Art As Re Exive Practice: Daniel Martin Feige
Art As Re Exive Practice: Daniel Martin Feige
Art As Re Exive Practice: Daniel Martin Feige
Now, in this freedom alone is ne art truly art, and it only fulls
its supreme task when it has placed itself in the same sphere as religion
and philosophy, and when it is simply one way of bringing to our minds
and expressing the Divine, the deepest interests of mankind, and the most
comprehensive truths of the spirit.
22
In a reformulation of the Hegelian vocabulary we can say that works of
art are means for understanding ourselves (Selbstverstandigung). This can be
reformulated in terms of art as a whole being a reexive practice. Unlike
the Kantian account of the reexivity of the aesthetic judgment, which
proposes from a transcendental point of view to understand art and the
aesthetic as reexive insofar as the subject ensures itself about its cog-
nitive faculties and thus that it ts in the world, Hegel understands this
reection as a reection of our position in the world, being a historical
and social position. Thus, even though works of art can be about many
21
Georg W.F.Hegel, Lectures on Fine Art.Vol.1 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1975),
7.
22
Georg W.F.Hegel, Lectures on Fine Art. Vol.1, 7. In the german Hotho-Edition of
Hegels Aesthetics the functional point of this passage is even more clear:
Das allgemeine
Bed urfnis zur Kunst also ist das vern unftige, da der Mensch die innere und auere Welt
sich zum geistigen Bewutsein als einen Gegenstand zu erheben hat, in welchem er sein
eigenes Selbst wieder erkennt. Das Bed urfnis dieser geistigen Freiheit befriedigt er, indem
er einerseits innerlich, was ist, f ur sich macht, ebenso aber dies F ursichsein auerlich
realisiert und somit, was in ihm ist, f ur sich und andere in dieser Verdopplung seiner zur
Anschauung und Erkenntnis bringt. Georg W.F. Hegel, Vorlesungen uber die
Asthetik.
Band 1 (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1986), 52. Denn andere Zwecke, wie Belehrung,
Reinigung, Besserung, Gelderwerb, Streben nach Ruhm und Ehre, gehen das Kunstwerk
als solches nichts an und bestimmen nicht den Begri desselben. Georg W.F. Hegel,
Vorlesungen uber die
Asthetik. Band 1, 82.
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Daniel Martin Feige Art as Reexive Practice
things and exemplify any properties, they also always concern us and our
position in the world. To name some examples: In understanding cer-
tain representational paintings we understand not only something about
a depicted world, but also something about our (historically and socially
coined) ways of seeing the world;
23
in following the inner logic of a jazz
performance like Bill Evans Time Remembered, we are not only emo-
tionally engaged, but understand the movement of the music as a thema-
tizing and playing-through of our existential movings and possibilities in
a specic way and as thematizing and playing-through specic existential
movings and possibilities;
24
in understanding specic novels we not only
follow a ctional chain of events, but in following it, we thematize our-
selves and imaginatively so our possibilities of acting and perhaps even our
whole way of living. Thus, if we say we learn something in our encounters
with works of art, this should not be understood in terms of an epistemic
practice, because as a part of an epistemic practice, art would be ghting a
losing battle. Even if we may gain knowledge about history and the world
while reading a historical novel, if this was the main function of this novel,
we could read books on history right away fullling this function a lot bet-
ter. Thus we have to say the internal function of art is neither providing an
aesthetic experience in hedonic terms, nor gaining knowledge about the
world. In contrast works of art are candidates for our self-understanding
and thus part of a reexive practice.
25
Concerning this account of art as a reexive practice, we have to ask
how art specically fulls this function. An answer to this question is nec-
essary due to the fact that there are other reexive practices as well
apart from art, Hegel obviously listed philosophy and religion. Hegel as
well as other major exponents of the tradition of philosophical aesthetics
proposed to specify the reexivity of art by means of the use of sensuous
23
Cf. for example Hegels Interpretations of Dutch Painters: Georg W.F. Hegel, Vor-
lesungen uber die
Asthetik. Band 2 (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1986), 225.
