Harsh Poetry and Art’s Address: Romare Bearden and Hans‑Georg Gadamer in Conversation Cover Image

Harsh Poetry and Art’s Address: Romare Bearden and Hans‑Georg Gadamer in Conversation
Harsh Poetry and Art’s Address: Romare Bearden and Hans‑Georg Gadamer in Conversation

Author(s): Cynthia R. Nielsen
Subject(s): Philosophy, Aesthetics, Hermeneutics
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Keywords: Gadamer and art;critique of aesthetic consciousness;Gadamer’s hermeneutical aesthetics;Romare Bearden;Bearden’s montage technique;art and social construction;participatory aesthetic engagement;

Summary/Abstract: This essay centers on Romare Bearden’s art, methodology, and thinking about art, and likewise explores his attempt to harmonize personal aesthetic goals with sociopolitical concerns. Following an investigation of Bearden’s work and thought, we turn to Hans Georg Gadamer’s reflections on art and our experience (Erfahrung) of art. As the essay unfolds, we see how Bearden’s approach to art and the artworks themselves resonate with Gadamer’s critique of aesthetic consciousness and his contention that artworks address us. An important component of Gadamer’s account is his emphasis on the spectator’s active yet non mastering role in the event of art’s address – an event that implicates the spectator and has the potential to trans¬form him or her. As we shall see, Gadamer’s notion of aesthetic experience sharp¬ly contrasts with modern, subjectivizing aesthetics, as it requires not only active participatory engagement, but it also brings about a transformed “vision” and understanding of one’s self, others, and the world. In closing, we return to Bearden in order to explore how his art unearths a crucial activity of our being in the world. I call this activity “un fabricating one’s world” and discuss how it expands and en¬riches Gadamer’s account.

  • Issue Year: 43/2016
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 101-122
  • Page Count: 22
  • Language: English