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English Pages [238] Year 1962
Art
and
Scholasticism and
The
Frontiers
of Poetry
Jacques Maritain
Jacques Maritain ART AND SCHOLASTICISM and
THE FRONTIERS OF POETRY Translated by Joseph W. Evans
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME PRESS
NOTRE DAME
LONDON
University of Notre
©
COPYRIGHT First U. S. edition
Printed
'
^ —
Press edition
1
974
1962 Jacques Maritain
1962 by Charles Scribner's Sons
in the
United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Maritain, Jacques, 1882-1973.
Art and scholasticism and The frontiers of poetry.
r
s > \
Dame
Translation of the author's Art et scolastique and his Frontieres
de
la
poesie.
Reprint of the ed. published by Scribner,
New
Includes bibliographical references. 1.
3.
Art-Philosophy-History.
Poetry.
I.
2.
Scholasticism.
Maritain, Jacques, 1882-1973.
Frontieres de
la
poesie. English. 1974.
[N61.M3 1974] 701 ISBN 0-268-0055 6-7 ISBN 0-268-00557-5 (pbk.)
II.
74-13601
Title.
York.
Table of Contents
Art and Scholasticism
CHAPTER
The Schoolmen and
I
3
the Theory of Art
CHAPTER n The Speculative Order and the CHAPTER
m
Making and Doing
CHAPTER
rv
Art an Intellectual Virtue
3
Practical Order
7
10
23
CHAPTER V Art and Beauty
CHAPTER
The Rules
VI
5
38
of Art
CHAPTER vn The Purity of Art
49
CHAPTER
VIII
64
CHAPTER
DC Aft
APPENDIX
I
APPENDIX
II
Christian Art
An
70
and Morality
Essay on Art
Some
Reflections
85
on Religious Art
APPENDIX ni The "Triomphe de Saint Thomas'* APPENDIX
IV
100 at the
Theatre
Apropos an Article by Montgomery Belgion
The Frontiers of Poetry Notes
1^3
Index
231
119
108 113
Translator's Note
and Scholasticism was underis made from the third and final edition (1935) of Art et Scolastique. The "The Frontiers of Poetry" essay, which was added as a sup-
new
This
translation of Art
taken at Professor Maritain's suggestion, and
plement in
in the
1930
the
second edition (1927),
translation, but
it
is
is
now
again included, as
given, as Professor
Maritain desired, equal prominence with "Art and Scholasticism";
it
is
translated
from the revised version presented
de la poesie et autres essais (1935). The "Appendices" have had restored to them here their original status "The as addenda to "Art and Scholasticism"; two of them 'Triomphe de Saint Thomas' at the Theatre" and "Apropos in Frontieres
—
an Article by Montgomery Belgion" Finally, the
siderable I
—
are
new
to this edition.
"Notes" contain some minor revisions and a con-
number
of additions.
wish to thank Professor Maritain for the privilege of
translating this work. Also,
Ouinn
I
am
grateful to Professor Wilfred
and making a number of and for checking some of the bibliographical
for reading the manuscript
suggestions, detail.
JOSEPH W. EVANS Notre Dame, Indiana
VI
ART AND SCHOLASTICISM
—
The Schoolmen and the Theory oj Art
The Schoolmen
did not write a special treatise entitled
Philosophy of Art. This
was no doubt due
to the strict peda-
gogical discipline to which the philosophers of the Middle
Ages were subjected; occupied lems of the School in
all
in sifting
and probing the prob-
directions, they cared
little
that they
unworked regions between the quarries they excavated. find in them a very profound theory of Art; but we must look for it in austere treatises on some problem of
left
Yet we
logic
—
"how
"is
is
Logic a liberal art?"
—
or of moral theology
the virtue of Prudence, a virtue at once intellectual
and moral, to be distinguished from Art, which
is
an
intellec-
tual virtue?"
In these treatises, in which the nature of art incidentally, art in general
is
is
studied only
the subject of debate, from the
art of the shipbuilder to the art of the
grammarian and the
logician, not the fine arts in particular, the consideration of
which has no "formal" bearing on the matter under discussion.
We
must go
to the Metaphysics of the ancients to dis-
cover what their views were concerning the Beautiful, and then proceed to meet Art and see what comes of the junction of these it
two terms.
If
such a procedure disconcerts us,
by making clear to us modern philosophers, which,
at least affords us a useful lesson,
the error of the "Aesthetics" of 3
Art and Scholasticism
4
considering in art only the fine
only with regard to
art,
arts,
and treating the beautiful
runs the risk of vitiating both the no-
Art and the notion of the Beautiful.
tion of
Thus one could, by gathering together and reworking the materials prepared by the Schoolmen, compose from them a rich
and complete theory of Art.
cate here for the
some
I
should like only to indi-
of the features of such a theory.
peremptory tone thus imposed on
my
essay,
that despite their insufficiency these reflections
of the
Schoolmen
will
draw
I
apologize
and
I
hope
on maxims
attention to the usefulness of
having recourse to the wisdom of the ancients, as also to the possible interest of a conversation between philosophers artists, at
the
a time
immense
when
all feel
the necessity of escaping from
intellectual disorder inherited
teenth century, and of finding once tions of honest work.
and
more
from the nine-
the spiritual condi-
—
The Speculative Order and the Practical Order
There are
in the intellect virtues
whose
end
sole
is
to
know.
They belong to the speculative order. Such are: the Understanding of first principles, which, once we have drawn from our sense-experience the ideas of Being, of
Cause, of End,
through the power
—
etc.,
enables us to see immediately
of the active Ught
the self-evident truths
which
on which
pends; Science, which enables us to
is
in us
by nature
our knowledge de-
all
know by
demonstration,
assigning causes; Wisdom,^ which enables us to contemplate the first causes, and in which the mind holds all things in the
superior unity of a simple glance.
These speculative virtues perfect the proper function, in the activity in which
intellect in its it is
the intellect as such aims only to know.
indeed its
act
act
its
is
is,
absolutely speaking,
life
purely
The
most
itself;
for
intellect acts,
par excellence; but
an immanent act which remains wholly within the
and through which the
intellect to perfect
it,
limitless voracity,
seizes being
eats being
and drinks being
certain fashion,
all
things."
