Theses On Realism
Theses On Realism
Theses On Realism
I have taught a module entitled 'Realisms' for a number of years, as part of the Art
and Design History set offered by the School of History and Theory of Visual
Culture [at Middlesex University]. The title of the module is in the plural because
the history of art reveals that there have been many individual artists and groups of
artists, working in different countries and periods, who have called themselves
realists, even though their works of art have been very different in character -
account for the variety of art movements employing the label 'Realist'.
and reality, signs and referents: how does one judge the accuracy or truthfulness of
realistic images? The following theses are my personal conclusions reached after
many years of reflection. (Students were the readers I had in mind; hence the
possible. The theses are intended as a basis for further argument and discussion.)
Clearly, the two problems raise fundamental theoretical issues which are
normally the province of the discipline of philosophy. I was trained as a fine artist in
the 1950s and in recent decades have worked as an art critic and art historian; I am
Martin Heidegger and Jean-Paul Sartre to write about art, then surely it is
legitimate for art historians to comment on philosophical questions.
1. There is only one reality. It can be defined as everything that presently exists, has
existed in the past and will exist in the future. Logical deduction tells us that past
reality pre-existed the emergence of the human species. Present reality includes
human beings and their thoughts. The universe in which we find ourselves existed
before we were born and will continue to exist after we die; consequently, it exists
the minds of human beings (as the pure idealist would have us believe).
2. Works of art do not exist outside reality. They exist within reality, indeed they are
part of it. In the case of paintings and sculptures, they are made from real materials
that have been worked upon and organized for the purpose of depicting or
commenting upon reality. (To use the reflection metaphor - 'art reflects reality' - is
inadequate because artists often reflect upon reality: they comment on it as well as
describing it.) The relationship between art and reality, therefore, is a part/whole
3. Every new work of art (whether realist or not) is an addition to present reality,
therefore the production of art changes and extends present reality. Art is also a
cultural force capable of influencing human behaviour and therefore future reality.
(there is a future); therefore, any realist depiction is likely to be true only in relation
to the time it was made (place or vantage point - both in the sense of physical
location and the sense of political/ideological position - is also crucial); therefore,
every statement about reality needs a time and place qualification. Contrary to
received wisdom, art is never timeless. Works of art are always marked by their
historical moment of production but some seem timeless because (a) they survive
long after their makers have died; (b) they are appreciated aesthetically by later
generations; and (c), their truth content may remain valid for a lengthy period
5. What separates a work of art from the encompassing reality is (a) the concept art
and the social institution of art (that which enables us to distinguish art from non-
art); and (b), a frame or border or time-span of some kind. Also, the work is
apples is made from canvas and pigment, not apples. Exceptionally, some
assemblages and installations are constructed from actual, everyday objects - one
could call them presentations rather than representations.) [Tracey Emin’s famous
bed is an example.]
6. There is only one reality but there are many different ways of representing it and
many media with which to represent it: a drawing of a scene differs from a
artists of the same scene will also vary in terms of style. However, we should not
conclude from this that there are as many realities as there are individual artists.
mean'.
8. Nevertheless, it seems logical that any truthful work of art must correspond to
the reality it depicts in some, if not in all, respects. Otherwise we would not be able
to pick out a person we had not met before from a portrait of that person. (Often
there is an isomorphic relation between pictorial signs and their referents; for
example, the London Underground system and the London Underground diagram
are both networks of lines.) However, as already indicated, the material character of
the work of art normally differs from what it represents: the word 'sugar' is not a
white or brown substance, nor is it sweet; the 'pipe' in a René Magritte painting
may look like a pipe seen from one viewpoint but it cannot be picked up and
smoked. Hence, representations of reality tend to be reductive in the sense that they
accurate, truthful in certain respects, but not in all respects. (A street map is
truthful if strangers to a city can use it to find their way about; the map is a
simplified, schematic representation of the urban terrain but it does not attempt to
10. Besides being a truthful depiction of reality the realist work of art is a real
artefact; consequently, the honest work of art acknowledges rather than disguises
the reality of the materials from which it is made and the processes of labour
11. The truthful depiction of reality does not depend upon resemblance, though in
some cases it may. (The word 'cat' does not resemble a cat, but a photograph of a
particular cat may.) Many visual representations consist of several different kinds
12. There are paintings with real referents: for example, a Paul Cézanne landscape
of the mountain Saint Victoire in Provence, but there are also paintings whose
fairies, unicorns and Donald Duck. Such invented creatures are pictorial lies,
fictions or fantasies. Even so, they are generally created by combining elements
13. To describe and depict reality writers and artists employ verbal and pictorial
languages that have evolved over many centuries. The relative autonomy of these
languages means that they can be manipulated to tell lies, to construct fictional or
virtual universes, or to generate nonsense. However, the scepticism that results from
knowing how easy it is to tell lies should not lead us to conclude that language can
14. Lies and fictions are not identical; they have different social functions; but in a
literal sense they are both untruths. The lying and fictional capacity of language has
artist can depict visions of Heaven, while the socialist artist can depict a
harmonious and just society. Such images may not be true now but they could turn
out to be true. (At the time it is drawn, an architect's drawing/plan for a new
hospital is, literally speaking, a lie or fantasy - it depicts a building that does not
exist - but if the building is erected according to the plan, then the drawing gains a
method of achieving realism in art and this may involve attempts by artists to
of art. Artists often use procedures designed to achieve an 'innocent eye' in order to
see reality afresh. However, it is difficult for artists to deny their cultural knowledge
and the heritage of previous art is often as much a source of realist compositions as
perceived reality. For example, the composition of the figures in Edouard Manet's
news reports rather than direct observation - echoes that of Francisco Goya's
16. E. H. Gombrich has argued that when landscape painters copy nature, making
marks on canvas always precedes the matching process. We can say that a realist
landscape is the result of a struggle to realize the painter's visual sensations in front
'language' or conventions of the oil painting tradition, and by the knowledge the
artist has of earlier landscape paintings.
