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Violence in art

Depictions of violence in high culture art and in popular culture, such as cinema and theater, have been the subject of considerable controversy and debate for centuries. In Western art, graphic depictions of the Passion of Christ have long been portrayed, as have a wide range of depictions of warfare by later painters and graphic artists. Theater and, in modern times, cinema have often featured battles and violent crimes. Similarly, images and descriptions of violence have historically been significant features in literature. Margaret Bruder, a film studies professor at Indiana University, states that the aestheticization of violence in film is the depiction of violence in a "stylistically excessive", "significant and sustained way". Aestheticized violence differs from gratuitous violence in that it is used as a stylistic element, and through the "play of images and signs" references artworks, genre conventions, cultural symbols, or concepts.[1]

Laocoön and His Sons is one of the most famous of ancient sculptures. It shows Trojan priest Laocoön and his sons Antiphantes and Thymbraeus being attacked by sea serpents.

History in art edit

Antiquity edit

 
Rape of Persephone. Hades with his horses and Persephone (down). An Apulian red-figure volute krater, c. 340 BC. Antikensammlung Berlin

Plato proposed to ban poets from his ideal republic because he feared that their aesthetic ability to construct attractive narratives about immoral behaviour would corrupt young minds. Plato's writings refer to poetry as a kind of rhetoric, whose "...influence is pervasive and often harmful". Plato believed that poetry that was "unregulated by philosophy is a danger to soul and community". He warned that tragic poetry can produce "a disordered psychic regime or constitution" by inducing "a dream-like, uncritical state in which we lose ourselves in ...sorrow, grief, anger, [and] resentment". As such, Plato was in effect arguing that "What goes on in the theater, in your home, in your fantasy life, are connected" to what one does in real life.[2]

15th century to 17th century edit

 
Perseus with the Head of Medusa, in the Loggia dei Lanzi, Florence

Politics of House of Medici and Florence dominate art depicted in Piazza della Signoria, making references to first three Florentine dukes. Besides aesthetical depiction of violence these sculptures are noted for weaving through a political narrative.[3]

The artist Hieronymus Bosch, from the 15th and 16th centuries, used images of demons, half-human animals and machines to evoke fear and confusion to portray the evil of man. The 16th-century artist Pieter Brueghel the Elder depicted "...the nightmarish imagery that reflect, if in an extreme fashion, popular dread of the Apocalypse and Hell".[4]

18th century onwards edit

In the mid-18th century, Giovanni Battista Piranesi, an Italian etcher, archaeologist, and architect active from 1740, did imaginary etchings of prisons that depicted people "stretched on racks or trapped like rats in maze-like dungeons", an "aestheticization of violence and suffering".[5]

In 1849, as revolutions raged in European streets and authorities were putting down protests and consolidating state powers, composer Richard Wagner wrote: "I have an enormous desire to practice a little artistic terrorism."[6]

Laurent Tailhade is reputed to have stated, after Auguste Vaillant bombed the Chamber of Deputies in 1893: "Qu'importent les victimes, si le geste est beau? [What do the victims matter, so long as the gesture is beautiful]?" In 1929 André Breton's Second Manifesto on surrealist art stated that "L'acte surréaliste le plus simple consiste, revolvers aux poings, à descendre dans la rue et à tirer au hasard, tant qu'on peut, dans la foule" [The simplest Surrealist act consists of running down into the street, pistols in hand, and firing blindly, as fast as you can pull the trigger, into the crowd]."[6]

In high culture edit

High culture forms such as fine art and literature have aestheticized violence into a form of autonomous art. This concept of an aesthetic element of murder has a long history; in the 19th century, Thomas de Quincey wrote,

Everything in this world has two handles. Murder, for instance, may be laid hold of by its moral handle... and that, I confess, is its weak side; or it may also be treated aesthetically, as the Germans call it—that is, in relation to good taste.[7]