—
and draws
intellect, it
with a
into itself
it
so as "itself to become, in a
Thus the speculative order 5
—
is its
Art and Scholasticism
6 proper order;
at
it is
subject, the needs little
to
The
it; it
practical order
man
it
The good or
the evil of the
subject, matter
(frui);
is
opposed
to the speculative order be-
tends to something other than knowledge
only. If he knows,
to
there.
enjoys being and has eyes only for being.
cause there
enjoy
home
and conveniences of the
it is
it is
no longer
to rest in the truth,
and
to
to use (uti) his knowledge, with a view
some work or some
action.^
Art belongs to the practical order. It
is
turned towards
action, not towards the pure interiority of knowledge.
There
are,
it is
time sciences,
which are
true, speculative arts,
as,
These
for instance, logic.
at the
scientific
same arts
perfect the speculative intellect, not the practical intellect;
mode something
but such sciences retain in their
of the
and are arts only because they imply the making work this time a work wholly within the mind, and whose sole object is the achievement of knowledge, a work
practical,
of a
—
which consists for instance
in setting
our concepts
in order, in
framing a proposition or in constructing a reasoning.^ The fact remains, therefore, that wherever
we
productive operation to be contrived,
we find some some work to be made. find art
///
Making and Doing
The it
intelligence
works
is
a faculty perfectly one in
the sake of knowledge or
The
knows
Essence;
it
is
through
gaudium de
its
as
it
being, but
knows
its
perfect
and
infinitely
in the intuitive vision of the it
man
that
Veritate.
It
for
for the sake of action.
speculative intellect will have
superabundant joy only
tude:
ways according
in entirely different
is
will
Divine
then possess beati-
very rarely exercised in
absolute liberty on this earth, save in the
Man
of
Wisdom,
theologian or metaphysician, or in the pure scientist. In the great majority of cases reason works in the practical order,
and
for the diverse ends of
But the
human
practical order itself
is
actions.
divided into two entirely
which the ancients called the sphere of Do-
distinct spheres,
ing {agibile, irpaKrov) and the sphere of TTOirjTOV)
Making
(factibile,
.
Doing, in the restricted sense
understood
word, consists
this
in
which the Schoolmen
in the free use, precisely as free,
of our faculties, or in the exercise of our free will considered
not with regard to the things themselves or to the works which
we produce, but merely with
regard to the use which
we make
of our freedom.
This use depends on our specifically Will,
which of
itself
jealously to the
human
appetite,
on our
does not tend to the true, but solely and
good of man
— 7
for that alone exists for appe-
Art and Scholasticism
8 tite
which
fulfills
itself.
This use
human life;
and
is
good
is
to the subject as the subject
if it is
good, the
to
end of the whole of human
true
man
is
conformity with the law of
in
if it is
and with the
acts,
and which increases the being
desire or love
of the subject, or which
acting
is
himself good
—purely
and simply good.
Thus Doing
is
common end
ordered to the
of the whole of
human life, and it concerns the proper perfection of the human being. The sphere of Doing is the sphere of Morality, or of the human good as such. Prudence, the virtue of the practical intellect
which
rules Doing, stands entirely in the
human sphere. Queen of the moral virtues, noble and born to command, because it measures our acts with regard to an ultimate end which
God
is
Himself sovereignly loved. Pru-
dence nevertheless retains a taste of misery, because for
it
has
matter the multitude of needs and circumstances and
its
traffickings
because
it
which human anxiety flounders about, and
in
imbues with humanity
all
that
it
touches.
In contradistinction to Doing, the Schoolmen defined
Mak-
ing as productive action, considered not with regard to the
use which
we
therein
make
of our freedom, but merely with
regard to the thing produced or with regard to the work
taken in
itself.
This action sphere,
if it is
is
in
end of the work tends
if it
Making self
and the
and it
is
is
what
ought to be,
it
is
good
is
ordered to
self-sufficing,
relates to the
man making, of
and the result work be good in
to be produced;
good,
The sphere
it
in
own
its
conformity with the rules and with the proper
that this this
to
which
itself.
or that particular end, taken in
not to the
good or
common end
of
it
Thus
human
it-
life;
to the proper perfection, not of
but of the work produced.
Making
is
universal sense of this word.
the sphere of Art, in the most
Making and Doing
Making and not Doing, stands
Art, which rules
outside the
human
sphere;
it
This work
everything for Art; there
power of soothing;
establishes the artijex
it
—
and
manhood
intelligence of his
true of
is
it
artist
apart, closed, limited, absolute, in
which he makes. This
is
be produced.
to
for Art but one law
and absorbing power of Art, and also
the tyrannical
astonishing
human;
work
good of the work.
the exigencies and the
Hence its
is
therefore
has an end, rules, values, which
are not those of man, but those of the
—
9
delivers
one from the
or artisan
—
world
in a
which he puts the energy at the service of a thing
all art;
the ennui of living
and willing ceases at the door of every workshop.
But
man, of
if
art is not
essentially
man
human
human,
that has to be
in the
in
its
made;
end that
mode it
it
pursues,
must have on
it
it is
hu-
work the mark of
of operating.
It's
a
man: animal rationale. The work of art has been thought before being made, it has been kneaded and prepared, formed, brooded over, ripened in a mind before passing into matter. And in matter it will always retain the color and savor of the spirit. Its formal element, what constitutes it in its species and makes it what it is, is its
being ruled by the
diminishes ever so vanishes.
form
is
little,
The work
intellect.^ If this
to the
to be
made
formal element
same extent the is
only the matter of
undeviating reason. Recta ratio factibilium:
say, in order to try to translate this Aristotelian tic
definition,
works
to
reality of art
that art
be made.^
is
art, its let
us
and Scholas-
the undeviating determination of
Art an Intellectual Virtue
Let us sum up in general,
now what
considered in the
the
Schoolmen taught about
artist
art
or artisan and as something
of himself.
Art,
1.
first
of
all,
is
of the intellectual order,
consists in imprinting an idea in
some matter:
in the intelligence of the artifex that this intelligence is the subject in
which
it it
its
is
it
resides, or, as
inheres. It
is
action
therefore is
said,
a certain
quality of this intelligence.