recording technologies (such as photography) over the centuries has been driven by
a desire for greater and greater illusionism. Illusionism in visual art is often equated
with realism but a highly illusionistic image is not necessarily the most truthful kind
of image. Illusionism seeks to imitate the surface detail, to record the external
appearance of reality as accurately as possible. But one can see something without
necessarily understanding it. There is often a conflict between how a thing looks and
how it is: a man walking into the distance appears to become smaller but he does
not actually become a midget. Seeing and knowing, therefore, are not identical. (The
are deceptive'.)
18. Computer graphics specialists and designers of Virtual Reality systems seek to
duplicate the look and feel of reality but an exact duplication of part of reality as a
goal for art is contradictory and pointless. (As Virginia Woolf is said to have
indistinguishable from its source, and therefore would not be recognized as a work
of art at all! This is why the goal of absolute illusionism in art is absurd. However,
19. By definition, the visual artist is dependent upon visual appearances, and
appearances can deceive. Even so, invisible, hidden relations (such as economic or
power relationships) can be communicated to viewers through devices such as
montage, metaphor, allegory and symbolism. Artists who wish to depict reality will
need, therefore, a political understanding of the society in which they live and this
will depend upon critical analysis and theory as well as empirical knowledge
20. Bertolt Brecht once cited the inadequacy of records of surface appearances by
arguing that a photograph of a factory told us very little about that factory - what it
made, who owned it, what the workers were paid, etc. This is simply a consequence
photograph could well be useful for certain purposes - if you wanted to bomb the
even more.
21. A realist image is one that says something truthful about reality; but there are
limits to the amount of information anyone image, book, TV documentary, etc., can
convey. The limited, partial nature of the information conveyed inevitably produces
distortions and gaps even when the communicator is striving to be truthful. The
impossibility of saying everything about a society forced artists to search for the
typical or the representative: for example, using types to represent different social
classes or professions. The type, however, can easily degenerate into the stereotype.
example, estimates of crowd sizes often vary from newspaper to newspaper. This
does not mean they are all equally valid; on the contrary, one estimate will be more
accurate than the others. The degree of precision required varies according to the
social situation or purpose for which the information is needed - for many
dependent upon the viewer's ability to verify the information it contains against
23. Ensuring our conceptions and models of reality are true is a constant struggle,
not only because of the deliberate misinformation some humans generate and the
intrinsic complexities of nature, but also because of changes in reality over time.
Our very survival as a species depends upon our ability to comprehend the 'laws'
of nature and the changing environment. Although human societies can survive for
some timecenturies even - while holding mistaken ideas and beliefs, sooner or later
reality will assert itself; those who cling to false beliefs will face extinction by the
24. Judging the truthfulness of news reports is often problematic because they
frequently contain a mixture of fact and fiction. A realist painting, therefore, may
also contain a mix of truth and errors. We may need, therefore, to express the
Millet, Edouard Manet and Ford Madox Brown. This movement was distinguished
of its assertion of difference from other art styles such as classicism and
romanticism.
26. Today, 'realisms' has to be used in the plural because there have been so many
art movements since the nineteenth century that have employed the term: critical
realism, socialist realism, surrealism, magic realism, Nouveau Realisme, and photo-
realism.
27. In the twentieth century, realist tendencies in visual art have generally been
paradoxically, some abstract artists (Naum Gabo for example) have published
realist manifestos. The realist claim of abstract artists is generally based on the
arguments that their art is made from real materials, that it imitates the creative
processes of nature in its modes of construction, and that the finished work is a new
addition to reality.
28. Realist artists presumably believe that realism should be the goal of all art, but
so far realism is only one of the varieties of art that exist. As the word 'surrealism'
indicates, some artists have sought to transcend realism. Many surrealists wanted to
achieve a synthesis of internal and external realities (the subjective and the
about earthquakes, famine, war, rape, torture, murder, etc., may well find their
realism unbearable (even though the reports are generally sanitized in advance by
the media gatekeepers). Some viewers will look away or switch off their sets. News
pleasure no matter bow disturbing its subject matter. Since realist art places
particular emphasis on the content or referent of the image, it may direct the
viewer's attention away from the reality of the artefact itself and the aesthetic
pleasure associated with it. Alternatively, if the subject matter is horrific, the viewer
may well be disturbed or embarrassed by the fact that aesthetic pleasure can be
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This article was first published in the Middlesex University magazine Notebooks, no.
John A. Walker is a painter and art historian. He is the author of several books
about art and mass media. He is also an editorial adviser for the website:
"http://www.artdesigncafe.com">www.artdesigncafe.com</a>