In his 1991 study of romantic literature, University of Georgia literature professor Joel Black stated that "(if) any human act evokes the aesthetic experience of the sublime, certainly it is the act of murder". Black notes that "...if murder can be experienced aesthetically, the murderer can in turn be regarded as a kind of artist—a performance artist or anti-artist whose specialty is not creation but destruction."[8]

In films edit

Film critics analyzing violent film images that seek to aesthetically please the viewer mainly fall into two categories. Critics who see depictions of violence in film as superficial and exploitative argue that such films lead audience members to become desensitized to brutality, thus increasing their aggression. On the other hand, critics who view violence as a type of content, or as a theme, claim it is cathartic and provides "acceptable outlets for anti-social impulses".[1] Adrian Martin describes the stance of such critics as emphasizing the separation between violence in film and real violence. To these critics, "movie violence is fun, spectacle, make-believe; it's dramatic metaphor, or a necessary catharsis akin to that provided by Jacobean theatre; it's generic, pure sensation, pure fantasy. It has its own changing history, its codes, its precise aesthetic uses."[9]

Margaret Bruder, a film studies professor at Indiana University and the author of Aestheticizing Violence, or How to Do Things with Style, proposes that there is a distinction between aestheticized violence and the use of gore and blood in mass market action or war films. She argues that "aestheticized violence is not merely the excessive use of violence in a film". Movies such as the popular action film Die Hard 2 are very violent, but they do not qualify as examples of aestheticized violence because they are not "stylistically excessive in a significant and sustained way".[1] Bruder argues that films such as such as Hard Target, True Romance and Tombstone employ aestheticized violence as a stylistic tool. In such films, "the stylized violence they contain ultimately serves as (...) another interruption in the narrative drive".[1]

A Clockwork Orange is a 1971 film written, directed, and produced by Stanley Kubrick and based on the novel of the same name by Anthony Burgess. Set in a futuristic England (circa 1995, as imagined in 1965), it follows the life of a teenage gang leader named Alex. In Alexander Cohen's analysis of Kubrick's film, he argues that the ultra-violence of the young protagonist, Alex, "...represents the breakdown of culture itself". In the film, gang members are "...[s]eeking idle de-contextualized violence as entertainment" as an escape from the emptiness of their dystopian society. When the protagonist murders a woman in her home, Cohen states that Kubrick presents a "[s]cene of aestheticized death" by setting the murder in a room filled with "...modern art which depict scenes of sexual intensity and bondage"; as such, the scene depicts a "...struggle between high-culture which has aestheticized violence and sex into a form of autonomous art, and the very image of post-modern mastery".[10]

Writing in The New York Times, Dwight Garner reviews the controversy and moral panic surrounding the 1991 novel and 2000 film American Psycho. Garner concludes that the film was a "coal-black satire" in which "dire comedy mixes with Grand Guignol. There's demented opera in some of its scenes." The book, meanwhile, has acquired "grudging respect" and has been compared to Anthony Burgess's A Clockwork Orange.[11] Garner claims that the novel's author, Bret Easton Ellis, has contributed to the aestheticization of violence in popular media: "The culture has shifted to make room for [Patrick] Bateman. We've developed a taste for barbaric libertines with twinkling eyes and some zing in their tortured souls. Tony Soprano, Walter White from "Breaking Bad", Hannibal Lecter (who predates "American Psycho")—here are the most significant pop culture characters of the past 30 years... Thanks to these characters, and to first-person shooter video games, we've learned to identify with the bearer of violence and not just cower before him or her."