The
2.
ancients termed habitus (e^t?) qualities of a class
apart, qualities
which are
fecting in the line of
own
nature the subject in which they
Health, beauty are habitus of the body; sanctifying
exist. ^
grace
its
essentially stable dispositions per-
is
a habitus (supernatural) of the soul." Other habitus
have for their subject the faculties or powers of the as the nature of these faculties or
the habitus which inhere in
powers
is
them perfect them
in their
dynamism, are operative habitus: such are the virtues
We use;
^
and the moral
soul,
and
to tend to action,
very
intellectual
virtues.
acquire this last kind of habitus through exercise and
but
we must not for this reason confuse modern sense of this word, that is
habit in the
10
habitus with to say, with
Art an Intellectual Virtue
mere mechanical bent and
routine; habitus
trary of habit in this sense. ^ Habit,
11 is
which
exactly the con-
weight
attests the
of matter, resides in the nerve centers. Operative habitus,
which
attests the activity of the spirit, resides principally in
first
activity in a certain
itself, it
this
disposes
its
manner, thus giving birth within
a quality which proportions
itself to
knowing
indifferent to
rather than that, demonstrates a truth to
own
When,
faculty, in the intelligence or the will.
an immaterial
for example, the intellect, at
it
to,
and makes
com-
it
mensurate with, such or such an object of speculation, a quality
which elevates
it
and
fixes
it
as regards this object;
it
acquires the habitus of a science. Habitus are intrinsic superelevations of living spontaneity,
vital
developments which
render the soul better in a given order and which
an active sap:
Thomas
turgentia ubera
them.
calls
who
lectual beings,
And
fill
it
with
animae, as John of Saint
only the living (that
to say, intel-
is
can acquire
alone are perfectly alive)
them, because only they are capable of elevating the level of their being
by
their very activity:
they have thus, in their
enriched faculties, secondary principles of action which they use
when they wish and which make easy and
them what of
delightful for
itself is difficult.
Habitus are, as
it
were, metaphysical
titles
of nobility,
and
much as innate gifts they make for inequality among men. The man who possesses a habitus has within him a quality
as
which nothing can pay for or replace; others are naked, he is
armed with
steel:
but
it is
a case of a living and spiritual
armor. Finally, habitus, properly speaking,
nent
(difficile
specifies tion,
which
it; it is
as for it
is
stable
and perma-
mobilis) by very reason of the object which thus to be distinguished from simple disposi-
example opinion. ^^ The object with regard to
perfects the subject
is itself
immutable
—such
as the
Art and Scholasticism
12
demonstration for the habitus of Science
infallible truth of
— and
it is
upon
this object that the quality
Hence
subject takes hold.
hence their
irritability
—
and the
the force
all
developed
from the
that deviates
in the
rigidity of habitus;
straight line
of their object galls them; hence their intransigence
—what
concession could they admit of? They are fixed in an absolute;
hence their inconvenience
the world, polished
on
all sides,
in the social order.
do not
like the
man
Men
of
of habitus,
with his asperities.
Art
3.
is
a habitus of the practical intellect.
This habitus
a virtue, that
is
is
to say, a quality which,
triumphing over the original indetermination of the lectual faculty, at
of
its activity,
to a certain efficiency.
draws
and an
and thus
of perfection
of operative
Every virtue being thus determined to the ultimate is
capable,^ ^ and every evil being a lack
infirmity, virtue
to use a virtue to of
with reference to a definite object,
it,
maximum
which the power
of
intel-
once sharpening and tempering the point
do
can tend only to the good: impossible
evil;
it is
essentially a habitus operative
good}^
The
existence of such a virtue in the
for the
good of the work,
for the
manner
disposition of the agent, and, as a
To
the work~to-be-made,
if it is
correspond in the soul of the creates between the one
workman
man
is
necessary
of action follows the
is,
so are his works. ^^
must
to turn out well, there
workman
and the other
a disposition
which
that kind of conformity
and intimate proportion which the Schoolmen called "connaturality"; Logic,
Music and Architecture respectively
graft
present in
harmony in the musician, equimasses in the architect. Through the virtue of Art them, they in some way are their work before
making
they are conformed to
the syllogism in the logician,
librium of
it;
it,
so as to be able to form
it.
13
Art an Intellectual Virtue
But
if
art
is
a virtue of the practical intellect,
virtue tends exclusively to the
good (that
is,
and
if
every
to the true in
we must conclude from Art and not the artist, who often
the case of a virtue of the intellect), this that
Art as such
(I say
acts contrary to his art)
an
never mistaken, and that
is
Otherwise
infallible rectitude.
properly speaking, stable of
of
it
implies
would not be a habitus
it
very nature.
its
The Schoolmen discussed at length this infallible rectitude art, and more generally of the virtues of the practical in(Prudence in the order of Doing, Art in the order of
tellect
Making).
How
domain
in the
can the
intellect
of the individual
be rendered
replied with the fundamental distinction
conformity with what
which consists
lect,
is,
between the truth
which consists
of the speculative intellect,
and the
infallibly true
and the contingent? They in knowing,
in
truth of the practical intel-
in directing,
in
conformity with what
ought to be according to the rule and the measure of the thing to be effected.^* If there
there
is
no
be otherwise than ing, there
is
science only of the necessary,
infallible truth in
can be
it is,
knowing
in regard to
if
what can
there can be infallible truth in direct-
art, as
there
is
prudence, in regard to the
contingent.
But
this infallibility of art
of the operation, that the mind. Let the
betray him,
let
is
concerns only the formal element
to say, the regulation of the
hand of the
artist falter, let his
the matter give way, the defect thus introduced
into the result, into the eventus, in
no way
and does not prove
is
the
moment
his intellect,
work by
instrument
that the artist
that the artist, in the act of
imposed the
the given case, there false direction.
trembling hand,
The
rule
who
in his art.
From
judgment brought by
and the measure which suited
was no error artist
affects the art itself
wanting
in
him, that
is
to say,
no
has the habitus of art and a
Art and Scholasticism
14
Gha
man
Vhabito de Varte e
che trema,
produces an imperfect work, but retains a
faultless virtue.
