mills

My name is Mills Baker; I write about love, culture, art, religion, mental illness, philosophy, memory, politics and the rather random.

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Your search for gombrowicz returned 5 posts.
“Each aesthetic judgment is a personal wager; but a wager that does not close off into its own subjectivity; that faces up to other judgments, seeks to be acknowledged, aspires to objectivity.”

Milan Kundera, The Curtain. Almost all discussions about the aesthetic values must address this problem: are judgments about art subjective or not? It is common enough in our time to consider everything subjective, but this is not so: indeed, it is the supposition of objective aesthetic values that permits art to have historical continuity in the first place, despite being the work of many thousands or millions of individuals:

…in the absence of [presupposed objective] aesthetic value, the history of art is just an enormous storehouse of works whose chronologic sequence carries no meaning.

This is clearly not the case, as anyone who knows the full catalog of a band or the arc of a painter’s career will attest; it is even truer when one looks at movements and counter-movements. The history of the arts is comparable to a conversation with consequential threads, and like a conversation this history presupposes certain values; what the content of those values is, whether they are to be celebrated or violated, traced or transgressed, is another matter.

But what is striking about Kundera’s passage, to me, is that he refrains from acting as a philosopher: he does not argue that aesthetic judgments are subjective or objective, but rather than they are in a zone between those categories: each one is a personal wager which aspires to objectivity.

Although most debates about art and aesthetics quickly become debates about the implicit morality, politics, or personality-associations of the debaters, those that don’t still may come to dead ends: someone will say, “Well, it is only your opinion,” or someone else will say, “It’s all just taste.”

And it at once is and isn’t. We may all have our happenstance proclivities, but these are irrelevant except to us. What makes an aesthetic judgment defensible is the degree to which its aspirational objectivity is supported by context, by historical observation, by comparison and contrasting, by references to the internal coherence, logic, structure, and intention of the art in question (I apologize to anyone who strictly supports the notion that there is an ‘intentional fallacy’).

Such qualities buttress an aesthetic judgment, but while it may asymptotically approach objectivity it will never achieve it, not even in the cases of the greatest artists: when Nabakov hates Dostoevsky and Musil finds Kafka dull, you know that understood objectivity is a myth (and those were all roughly contemporary European men!).

Witold Gombrowicz said that any artist is an anti-scientist, and Kundera’s unscientific assertion that aesthetic judgments are personal but not merely subjective, individual gambles communing with the objective, is an excellent example of why I prefer this mode of thought.

“…this [shameful inner world] is not the Freudian world of instinct and subconscious. It is the result of the following process: in our relations with other people we want to be cultivated, superior, mature, so we use the language of maturity and we talk about, for instance, Beauty, Goodness, Truth… But within our own confidential, intimate reality, we feel nothing but inadequacy, immaturity; and then our private ideals collapse, and we create a private mythology for ourselves, which is also basically a culture, but a shabby, inferior culture, degraded to the level of our own inadequacy. This world…is composed of the remains of the official banquet: it is as though we were simultaneously at table and under the table.”
Witold Gombrowicz, on the anthropology expounded by Ferdydurke.
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Nudawn posted some “mastodon for mills.” Mastodon, it turns out, is a metal band from the state of Georgia. Listening to them brought to mind a few more thoughts on this subject:

(1) The mentally ill are always exercised about news; we think there is a crescendo in the narrative that we see, and that it is mounting towards the apocalypse. This may be true of most people, actually; this is how narrative structure informs political thought. Please ignore dire concerns I voice on the subject as you would the prophecy of a street-corner hobo.

(2) The above music inspired me to murder my neighbor, who screamed late into the night about the USC-Oregon State game, which -in all honesty- made me very, very happy.

(3) One never knows how analytical to be about David Lynch’s movies, which both invite and resist critical constructions of meaning. Another Gombrowicz quote: “To transpose poetry into diagrams is a thankless task. I’d be ashamed of myself if I did that.” And to an extent that is all a critic does beyond reporting on their impressions.

Nevertheless, some of Lynch’s films are clearly symbolic or representational to a degree that is rare in cinema, Mulholland Drive being the most obvious example. So perhaps it’s not inappropriate to wonder what the scene from Wild at Heart is all about:

  • Art as catharsis
  • Art liberating us from reality, which is grotesque and inscrutable
  • Love as being the only means through which we can access art
  • Love as being the only means through which we can escape reality
  • Heavy, violent art (like the music or Lynch’s films) being no different from more traditionally beautiful art (like the scene of the field and the string music)
  • Heavy, violent art replacing heavy, violent reality, displacing it

“Alienation? No, let us try to admit that this alienation is not so bad… Emptiness? The absurdity of existence? Nothingness? Don’t let us exaggerate! A god or ideals are not necessary to discover supreme values. We only have to go for three days without eating anything for a crumb to become our supreme goal…”

Witold Gombrowicz (1904-1969) led a life marked by flight, exile, incomprehension from the public, solitary anonymity, late recognition, and an early end, but he seems to have maintained a fairly irreverent sense of man’s problems, despite -or because of- the catastrophe’s that befell his people.

And he’s right: like an enabling limit, deprivation restores value to what we’ve ignored, but one wonders if this tactic works when the deprivation is deliberate: the purely physical fast, the little cycles of bingeing and purging, the cultivation of desire by the idle. Like all such deliberate tactics, it requires the Kierkegaardian techniques of rotation and repetition to avoid overuse and inefficacy, and like all tactics in general it never allows one to transcend the struggle.

Tags: philosophy art
“Theories? Ideas? I always knew they were sieves through which life runs.”

Witold Gombrowicz, whose A Kind of Testament I’m reading now. After offering some excellently-phrased disdain for ideologies and theories, towards which he had the radical hostility of the aesthete and survivor, he concludes:

“Besides… How could I, a Pole, believe in theories? That would be grotesque. Against the Polish sky, against the sky of a paling, waning Europe, one can see why so much paper coming from the West falls to the ground, into the mud, onto the sand, so that little boys grazing their cows can make the usual use of it…

…But these theories, which drift across the sky, become ridiculous, blind, ignoble, bloody, vain. Gentle ideas are pregnant with mountains of corpses.