24
Cf. Richard Eldrige, Hegel on Music, in Hegel and the Arts, ed. Stephen Houlgate
(Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 2007), 119-145.
25
A major problem of Goodmans Languages of Art is thus, that he proposes to un-
derstand art as an epistemic practices, that is just dierentiated from other epistemic
practices by symptoms of the aesthetics, that are conjunctive sucient and disjunctive
necessary for art. Nelson Goodman, Languages of Art(London: Oxford University Press,
1969).
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Daniel Martin Feige Art as Reexive Practice
materials within the work of art; most contemporary German aestheti-
cians reformulate this notion by way of a concept of aesthetic experience
that is orientated towards a specic sensual engagement with works of
arts. But as a denition these proposals are confronted with counterex-
amples at least concerning the notion of sensuality insofar as for works of
art like the works of the concept art and a lot of classical narrative novels
it has to be said that they dont exemplify sensuous properties.
26
Arthur
C. Danto has to my mind convincingly shown that only some properties
of an object or event that is a work of art are in fact properties of the work
of art artworks are construed via interpretation.
27
This suggestion gives
us good reasons to say that the notion of sensuous properties is a misun-
derstanding concerning at least certain works of the concept art and a lot
of novels and thus as a misunderstanding of the specic way of art fullll-
ing the function of Selbstverstandigung. This holds true despite the fact
that the vast majority of works of art has to be reconstructed in terms of
sensuous properties of artistic materials. Thus we have to consider the
possibility that there is not just one way of being an artwork , that is to
say in line with a Weitzian or in line with the more recent disjunctive or
cluster denitions with a functional twist: In the light of the heterogene-
ity of dierent works of art there is no single way in which art fulls the
function of reexivity.
Nevertheless we can say something general about those works of art
that have mainly been discussed as paradigmatic for art as a whole, namely
works of art that full the function of reexivity by exemplifying the sen-
suous dimensions of their artistic materials. The following thoughts thus
concern only certain works of art, but I subsequently will discuss the pos-
sibility to generalize this way of fullling the function of reexivity also
for those works of art that dont exemplify the sensuous dimensions of
their artistic materials. We can characterize the specic way these works
of art full the function of reexivity, by an analysis of the way we under-
stand them. As Heidegger in his essay The Origin of the Work of Art
26
Cf. James Shelley, The Problem of Non-perceptual art, The British Journal of Aes-
thetics, Vol. 43, No. 4 (2003): 363-378.
27
Arthur C.Danto, The Transguration of the Commonplace. APhilosophy of Art, 115.
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Daniel Martin Feige Art as Reexive Practice
concerning a painting of van Gogh rightly notes,
28
whereas within our ev-
eryday use of equipment there is no need to interpret because our under-
standing of equipment is taken up in a tacit hermeneutical background
of practices that ultimately concerns practical understandings, our under-
standing of art is not taken up into this hermeneutical background. Works
of art potentially pose diculties for our understanding in a way that they
challenge the recipients everyday capacities of understanding as we dont
have a practice that embodies denitive rules and conventions of inter-
pretation. This isnt meant to say that there are no rules and conventions
obviously there are. But concerning for example instructions on the
subject of interpretation for students of literature or art history, we know
that they are auxiliary means and can always prove to be inadequate in
light of a single artwork. Every work of art is unique and demands the re-
cipient to identify its constitutive elements and properties and in the case
of artworks exemplifying sensuous properties of artistic materials, these
properties are never mere sensuous properties as in the case of ordinary
use of predicates of perception.
We can say that this is due to the fact that those artwork exemplify-
ing the sensuous dimensions of their materials establish an inner logic of
their elements. These elements of a work of art are constituted holistically.