Likewise in the moral order, though the event can act posited according to the rules of
have been
infallibly correct.
prudence
Although
fail,
the
will nonetheless
extrinsically
the part of the matter art implies contingency and
and on
fallibility,
on the part of the form, from the mind, is not which comes and of the regulation
nevertheless art in
itself,
that
fluctuating like opinion, but It is
follows from this that
is
to say,
it is
planted in certitude.
manual
skill is
no part of
but a material and extrinsic condition of
it.
The
art;
it
labor
through which the zither player acquires nimbleness of finger does not increase his art as such nor does special art;
it
it
engender any
simply removes a physical impediment to the
non general novam artem, sed tollit on the side
exercise of the art:
impedimentum
exercitii ejus:^^ art stands entirely
of the mind.
4.
In order to determine more precisely the nature of Art,
the ancients
compared
it
with Prudence, which
is
of the practical intellect. In thus distinguishing
ing Art and Prudence, they put their finger in the psychology of
we have
Art,
human
also a virtue
and contrast-
on a
vital
point
acts.
already said,
is
in
the sphere of
Making,
Prudence in the sphere of Doing. Prudence discerns and ap-
means
plies the
of arriving at our moral ends, which are
themselves subordinate to the ultimate end of the whole of
human is, if
life,
you
good
of the
possess
above
that
will,
an life
fully,^''^
all
is
to say, to
art,
but
it is
God. Metaphorically, Prudence
the art of the totum bene vivere,^^
absolutely, an art
together with
which the Saints alone
supernatural
with the Gifts of the Holy
Spirit,
Prudence, and
which move them
— Art an Intellectual Virtue
15
to divine things according to a divine manner,
and cause them
God and
to act under the very guidance of the Spirit of
of
His loving Art, by giving them eagle wings to help them walk earth: they shall take wings as eagles, they shall run
on
not be weary, they shall
concerned with our
life,
walk and not jaint}^ Art
and not
but only with such or such particular
and extra-human ends which are an ultimate end to
is
in relation
it.
Prudence works for the good of the one
works
for the
bonum
and
that turns
operis,
and diminishes
—
From
the
ad bonum
from
it
moment
this
end perverts
that the artist
it
works well
from the moment that the geometrician demonstrates
as
matters
"it
it.
all
acting,
good of the work made, ad
operantis; Art
little
whether he be
in
good humor or angry."
^^
angry or jealous, he sins as a man, he does not sin
If
he
is
as
an
artist. ^^
Art in no way tends to the
artist's
being good
in his own action as a man; it would tend rather to the work produced if that were possible itself making in its own
—
—
line a perfect use of its activity.^^
produce works which move alone
and
makes works
literally
it is
art
does not
to action of themselves:
God
and thus the Saints are
truly
of this kind,
His masterpiece as Master-artisan.
Consequently, since the artist,*
But human
artist is
a
man
before being an
easy to see the conflicts which will set at logger-
heads within him Art and Prudence, his virtue as Maker and his virtue as
Man. No doubt Prudence
itself,
which judges
in
everything according to the particular cases, will not apply to
him the same rules as it will to the farmer or the merchant, and will not ask of a Rembrandt or a Leon Bloy that they
make works *
And
that pay, so as to ensure the material comforts
man also in order to be an artist. In this respect subjective causality art itself is in a vital relation
he must be a
—but by reason of
—
with the morality of the artist. Cf. further on, pp. 89-90, 91-98; and Frontieres de la Poesie et autres essais ("Dialogues").
Art and Scholasticism
16 of their family.
But the
order to keep himself always on
and
in
need a certain heroism
artist will
in
the straight path of Doing,
order not to sacrifice his immortal substance to the
devouring idol that he has in his soul. In truth, such conflicts
can be abolished only artist,
if
a profound humility renders the
so to speak, unconscious of his art, or
unction of wisdom gives to
that
all
is
in
if
the all-powerful
him
the sleep
and
the peace of love. Doubtless Fra Angelico did not experience
these interior conflicts.
The
remains that the pure
fact
such, reduplicative ut
sic, is
Prudence perfects the will is straight in its
say, with regard to
its
the whole man: ^^ in termining the means
human ends the appetite
something entirely amoral.
own line as human appetite, that is own proper good, which is the good reality
concerns
it
is
of
only with de-
itself
it
presupposes that
rightly disposed with reference to these ends.
appetite, for the ends at
human
to
in relation to such or such concrete
already willed, and therefore
supposing the rectitude of the
of the
only presupposing that the
intellect
on the contrary, perfects the
Art,
taken as
artist abstractly
intellect
will in its
which
it
without pre-
own hne
as
human
aims are outside the sphere
movement
good. Hence "the
of the appetite
which corrupts the judgment of prudence, does not corrupt the judgment of
art,
any more than
it
does that of geometry."
^3
Since the act of using our faculties (usus) depends on the will in its
proper dynamism as
human
appetite,^^
one can
understand that art gives only the power of making well (facultas boni operis),
The
artist
may choose
and not the use not to use his
badly, just as the grammarian,
if
itself
art,
he wishes,
barbarism, and yet the virtue of art in him
any the
less perfect.
of
making
is
well.
may use may commit
or he
not for
all
it
a
that
According to the celebrated saying of
Art an Intellectual Virtue
17
who no doubt would have hked the fantasies * Satie, the artist who sins against his art is not blamed
Aristotle,^^
of Erik if it;
he
sins willing
whereas the
justice
is
it
as
he would be
man who
blamed more
out willing
it.
if
he
he sinned without willing
sins willing
prudence or against it
than
if
he
sins with-
In this connection the ancients observed that
both Art and Prudence have
mand,
if
sins against
first
to judge
but that the principal act of art
whereas the principal act of prudence
is
is
and then
to
com-
merely to judge,
to
command. Per-
fectio artis consistit in judicando.^^
Finally, since
Prudence has for
its
matter, not a thing-to-
be-made, an object determined in being, but the pure use
makes of his freedom, it has no certain and determined ways or fixed rules. Its fixed point is the true end to which the moral virtues tend, and in relation to which it has to determine the just means. But for attaining this end, and for applying the universal principles of moral science, that the subject
precepts and counsels, to the particular action to be produced, there are
no ready-made
tissue of circumstances
rules; for this action is clothed in a
which individualize
it
and make of
it
each time a truly new case.^^ In each of these cases t there will be a particular manner of conforming to the end. It is for Prudence to find this manner, using
ways or
rules sub-
ordinated to the will which chooses according to the occurrence of circumstances and occasions
—ways
or rules that in
themselves are contingent and not pre-determined, that will
be fixed with certitude and rendered absolutely determined which are by no means barbarisms, but achievements modesty, evidencing the most profound care for rigor and purity. t Especially when, for example, it is a question of determining the exact measure of two virtues which must be practiced at the same time firmness and kindness, humility and magnanimity, mercy and * Fantasies
in
—
truth, etc.