In Xavier Morales' review of Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill: Volume 1, he calls the film "a groundbreaking aestheticization of violence".[12] Morales argues that, similarly to A Clockwork Orange, the film's use of aestheticized violence appeals to audiences as an aesthetic element, and thus subverts preconceptions of what is acceptable or entertaining.[12]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Bruder, Margaret Ervin (1998). . Film Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington IN. Archived from the original on 2004-09-08. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
  2. ^ Griswold, Charles (2003-12-22). "Plato on Rhetoric and Poetry". In Edward N. Zalta (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2004 ed.). Stanford, CA: The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University. ISSN 1095-5054. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
  3. ^ Mandel, C. "Perseus and the Medici." Storia Dell'Arte no. 87 (1996): 168
  4. ^ Alsford, Stephen (2004-02-29). "Death – Introductory essay". Florilegium Urbanum. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
  5. ^ "db artmag". Deutsche Bank Art. 2005. Archived from the original on 2013-01-21. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
  6. ^ a b Dworkin, Craig (2006-01-17). (PDF). Salt Lake City, UT: Department of English, University of Utah. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-26. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
  7. ^ de Quincey, Thomas (1827). On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts (Zipped PDF download). ISBN 1-84749-133-2. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
  8. ^ Black, Joel (1991). The Aesthetics of Murder: A Study in Romantic Literature and Contemporary Culture. ISBN 0801841801. Retrieved 2019-07-05.
  9. ^ Martin, Adrian (2000). . Senses of Cinema (8). ISSN 1443-4059. Archived from the original (Archive) on 2007-05-19. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
  10. ^ Cohen, Alexander J. (1998). . UC Berkeley Program in Film Studies. Archived from the original on 2007-05-15. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
  11. ^ Garner, Dwight (2016-03-24). "In Hindsight, an 'American Psycho' Looks a Lot Like Us". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-03-25.
  12. ^ a b Morales, Xavier (2003-10-16). . The Record. Harvard Law School RECORD Corporation. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-06-08.

Further reading edit

  • Berkowitz, L. (ed) (1977; 1986): Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, Vols 10 & 19. New York: Academic Press
  • Bersani, Leo and Ulysse Dutoit, The Forms of Violence: Narrative in Assyrian Art and Modern Culture (NY: Schocken Books, 1985)
  • Black, Joel (1991) The Aesthetics of Murder. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Feshbach, S. (1955): The Drive-Reducing Function of Fantasy Behaviour, Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 50: 3–11
  • Feshbach, S & Singer, R. D. (1971): Television and Aggression: An Experimental Field Study. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
  • Kelly, George. (1955) The Psychology of Personal Constructs. Vol. I, II. Norton, New York. (2nd printing: 1991, Routledge, London, New York)
  • Peirce, Charles Sanders (1931–58): Collected Writings. (Edited by Charles Hartshorne, Paul Weiss, & Arthur W Burks). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

