The artist can sense each incident he goes through in a special,
personal way, while he also takes part in the day-to-day life of himself
and of other people. What he may add, due to his artistic sensitivity,
are the frank expression of his emotions and enthusiasm, or the fruit of
his imagination. Thus, artists can expand certain details they consider
helpful in order to render their message to the world.
The artist may use his daily experiences and events in order to generate
something new and fresh; he may start from them, and then add quite an
amount of work in order to create quality art. His artistic productions
can be stimulated by the artist's life events. We could say that the
artist both exposes himself, and conceals himself in his very own art.
Oscar Wilde once said that the aim of art is to reveal art and conceal
the artist. "Je est un autre" says the French poet Arthur Rimbaud,
meaning "I is another." Maybe if we correlate this with Wilde's view on
the aim of the art, we could give an idea of what Rimbaud actually
meant. Indeed, art transforms the artist's reality; there is a
discrepancy between the real life poet and his lyrical ego. At any rate,
good artists are not necessarily the ones who succeed in transmitting
us their true emotions - that might be boring, in fact, but the ones who
are capable of arousing in us certain specific emotions they intended
to create in others. Not only artists need to be endowed with artistic
sensitivity, but there public also.
The interesting thing is that artists need to be both very sensitive
emotional, but also entirely capable of detaching themselves from those
emotions, and, with a surgeon's cold blood, dissect their own emotions
and feelings in order to create a new, living art product to deliver to
the great public. Indeed, the raw material of the aesthetic attitude is
the pure sensitivity of the artist. Arthur Rimbaud's sister, Isabelle,
makes an account of her brother's state of agony. She said that from
time to time, Rimbaud used to become a sort of visionary, he used to
prophecy. His sense of hearing got strangely stronger. He would relive
his painful past, and then have beautiful visions: columns of amethyst, a
lot of vegetation and bizarrely beautiful landscapes; in order to
describe his sensations, the agonizing Rimbaud used piercingly charming
and strange phrases and associations. Some weeks later, when she read
"Illuminations", Isabelle Rimbaud discovered with great emotion a lot of
resemblances with those dream-like sensations experienced and expressed
by Arthur during his agony.
Each painter has his own registry and raw material. Thus, David and his
school believed that the tones that Rubens actually obtained with the
help of light colors such as intense green or turquoise could be made
with the help of black and white for blue and black and yellow for the
green. On the other hand, Van Dyck used earthy color palettes such as
ochre, reddish brown, black. Michelangelo once said that marble pieces
used to vibrate around him; most probably it was the other way round,
i.e. he was the one to vibrate around marble pieces, due to his desire
and great power of creating genuine masterpieces.
Rodin comes to draw the attention upon the fact that the artist's
preference towards certain materials or techniques is, in fact, an
expression of the very essence of his soul. Titian's way of using colors
is beautiful mostly because it gives the impression of a sumptuous and
dominating sovereignty. And every such preference is an evocation, a
symbol. Thus, Rubens's shininess is an expression of life, happiness, of
the robust sensuality that is actually hidden inside the soul of the
artist himself.
Eugene Delacroix explained that one of the most essential qualities for an artist is the capacity to properly appreciate the forms
which he uses to excel in his art; the artist also needs to be able to
voluntarily and assuredly renounce any elements that may not do his work
any good. He must also be a visionary, in order to properly estimate
the potential effects of his art upon people.
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