Art and Scholasticism
18
only by the judgment or the decision of the Prudent
and which the Schoolmen called Particular for each
trariae.
Prudence
is
Man,
for this reason regulae arbi-
particular
the
case,
nonetheless certain and infallible, as
I
ruling
of
have said
before, because the truth of the prudential judgment depends
on the
right intention {per
tum), not on the event.
conformitatem ad appetitum rec-
And
supposing the return of a
infinity of cases, in all points identical
second case, or of an
with a given case, the very same ruling as was imposed on that
one would have
be imposed on
to
all
but there will never
:
be a single moral case which would be entirely identical with another.-^ It is
clear then that
no science can replace prudence, for
science, no matter how detailed in casuistry it may has anything but general and determined rules. It
is
clear also
why Prudence,
in
be, never
order to establish
its
judgment, must absolutely have recourse to that groping and multiple exploration which the ancients called consilium (deliberation, counsel).
on the contrary, which has for its matter a thingto-be-made, proceeds by certain and determined ways: "Art Art,
seems to be nothing other than a certain ordination of reason, by which human acts reach a determined end through determined
means."
^^
The Schoolmen, and they make
affirm this constantly,
following
fixed rules an essential property of art as such. later
some remarks concerning
Aristotle,
of this possession of I
shall present
these fixed rules in the case
of the fine arts. Let us recall here that the ancients treat of
the virtue of Art considered in
not in any one of
example of
The
is first
and
in all its generality,
particular species; so that the simplest
art thus considered, the
concept of art cal arts.
its
itself
one
in
which the generic
realized, must be sought in the mechani-
art of the shipbuilder or of the
clockmaker has
Art an Intellectual Virtue for
its
19
proper end something invariable and universal, deter-
mined by reason: the time
—
to permit
man
on water or
to travel
to
tell
the thing-to-be-made, ship or clock, being itself
but a matter to be formed according to that end.
And
for that
there are fixed rules, likewise determined by reason, in keep-
ing with the end and with a certain set of conditions.
Thus the
effect
produced
doubtless individual, and in
is
those cases where the matter of the art
and imperfect,
tingent
particularly con-
as in Medicine, for example, or in
Agriculture or in Strategy, Art will find
it
necessary in order
fixed rules to use contingent rules (regiilae arbi-
to apply
its
trariae)
and a kind of prudence,
to
is
will find
true that of itself Art derives
and universal ness of
its
rules,
stability
its
necessary also
it
have recourse to deliberation, to consilium.
It is
from
nonetheless rational
its
not from consilium, and that the correct-
judgment
not derived, as with Prudence, from
is
the circumstances and occurrences, but rather tain
and determined ways which are proper
why
the arts are at the
same time
from the
to
it.^^
cer-
That
is
practical sciences, such as
Medicine or Surgery {ars chirurgico-barbifica,
it
was
still
and some can even be
called in the seventeenth century),
speculative sciences, like Logic.
5.
In summary. Art
more
thus
is
exclusively intellectual
than Prudence. Whereas Prudence has for subject the practical intellect it,^^
will,
Art does not concern
itself
and with the ends that the
human
appetite;
and
appetite,"^^ this is
still
end. Like Science, object to be made, plated).
It
and depending on with the proper good of the
as presupposing right will
if it
will
pursues in
its
own
line as
supposes a certain rectitude of the
with regard to some properly intellectual
it
it
is
to
is
an object that Art
true, not
uses the roundabout
way
is
riveted (an
an object to be contemof deliberation
and coun-
Art and Scholasticism
20 sel
only by accident. Although
effects,
produces individual acts and
it
does not, except secondarily, judge according to
it
the contingencies of circumstance; thus
it
considers less than
does Prudence the individuation of actions and the hie nunc.^'^ In short,
gent,
if
its
matter, which
formal reason and as virtue
its
more with Science
and
"^^
et
contin-
speculativis in ratione virtutis, Scientist
is
quam cum
accords
cum
habitibus
prudentia.^''
an Intellectual who demonstrates, the Artist
who makes, the Prudent Man Will who acts well.
Intellectual
of
it
the habitus of the speculative intel-
than with Prudence: ars magis convenit
Man
is
Art accords more with Prudence than with Science,
yet according to
lect
by reason of
Such, in
its
principal features,
Schoolmen had of
art.
Not
is
an
is
The is
an
intelligent
the conception that the
in Phidias
and Praxiteles
only,
but in the village carpenter and blacksmith as well, they ac-
knowledged an
intrinsic
The
of the intellect.
eyes, strength of muscle
rapidity of the
development of reason, a nobility
virtue of the craftsman
was
and nimbleness of
not, in their
fingers, or the
chronometered and tailored gesture; nor was
mere empirical activity (experimentum) which takes place in the memory and in the animal (cogitative) reason, which imitates art and which art absolutely needs,^^ but which it
that
remains of
itself extrinsic to art. It v^as
and endowed the humblest
a virtue of the intellect,
artisan with a certain perfection
of the spirit.
The
artisan, in the
of truly
men.
If
because
human
normal type of human development and
civilizations,
represents the general run of
Christ willed to be an artisan in a
He wanted
to
assume the
little
common
village,
it
is
condition of
humanity.^^
The Doctors
of the
Middle Ages did
not, like
many
of
Art an Intellectual Virtue
21
our introspecting psychologists, study only city people, library dwellers, or academicians; they
were interested
mass of mankind. But even so they
still
in the
whole
studied their Master.