Consequently, we cannot describe elements of an artwork in an atomistic
manner and independent of the context they are embodied in within the
artwork. For example, it is usually not informative to notice that a cer-
tain voicing is used in a Beethoven-Piano-Sonata and a recording by Brad
Mehldau alike both fulll quite a dierent function depending on their
surrounding voicings. Concerning the structure of works of arts we have
to be holists. But this holism of elements is not sucient as a description
it is for example also true for the way that words gain their meaning
in language. Elements of a work of art are not only holistically consti-
tuted, but, unlike for example the elements of language, within a work
of art the dierences between these elements become articulated. Thus
the inner logic of an artwork can be described in such a way that each
artwork specically constitutes what counts as an element for it as well
28
Martin Heidegger, The Origin of the Work of Art, in Martin Heidegger, O the
Beaten Track (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), 13.
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Daniel Martin Feige Art as Reexive Practice
as articulating the dierences between those elements. Thus, if a work
of art operates with materials like words that are also used outside of art
they are not the same things as outside of the work of art anymore,
29
be-
cause we always have to ask what it is about them that is important within
the outlines of the artwork e.g. their sound-dimensions, the rhythmic
qualities of their combination, their usage within dierent strophes, pos-
sibly their immergence into bigger narrative units and even probably their
graphical presentation. Coming back to the mentioned example, we can
say that a certain voicing for a certain chord in a Beethoven-Piano-Sonata
and a recording by Bill Evans is not only a dierent element within two
dierent artworks because of the fact that we know both pieces are from a
dierent period and a dierent kind of music: It is a dierent element be-
cause it is surrounded by distinct voicings and certain dimensions of these
voicings become accentuated within the piece of music itself: A musical
work of art is for example presenting the harmonic progression itself and
it articulates the dierence between each of them. Thus the harmonies
are not only constituted holistically.
30
Reconstructing this logic of elements of works of art certainly can, as
I argued, only reconstruct the way art is a reexive practice concerning
some kinds of works of art. I briey want to comment on the two major
examples of works of art that cannot be reconstructed in terms of sensuous
artistic materials. Talking on the one hand about a great number of novels
we have to say that these kinds of works exemplify the specicity of their
narration that is nevertheless not a specicity of the sensuous phonetic,
rhythmic, graphic etc. dimensions of the words and sentences, they use
to tell their story. Concerning classical narrative novels we can neverthe-
less say that they follow the described logic of constitution of elements of
works of art, namely, if those elements are understood as narrative rather
than sensuous elements: The dierences of events, characterizations of
characters, the specicity of the chaining of events and so on become ar-
ticulated within the work of art. The story told could not have been told
29
For a discussion of the concept of artistic material cf.: Martin Seel, Aesthetics of
Appearing (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2004), 106.
30
Also cf. for this logic of elements constituting a work of art: Georg. W. Bertram,
Kunst und Alltag: Von Kant zu Hegel und dar uber hinaus, Zeitschrif f ur
Asthetik und
Algemeine Kunstwissenschaf, 52/2 (2009): 203-217.
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Daniel Martin Feige Art as Reexive Practice
dierently but in this case its also not a matter of a dierent sensuous
presentation of words. Taking on the other hand about some works of
concept art and the ready-mades we have to say instead that the majority
of those kinds of works of art dont exemplify the sensuous dimensions of
artistic materials and that they arent constituted in terms of the described
logic of elements but rather exemplify concepts and ideas. In this way, a lot
of ready-mades for example proceed in a self-reexive fashion in thematiz-
ing our artworld knowledge: Concerning Duchamps famous Fountain,
we need to have gained certain art-related understandings as a background
for understanding the work of art, but we also have to understand this art-
world knowledge as being thematized by Fountain. Knowledge doesnt
help to intensify the sensuous encounter with Fountain, but it is neces-
sary to understand Fountain as thematizing certain kinds of knowledge.
Thus talking about Fountain in terms of something like a sculpture or,
alternatively, of an art object in a traditional sense, is going into the wrong
direction.
31
But this description might not be true for every existing ready-
made: lets keep in mind, that there is not just more than one way of being
a work of art, but there is also more than one way of being a ready-made.