violence, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inlin. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style June 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations Please help summarize the quotations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or excerpts to Wikisource July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Depictions of violence in high culture art and in popular culture such as cinema and theater have been the subject of considerable controversy and debate for centuries In Western art graphic depictions of the Passion of Christ have long been portrayed as have a wide range of depictions of warfare by later painters and graphic artists Theater and in modern times cinema have often featured battles and violent crimes Similarly images and descriptions of violence have historically been significant features in literature Margaret Bruder a film studies professor at Indiana University states that the aestheticization of violence in film is the depiction of violence in a stylistically excessive significant and sustained way Aestheticized violence differs from gratuitous violence in that it is used as a stylistic element and through the play of images and signs references artworks genre conventions cultural symbols or concepts 1 Laocoon and His Sons is one of the most famous of ancient sculptures It shows Trojan priest Laocoon and his sons Antiphantes and Thymbraeus being attacked by sea serpents Contents 1 History in art 1 1 Antiquity 1 2 15th century to 17th century 1 3 18th century onwards 2 In high culture 3 In films 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingHistory in art editAntiquity edit nbsp Rape of Persephone Hades with his horses and Persephone down An Apulian red figure volute krater c 340 BC Antikensammlung Berlin This section may contain information not important or relevant to the article s subject Please help improve this section July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Plato proposed to ban poets from his ideal republic because he feared that their aesthetic ability to construct attractive narratives about immoral behaviour would corrupt young minds Plato s writings refer to poetry as a kind of rhetoric whose influence is pervasive and often harmful Plato believed that poetry that was unregulated by philosophy is a danger to soul and community He warned that tragic poetry can produce a disordered psychic regime or constitution by inducing a dream like uncritical state in which we lose ourselves in sorrow grief anger and resentment As such Plato was in effect arguing that What goes on in the theater in your home in your fantasy life are connected to what one does in real life 2 15th century to 17th century edit nbsp Perseus with the Head of Medusa in the Loggia dei Lanzi Florence Politics of House of Medici and Florence dominate art depicted in Piazza della Signoria making references to first three Florentine dukes Besides aesthetical depiction of violence these sculptures are noted for weaving through a political narrative 3 The artist Hieronymus Bosch from the 15th and 16th centuries used images of demons half human animals and machines to evoke fear and confusion to portray the evil of man The 16th century artist Pieter Brueghel the Elder depicted the nightmarish imagery that reflect if in an extreme fashion popular dread of the Apocalypse and Hell 4 18th century onwards edit In the mid 18th century Giovanni Battista Piranesi an Italian etcher archaeologist and architect active from 1740 did imaginary etchings of prisons that depicted people stretched on racks or trapped like rats in maze like dungeons an aestheticization of violence and suffering 5 In 1849 as revolutions raged in European streets and authorities were putting down protests and consolidating state powers composer Richard Wagner wrote I have an enormous desire to practice a little artistic terrorism 6 Laurent Tailhade is reputed to have stated after Auguste Vaillant bombed the Chamber of Deputies in 1893 Qu importent les victimes si le geste est beau What do the victims matter so long as the gesture is beautiful In 1929 Andre Breton s Second Manifesto on surrealist art stated that L acte surrealiste le plus simple consiste revolvers aux poings a descendre dans la rue et a tirer au hasard tant qu on peut dans la foule The simplest Surrealist act consists of running down into the street pistols in hand and firing blindly as fast as you can pull the trigger into the crowd 6 In high culture editHigh culture forms such as fine art and literature have aestheticized violence into a form of autonomous art This concept of an aesthetic element of murder has a long history in the 19th century Thomas de Quincey wrote Everything in this world has two handles Murder for instance may be laid hold of by its moral handle and that I confess is its weak side or it may also be treated aesthetically as the Germans call it that is in relation to good taste 7 In his 1991 study of romantic literature University of Georgia literature professor Joel Black stated that if any human act evokes the aesthetic experience of the sublime certainly it is the act of murder Black notes that if murder can be experienced aesthetically the murderer can in turn be regarded as a kind of artist a performance artist or anti artist whose specialty is not creation but destruction 8 In films editFilm critics analyzing violent film images that seek to aesthetically please the viewer mainly fall into two categories Critics who see depictions of violence in film as superficial and exploitative argue that such films lead audience members to become desensitized to brutality thus increasing their aggression On the other hand critics who view violence as a type of content or as a theme claim it is cathartic and provides acceptable outlets for anti social impulses 