In considering the art or the proper activity of the artifex,
Our Lord chose
they considered the activity that
during
of His hidden
all
the very activity of the Father; for they
of Art
and
is
knew
that the virtue
predicated pre-eminently of God, as are Goodness
and that the Son,
Justice,^^
trade,
to exercise
they considered also, in a way,
life;
was
in plying
His poor man's
the image of the Father and of His never-
still
^^
ceasing action:
Philip,
who
he
sees
Me,
sees the Father
also.
It is
curious to note that in their classifications the ancients
did not give a separate place to what
They divided
we
call the fine arts.^^
the arts into servile arts and liberal arts, ac-
cording as they required or did not require the labor of the
— was taken from — according
body,'^^ or rather
one thinks,
for this division,
ratio factibilium
one case an
effect
which goes deeper than
the very concept of art, recta as the
produced
work
in matter
to be
made was
(factibile
in
properly
speaking), in the other a purely spiritual construction remaining in the soul.^^ In that case, sculpture and painting belonged to the servile
was next
arts,'*^
and music
to arithmetic
intellectually
and
to the liberal arts,
logic.
where
it
For the musician arranges
sounds in his soul, just as the arithmetician
arranges numbers there, and the logician, concepts
—
the oral
or instrumental expression, which causes to pass into the fluid successions of
achieved in the
sonorous matter the constructions thus
spirit,
being but an extrinsic consequence
and a simple means for these
arts.
In the powerfully social structure of mediaeval civilization,
Art and Scholasticism
22 the artist
had only the rank of
artisan,
and every kind of
anarchical development was forbidden his individualism, be-
cause a natural social discipline imposed on him from the outside certain limiting conditions.
'*'*
He
did not
work
for the
rich and fashionable and for the merchants, but for the ful;
it
was
his mission to
house their prayers, to instruct their
intelligences, to delight their souls
epoch, in
without even realizing
tors
and
their eyes.
which an ingenuous people was formed
to pray without
it,
knowing
faith-
Matchless in
beauty
just as the perfect religious
that he
is
praying;
'*'"'
in
ought
which Doc-
and image-makers lovingly taught the poor, and the poor
delighted in their teaching, because they were
all
of the
same
royal race, born of water and the Spirit!
Man
more beautiful things in those days, and he The blessed humility in which the artist was placed exalted his strength and his freedom. The Renaissance was to drive the artist mad, and to m.ake of him the most miserable of men at the very moment when the world was to become less habitable for him by revealing to him his own peculiar grandeur, and by letting loose on him the created
adored himself
less.
—
—
wild beast Beauty which Faith had kept enchanted and led after
it,
docile.^^
Art and Beauty
Saint
Thomas, who was
as simple as he
was
wise, defined
the beautiful as that which, being seen, pleases: id quod visum placet .'^'^ These four words say that
is
an
to say,
beautiful
is
intuitive
what gives
all
that
necessary: a vision,
is
knowledge, and a delight. The
—not
delight
any
just
delight, but de-
hght in knowing; not the delight peculiar to the act of knowing,
but a delight which superabounds and overflows from
this act
because of the object known.
delights the soul intuition,
Beauty
by the very
good
it is
essentially
is
fact that
to apprehend,
an object of
in the full sense of the
which alone
open
of beauty
is
it
also, in a
senses, in so far as in
way,
man
is
given to the soul's
beautiful."^^
for that
intelligence,
word is intelligence, The natural place
to the sense of sight
it
falls
is
from there that
under the grasp of the
"Among
all
the senses,
and the sense of hearing only that
the beautiful relates, because these two senses are cognoscitivi." ^^
The
ception of beauty
is
maxime
part played by the senses in the per-
even rendered enormous in
us,
and well-
nigh indispensable, by the very fact that our intelligence
not intuitive, as
is
it
they serve the intellect and can
themselves take delight in knowing: it
and
to the infinity of being.
the intelligible world,
descends. But
a thing exalts
it is
it is
which knows is
If
the intelligence of the angel;
23
it
sees, to
is
be
— 24
Art and Scholasticism
sure, but
on condition of abstracting and discoursing; only
man
sense knowledge possesses perfectly in
the intuitiveness
Thus man can
required for the perception of the beautiful.
doubtless enjoy purely intelligible beauty, but the beautiful that
connatural to
is
is
man
the beautiful that delights the
is
through the senses and through their intuition. Such
intellect
also the beautiful that
proper to our
is
a sensible matter in order to delight the like to believe that paradise is
not
the terrestrial paradise, because
it
art,
which shapes
would thus
spirit. It
lost.
It
has the savor of
restores, for a
peace and the simultaneous delight of the
moment, the and the
intellect
senses.
If
beauty delights the
intellect,
it is
because
essentially
it is
a certain excellence or perfection in the proportion of things to the intellect.
Hence
fullness
in
ity.
because the
because the
finally,
intellect is
A certain splendor
is,
intellect is
because the
of Being; proportion,
pleased in order and unity; clarity,
and above
all,
—but
it is
intellect
is
intelligibil-
in fact, according to all the ancients, claritas est
pulchritudinis ;'^ lux pulchrificat, quia sine luce ^2
pleased
radiance or
pleased in light and
the essential characteristic of beauty
turpia
Thomas
the three conditions Saint
^^ integrity,
assigned to beauty:
a splendor of intelligibility
:
de ratione
omnia sunt
splendor
veri,
said the Platonists; splendor ordinis, said Saint Augustine,
form of
adding that "unity
is
formae, said Saint
Thomas
the
language: for the form, that stitutes
in
if
all
it,
^"^
splendor
precise metaphysician's
his
that
in their essences
one may so put
beauty";
to say, the principle
the proper perfection of
and achieves things finally,
is
all
is,
and
which con-
which constitutes
qualities,
which
is,
the ontological secret that they
bear within them, their spiritual being, their operating mystery
—
the form, indeed,
is
above
all
the proper principle of Intel-
Art and Beauty
the proper clarity of every thing. Besides, every
ligibility,
form
is
25
a vestige or a ray of the creative InteUigence imprinted
at the heart of created being.
der and every proportion so, to say
is
On the
the other hand, every or-
work
of intelligence.
with the Schoolmen that beauty
And
the splendor of
is
on the proportioned parts of matter, ^^ is to say that a flashing of intelligence on a matter intelligibly arranged.
the form it is
The ful
intelligence delights in the beautiful because in the beauti-
it
finds itself again
tact with
its
own
light.