We need to give an account of ready-mades that takes serious the dier-
ent kinds of ready-mades that exist. Thus some ready-mades exemplify the
explicated logic of elements, because certain aspects like their place in
the museum, the specic way they are arranged in the room, the lighting,
aspects of their installation etc. may be constitutive for them.
This described structural logic has to consider what Noel Carroll rightly
points out, i.e. artworks come in categories.
32
We can say that ev-
ery innovation or conservation in the realm of art has to be understood
against the background of expectations and habitualizations that embody
a hermeneutical horizon of understandings. This horizon is a condition of
the possibility of artworks being understandable for subjects and involves
dierent kinds of theoretical and practical knowledge. Any understand-
ings embodied within our way of life can come into play here as well as
practical knowledge about characteristic usages of artistic media and also
31
George Dickie has oered this kind of wrong interpretation in reaction to criticism
of Ted Cohen: Georg Dickie, Art and the Aesthetic. An institutional Analysis, 42.
32
Noel Carroll, On Criticism(New York: Routledge, 2009), 93. Also see his remarks
on the plural-category approach: Noel Carroll, On Criticism, 170.
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Daniel Martin Feige Art as Reexive Practice
artworld knowledge in a narrower sense, i.e. things like the knowledge of
styles and conventions of genre. But this hermeneutical horizon is, as I
have argued, not sucient to describe our ways of understanding every
kind of work of art, because in the majority of all cases these ways have
to be understood from the logic of how artworks establish their elements
that omit a purely conventional or rule-governed understanding of our un-
derstanding of art. What I call inner logic here should of course neither
be understood as something completely autonomous from the interpret-
ing subject, nor as something static. Artworks, being relational entities in
the Hegelian and Dantoian sense, change with interpreting them, because
every interpretation can oer dierent readings of the relation of the art-
works elements and even dierent individuations of their elements. Art-
works are ultimately not translatable, because in every historical situation
they oer new possibilities of interpretation, which are related to the re-
cipients capacities to make sense of them as part of a reexive practice.
After trying to outline some basic ideas concerning the modes in which
art fulls the function of reexivity, let me nally come back to the no-
tion of reexivity once more in trying to connect it to my earlier Hegelian
statement about artworks being a candidate for understanding ourselves.
The notion of reexivity would be misguided if art would be understood
as a practice that lets us understand something that we already knew as
participants of a historical way of life and that could be expressed oth-
erwise. This notion has been proven wrong regarding the reconstructed
logic of our understanding of works of art. Even if works of art illustrate,
they never do so exclusively, since they also change the thing they illus-
trate in their own way. Instead of understanding reexion as a theoretical
activity, that could be reconstructed in representational terms, we should
rather understand it as a practical activity, that changes our understandings,
our ways of seeing, hearing and behaving, our ways of narrating aspects of
our lives and so on. This changes include quite dierent dimensions, like
dimensions of habitualization or dimensions of normative revaluations of
our ways of thinking, seeing and hearing. Enhancing the Hegelian concept
of art, Heideggers example of the Greek temple as a work of art exam-
ines the role this temple plays for a dynamic world-disclosure of historical
subjects: But men and animals, plants and things, are never present and
familiar as unalterable things fortuitously constituting a suitable environ-
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Daniel Martin Feige Art as Reexive Practice
ment for the temple that, one day, is added to what is already present.
[...] Standing there, the temple rst gives to things their look, and to men
their outlook on themselves.
33
In following the themes and presentations
an artwork develops the recipients understandings undergo a transforma-
tion, because he has to adjust his ways of seeing, thinking etc. to the ways
of seeing, thinking etc., the artwork demands. A subject who arranges his
life in contact with certain types of artworks will thus establish new modes
of seeing, hearing, thinking, acting, and so on.
In pointing out this possibility of art, we can say that art has to be
understood as situated at the basics of a given historical culture. What
comes into focus here is art being a practice that is constitutive for our
way of life.
References
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New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1958.
Beardsley, Monroe C., An Aesthetic Denition of Art. In What is Art?,
edited by Hugh Curtler, 15-29. New York: Haven Publications, 1983.
Bertram, Georg W.,