — Noble Dust
Honestly, you seem to have created a convenient straw-man for me, based on your own musical tastes here. — Noble Dust
What I'm arguing (and apparently not very well) is that music didn't evolve from Bingen (12th century) to say, Palestrina (16th century), or from Palestrina to Bach (overlapping 17th & 18th century). — Bitter Crank
Everybody has a soft spot for The Four Seasons, judging by how often Public Radio plays it. I thought it was pure heaven when I first heard it 50+ years ago, but after 1000 times, the charm is wearing off. — Bitter Crank
I like Ravel, but if I never heard Bolero again, it wouldn't be too soon. Also played to death. — Bitter Crank
Have you heard Eric Satie's Gymnopédies, written in the late 1880s? — Bitter Crank
What seems to happen isn't so much "evolution" as "mining the past for current material". — Bitter Crank
Same thing with black music and rock and roll. — Bitter Crank
My apologies to the Romans. A display of common objects from Pompeii (fish hooks to frying pans)--and Pompeii itself or any other contemporary site--shows their handling of the material world was about the same as modern peoples'. That alone can shock our sensibilities. "What! They solved these problems 2000 years ago?" — Bitter Crank
On the other hand, Greco-Roman religion is more of a challenge to us militant monotheists. To us, the improper Priapus, the child of Dionysus and Aphrodite (who had their own weird origins) presents something of a challenge to understand. As an unreliable prick joke, we can understand him well enough; but as a god he had other functions aside from simple up-front fertility, or so I read somewhere, and that makes him more complicated. All the gods back then seemed to have had multiple personalities. — Bitter Crank
Some glassware dug out of Martin Luther's parents' midden from 600 years ago (+/-), where presumably it ended up because it wasn't valuable, looks like nice modern stemware (in shape, thickness, etc.). Maybe they had far better glasses to drink out of, but we don't have them. — Bitter Crank
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