Francis of Assisi
and recognizes
This
is
—^perceive
itself,
and makes con-
so true that those
—such
who know that things come forth from an and who relate them to their author.
things,
Every sensible beauty implies, of the eye
itself
beauty only
A
if
as Saint
and savor more the beauty of
it
intelligence,
true, a certain delight
is
or of the ear or the imagination: but there
the intelligence also takes delight in
is
some way.
beautiful color "washes the eye," just as a strong scent
dilates the nostril;
only the
is
perfume,
knowledge,^^ liance,
but of these two "forms" or qualities color
said to be beautiful, because, being received, unlike in it
a
sense
power capable of
can be, even through
an object of delight for the
higher the level of man's culture, the
its
disinterested
purely sensible bril-
intellect.
more
Moreover, the
spiritual
becomes
the brilliance of the form that delights him. It is
important, however, to note that in the beautiful that
we have called connatural to man, and which is proper to human art, this brilliance of the form, no matter how purely intelligible it may be in itself, is seized in the sensible and through the sensible, and not separately from it. The intuition of artistic beauty thus stands at the opposite extreme
the abstraction of scientific truth.
For with the former
from it
is
through the very apprehension of the sense that the light of being penetrates the intelligence.
26
Art and Scholasticism
The
work and without
abstraction, rejoices without is
dispensed from
an to
from
intelligence in this case, diverted
intelligible
go over
its
usual labor;
its
from the matter
it
it is
by
different attributes step
step; like a stag at
do but drink;
drinks the clarity of being. Caught up in the intuition of
sense,
it is
given to it
It
buried, in order
the gushing spring, intelligence has nothing to it
discourse.
does not have to disengage
which
in
effort of
all
it,
irradiated
by an
does not seize sub ratione
veri,
which
it
glitters,
and which
but rather sub ratione delec-
through the happy release procured for the intelligence
tabilis,
and through the delight ensuing at every
wards
suddenly
intelligible light that is
in the very sensible in
good of the soul
will
it
be able to
as at
reflect
in the appetite,
its
which leaps
proper object. Only after-
more or
upon
less successfully
the causes of this delight.^^
Thus, although the beautiful borders on the metaphysical true, in the sense that every
implies
splendor of
some conformity with
the Intelligence that
of things, nevertheless the beautiful
a kind of good;
^^
is
the cause
not a kind of truth, but
is
the perception of the beautiful relates to
comme
knowledge, but by way of addition, s'ajoute sa fleur;
intelligibility in things
it is
not so
much
a kind of
a
la
jeunesse
knowledge as a
kind of delight.
The
beautiful
is
essentially delightful. This
very nature and precisely as beautiful,
it
is
stirs
why, of desire
produces love, whereas the true as such only illumines. nibus igitur est pulchrum et diligibile."
And
it is
-'^
It is
for
et its
bonum
wards the too weak
flesh is
turn produces ecstasy, that
is
is first
caught to say,
"Om-
desiderabile et amabile
beauty that
for itself that every beauty
its
and
Wisdom
in the trap. it
is
loved, even
loved.^* if
Love
afterin its
puts the lover outside
of himself; ec-stasy, of which the soul experiences a diminished
27
Art and Beauty
form when of
seized
it is
when
the fullness
it is
by the beauty of the work of
art,
and
absorbed, like the dew, by the beauty
God.
And
of God Himself, we must be so bold as
according to Denis the Areopagite,^^ to say that
ecstasy of love, because of the
Him
which leads
He
suffers in
some way
abundance of His goodness
to diffuse in all things a participation of
His
But God's love causes the beauty of what He loves, whereas our love is caused by the beauty of what we love. splendor.
The
speculations of the ancients concerning the beautiful
must be taken terializing their is
not just one
in the
most formal sense; we must avoid ma-
thought in any too narrow specification. There
way but
which the notion of
a thousand or ten thousand ways in
integrity or perfection or
be realized. The lack of a head or an arm
woman
able lack of integrity in a in
a statue
have
The
—whatever
felt at
plete than the
he
is
quarter of an eye, no one denies is
an eye be precisely the
Venus de Milo. is more com-
da Vinci's or even of Rodin's
futurist to give the lady
It is
M. Ravaisson may
disappointment
And
most perfect Bouguereau.
—here
quite a consider-
but of very Uttle account
not being able to complete the
least sketch of
asks only
is
completion can
pleases a
painting only one eye, or a
him
the right to
the whole problem all
if it
—
do
this
:
one
that this quarter of
the eye this lady needs in the given case.
same with proportion,
fitness
and harmony. They
are diversified according to the objects and according to the ends.
The good proportion
of a
man
is
not the good propor-
tion of a child. Figures constructed according to the
Greek
or the Egyptian canons are perfectly proportioned in their genre; but Rouault's clowns are also perfectly proportioned, in their genre.
Integrity
and proportion have no absolute
Art and Scholasticism
28 signification,^^
and must be understood
the end of the work, which Finally,
which
is
and above
the
all,
main thing
is
to
this
make
a form shine on matter.
