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 To what degree does contextual knowledge (of the life, times, intentions, 
          conditions, formal and technical processes, character etc) of the artist 
          really deepen, or even distort, our appreciation of the actual art form 
          itself?
 Does our knowledge of the author of an artwork and its historical context 
          affect our judgment of its virtues? Should a work of art essentially 
          speak for itself and suggest its own significance to a reader, viewer 
          or listener without needing a supporting commentary to unravel its meaning? 
          If this is the case does it assume that art can only be fully appreciated 
          by the initiated or those who are previously informed with background 
          information.
 D.H.Lawrence reckoned that relevant background context was of the utmost 
          necessity to appreciating his work. In the Preface to his Collected 
          Poems Lawrence wrote:
 Even the best poetry, when it is at all personal, needs the penumbra 
          of its own time and place and circumstance to make it full and whole. 
          If we knew a little more of Shakespeare's self and circumstance, how 
          much more complete the Sonnets would be to us, how their strange, torn 
          edges would be softened and merged into a whole body! (taken 
          from the article 'In My View' by Bernard Richards in The Sunday Times, 
          May 1989)
 Factors influencing our reaction to pictures (or other works of art) 
          context,anecdote,personal feelings and mood,the environment in which 
          the work is placed or listened to, knowledge or ignorance of allusions, 
          history, the placing of a work, the effect the lifestyle of an artist 
          may have on us (ie Wagner's anti-Semitism). It is strange how people 
          change their reaction to a piece of music or a drawing if they are told 
          midway that it is a composition by the 8 year old Mozart, 12 year-old 
          Rossini, the 14 year-old Durer, the deaf Beethoven. Would we adjust 
          our opinions of the paintings of Churchill and Hitler if we were only 
          later made aware of their authorship? Personal symbolism can be employed 
          in pictures which may be lost in the fullness of time (ie portraiture, 
          locations and objects only familiar to the artist who made the picture 
          and perhaps to his cronies and family, or scholar etc.). Does awareness 
          of symbolic allusions really help or sharpen our understanding?
 The Intention of the Artist
 
 How important is it to understand the underlying intentions on the part 
          of the creator?
 
 Fakes and Forgeries If we are told that a painting 
          that we had previously derived much pleasure from was a fake, does our 
          response to it change? Do we no longer accept it as the painting we 
          once loved merely because it has been ascribed to someone else? Do we 
          modify our feelings about it because we feel we have been cheated about 
          its authorship? While the painting itself remains physically exactly 
          the same, can our minds really be affected by such things as authenticity?Is 
          it the change of value in money terms that we are really worried about? 
          What happens to our feelings about a hitherto ascribed fake painting 
          suddenly being found by scholars to be genuine after all?
 The personal value of photographs in family albums rests more with the 
          delight in knowing that the people in them are your very own ancestors 
          rather than the quality of the photographic image itself. If it were 
          possible to see authenticated photographs of life on earth hundreds 
          of years ago we would probably be fascinated by the content of the image 
          more than its quality.
 Part of the meaning in narrative illustration is implied in its connecting 
          text. Are the titles and narrative backgrounds to the stories of some 
          of the Old Masters essential to our better appreciation?
 
 Should the image speak for itself?
 In the main the viewer reading the forms in a picture should be able 
          to follow the underlying intentions of the image's creator without recourse 
          to possessing an instruction kit. This is not to say that an image is 
          stuck with only one expected interpretation. Most images offer wide 
          interpretation and appreciation by viewers on many levels, some of which 
          might never have been consciously considered by the artist. (consider 
          the degree to which an image may have wide interpretation).
 
 Appreciation and Understanding
 Surely we are able to appreciate things without understanding them. 
          You don't have to be an entomologist to appreciate the wings of a butterfly, 
          nor a botanist to appreciate the petals of a flower. Making a connection 
          with a work of art is perhaps a form of understanding it.
 To appreciate something is different to understanding it; the one is 
          valuing and feeling grateful for its existence through a recognition 
          of its qualities; the other is the comprehending the nature and meaning 
          underlying it. We may be able to value and feel grateful for an image's 
          existence by certain qualities it may possess, without necessarily entirely 
          comprehending its nature, meaning or intended significance.
 Appreciating something without properly understanding its form, or how 
          and when it is was made, does not surely mean that one is appreciating 
          the artifact at a lower level than those who understand it more. We 
          may appreciate 'Old Masters'' paintings without actually knowing that 
          some of their compositions may have been based on geometrical grid structures 
          using 'golden section' intervals or other proportional divisions. We 
          may appreciate a Seurat painting without being aware of his systematic 
          use of scientific colour theory.
 Some of the symbols employed by artists may allude us as to their meaning. 
          We are able to appreciate a landscape without a knowledge of its topographical 
          location or if it is indeed a specific place at all. Identification 
          of actual personages in pictorial matter is unimportant to us when it 
          comes to our appreciation of a portrait. A knowledge of history, artistic 
          theories and manifesto may deepen our appreciation of the underlying 
          context, content and artist's intention but doesn't the 'art' really 
          speak for its self ultimately. Do we really need to absorb the catalogue 
          text of an exhibition or read the programme notes prior to attending 
          a concert to reach towards ultimate or quintessential appreciation? 
          Do we really need to know about or be aware of key signatures, beats 
          in the bar, counterpoint, fugue form, or the fact that J.S.Bach introduced 
          the musical letters of his own surname (B A C H = B flat, A, C, B natural) 
          as a counter subject in the last fugue, in order to gain full appreciation 
          when we are listening to his Art of Fugue? How important is it for us 
          to know that it was written in 1749 as Bach's last composition, written 
          in his mid sixties and left unfinished at his death? In other words 
          do we need to be a botanist to be able to fully appreciate the beauty 
          of a rose? Is our delight in a landscape impoverished if we are ignorant 
          of geography, geology, botany and topography?
 
          Picasso has written -
 'Everyone wants to understand art. Why not try to understand the song 
            of a bird? Why does one love the night, flowers, everything around 
            one, without trying to understand them? But in the case of painting 
            people have to understand... .People who try to explain pictures are 
            usually barking up the wrong tree.'
 Pablo Picasso, Artists on Art ,edited by Robert Goldwater 
            and Marco Treves (see p.53 in The Macmillan Treasury of Relevant Quotations 
            )
   JOHN VERNON LORD |