radiance
in beauty,
ways of shining on matter.* There
solely in relation to
itself
has an is
of the form,
infinity of diverse
the sensible radiance of
* By "radiance of the form" must be understood an ontological splendor which is in one way or another revealed to our mind, not a conceptual clarity. We must avoid all misunderstanding here: the words clarity, intelligibility light, which we use to characterize the role of "form" at the heart of things, do not necessarily designate something clear and intelligible for us, but rather something clear and luminous in itself, intelligible in itself, and which often remains obscure to our eyes, either because of the matter in which the form in question is buried, or because of the transcendence of the form itself in the things of the spirit. The more substantial and the more profound this secret sense is, the more hidden it is for us; so that, in truth, to say with the Schoolmen that the form is in things the proper principle of intelligibility, is to say at the same time that it is the proper principle of mystery. (There is in fact no mystery where there is nothing to know: mystery exists where there is more to be known than is given to our comprehension.) To define the beautiful by the radiance of the form is in reality to define it by the radiance of a mystery. It is a Cartesian misconception to reduce clarity in itself to clarity for us. In art this misconception produces academicism, and condemns us to a beauty so meagre that it can radiate in the soul only the most paltry of delights. If it be a question of the "legibility" of the work, I would add that if the radiance of form can appear in an "obscure" work as well as in a "clear" work, the radiance of mystery can appear in a "clear" work as well as in an "obscure" work. From this point of view neither "obscurity" nor "clarity" enjoys any privilege. [1927] Moreover, it is natural that every really new work appear obscure at first. Time will decant the judgment. "They say," Hopkins wrote to Bridges apropos the poem The Wreck of the Deutschland, "that vessels sailing from the port of London will take (perhaps it should be / used once to take) Thames water for the voyage: it was foul and stunk at first as the ship worked but by degrees casting its filth was in a few days very pure and sweet and wholesome and better than any water in the world. However that may be, it is true to my purpose. When a new thing, such as my ventures in the Deutschland are, is presented us our first criticisms are not our truest, best, most homefelt, or most lasting but what come easiest on the instant. They are barbarous and like what the ignorant and the ruck say. This was so with you. The Deutschland on her first run worked very much and ,
Art and Beauty color or, tone; there
is
29
the intelligible clarity of an arabesque,
of a rhythm or an harmonious balance, of an activity or a
movement; there divine thought;
^'-^
the reflection
is
there
one glimpses of the
is,
above
there
is
a
things of a
human
still
and
ani-
and passion.
spiritual life, of pain
more exalted
or
the deep-seated splendor
soul, of the soul principle of life
mal energy, or principle of
And
upon all,
splendor, the splendor of
Grace, which the Greeks did not know. Beauty, therefore,
immutable type,
confusing the true
would have
it
is
not conformity to a certain ideal and
in the sense in
and the
which they understand knowledge and
beautiful,
man
that in order to perceive beauty
it
who,
delight,
discover
"by the vision of ideas," "through the material envelope," "the invisible essence of things" and their "necessary type." Saint as he
Thomas was was from the
There
on a
is
this
pseudo-Platonism
bazaar of Winckelmann and David.
beauty for him the
and he takes care
relative
—
moment
the shining of any form
to
warn us
that beauty
in
some
which the
modems
understand the word rela-
but to the proper nature and end of the thing, and to
the formal conditions under which
it
is
taken. 'Tulchritudo
quodammodo dicitur per respectum ad aliquid. enim
is
relative not to the dispositions of the subject,
in the sense in tive,
removed from
idealist
suitably proportioned matter succeeds in pleasing the
intellect,
way
as far
^^
est pulchritudo spiritus et alia corporis,
et illius corporis." ^^
And however
.
.
." ^^ ''Alia
atque alia hujus
beautiful a created thing
unsettled you, thickening and clouding your mind with vulgar mudbottom and common sewage (I see that I am going it with the image) and just then you drew off your criticisms all stinking (a necessity now of the image) and bilgy, whereas if you had let your thoughts cast themselves they would have been clearer in themselves and more to my taste too." Letter of May 13, 1878, in The Letters of Gerard Manley Hopkins to Robert Bridges, edited with notes and an introduction by Claude CoUeer Abbott (London: Oxford University Press,
1935), pp. 50-51.
30
Art and Scholasticism
may
be,
because
it
can appear beautiful
it is
some and not
to
beautiful only under certain aspects,
discern and others do not:
and not beautiful
If this is so,
is
it
to others,
which some
thus "beautiful in one place
in another."
it is
because the beautiful belongs to the order
of the transcendentals, that
to say, objects of thought
is
which
transcend every limit of genus or category, and which do not allow themselves to be enclosed in any class, because they
imbue everything and are
to be
found every where. ^^ Like the
one, the true and the good, the beautiful sidered from a certain aspect;
the
mere
thing
is
it,
an
And
as being
is
is
Thus every-
good, at least in a cer-
everywhere present and every-
where varied the beautiful likewise is
is
adds to being only
intellectual nature.
beautiful, just as everything
tain relation.
it
being considered as delighting, by
it is
intuition of
con-
itself
a property of being. It
it is
not an accident superadded to being, a relation of reason:
being
is
is
diffused everywhere
and
everywhere varied. Like being and the other transcenden-
tals, it is essentially
analogous, that
is
to say,
it is
predicated
for diverse reasons, sub diversa ratione, of the diverse subjects
of which is
good
it is
in its
predicated
own way,
:
is
each kind of being beautiful in
its
is
in
its
own way,
own way. God pre-eminently;
Analogous concepts are predicated of in
Him
the perfection they designate exists in a "formal-
eminent" manner,
in the
"sovereign analogue,"
^^
pure and
infinite state.
and they are
in things only as a dispersed
to
and prismatized
countenance of God.^^ Thus Beauty
is
God
is
their
be met with again reflection of the
one of the divine
names.
God
is
beautiful.
He
is
the
most beautiful of beings, be-
Art and Beauty
31
Thomas
cause, as Denis the Areopagite and Saint
His beauty
without alteration or vicissitude, without in-
is
crease or diminution; and because things, all of
explain,^^
it
is
not as the beauty of
which have a particularized beauty, particulatam
pulchritudinem, sicut et particulatam naturam.
He
is
beautiful
through Himself and in Himself, beautiful absolutely.
He
is
beautiful to the extreme (superpulcher)
,
because in
the perfectly simple unity of His nature there pre-exists in
a super-excellent manner the fountain of
He
is
beauty
itself,
because
He
beauty.
all
gives beauty to
all
created
beings, according to the particular nature of each, and because
He
is
the cause of
form indeed, that
all
consonance and
to say, every light,
is
proceeding from the
first
And
divine brightness."
all
is
brightness.
Every
"a certain irradiation
brightness," "a participation in the
every consonance or every harmony,
every concord, every friendship and every union whatsoever
among
beings proceeds from the divine beauty, the primordial
and super-eminent type of things together in this "the
and which
name
x