1 Adrian Martin describes the stance of such critics as emphasizing the separation between violence in film and real violence To these critics movie violence is fun spectacle make believe it s dramatic metaphor or a necessary catharsis akin to that provided by Jacobean theatre it s generic pure sensation pure fantasy It has its own changing history its codes its precise aesthetic uses 9 Margaret Bruder a film studies professor at Indiana University and the author of Aestheticizing Violence or How to Do Things with Style proposes that there is a distinction between aestheticized violence and the use of gore and blood in mass market action or war films She argues that aestheticized violence is not merely the excessive use of violence in a film Movies such as the popular action film Die Hard 2 are very violent but they do not qualify as examples of aestheticized violence because they are not stylistically excessive in a significant and sustained way 1 Bruder argues that films such as such as Hard Target True Romance and Tombstone employ aestheticized violence as a stylistic tool In such films the stylized violence they contain ultimately serves as another interruption in the narrative drive 1 A Clockwork Orange is a 1971 film written directed and produced by Stanley Kubrick and based on the novel of the same name by Anthony Burgess Set in a futuristic England circa 1995 as imagined in 1965 it follows the life of a teenage gang leader named Alex In Alexander Cohen s analysis of Kubrick s film he argues that the ultra violence of the young protagonist Alex represents the breakdown of culture itself In the film gang members are s eeking idle de contextualized violence as entertainment as an escape from the emptiness of their dystopian society When the protagonist murders a woman in her home Cohen states that Kubrick presents a s cene of aestheticized death by setting the murder in a room filled with modern art which depict scenes of sexual intensity and bondage as such the scene depicts a struggle between high culture which has aestheticized violence and sex into a form of autonomous art and the very image of post modern mastery 10 Writing in The New York Times Dwight Garner reviews the controversy and moral panic surrounding the 1991 novel and 2000 film American Psycho Garner concludes that the film was a coal black satire in which dire comedy mixes with Grand Guignol There s demented opera in some of its scenes The book meanwhile has acquired grudging respect and has been compared to Anthony Burgess s A Clockwork Orange 11 Garner claims that the novel s author Bret Easton Ellis has contributed to the aestheticization of violence in popular media The culture has shifted to make room for Patrick Bateman We ve developed a taste for barbaric libertines with twinkling eyes and some zing in their tortured souls Tony Soprano Walter White from Breaking Bad Hannibal Lecter who predates American Psycho here are the most significant pop culture characters of the past 30 years Thanks to these characters and to first person shooter video games we ve learned to identify with the bearer of violence and not just cower before him or her In Xavier Morales review of Quentin Tarantino s Kill Bill Volume 1 he calls the film a groundbreaking aestheticization of violence 12 Morales argues that similarly to A Clockwork Orange the film s use of aestheticized violence appeals to audiences as an aesthetic element and thus subverts preconceptions of what is acceptable or entertaining 12 See also editAbjection Aestheticization of politics Anti hero Art of murder Gladiator Graphic violence Moral panic Violence and video gamesReferences edit a b c d Bruder Margaret Ervin 1998 Aestheticizing Violence or How To Do Things with Style Film Studies Indiana University Bloomington IN Archived from the original on 2004 09 08 Retrieved 2007 06 08 Griswold Charles 2003 12 22 Plato on Rhetoric and Poetry In Edward N Zalta ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2004 ed Stanford CA The Metaphysics Research Lab Center for the Study of Language and Information Stanford University ISSN 1095 5054 Retrieved 2007 06 08 Mandel C Perseus and the Medici Storia Dell Arte no 87 1996 168 Alsford Stephen 2004 02 29 Death Introductory essay Florilegium Urbanum Retrieved 2007 06 08 db artmag Deutsche Bank Art 2005 Archived from the original on 2013 01 21 Retrieved 2007 06 08 a b Dworkin Craig 2006 01 17 Trotsky s Hammer PDF Salt Lake City UT Department of English University of Utah Archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 26 Retrieved 2007 06 08 de Quincey Thomas 1827 On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts Zipped PDF download ISBN 1 84749 133 2 Retrieved 2007 06 08 Black Joel 1991 The Aesthetics of Murder A Study in Romantic Literature and Contemporary Culture ISBN 0801841801 Retrieved 2019 07 05 Martin Adrian 2000 The Offended Critic Film Reviewing and Social Commentary Senses of Cinema 8 ISSN 1443 4059 Archived from the original Archive on 2007 05 19 Retrieved 2007 06 08 Cohen Alexander J 1998 Clockwork Orange and the Aestheticization of Violence UC Berkeley Program in Film Studies Archived from the original on 2007 05 15 Retrieved 2007 06 08 Garner Dwight 2016 03 24 In Hindsight an American Psycho Looks a Lot Like Us The New York Times Retrieved 2016 03 25 a b Morales Xavier 2003 10 16 Beauty and violence The Record Harvard Law School RECORD Corporation Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 06 08 Further reading editBerkowitz L ed 1977 1986 Advances in Experimental Social Psychology Vols 10 amp 19 New York Academic Press Bersani Leo and Ulysse Dutoit The Forms of Violence Narrative in Assyrian Art and Modern Culture NY Schocken Books 1985 Black Joel 1991 The Aesthetics of Murder Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press Feshbach S 1955 The Drive Reducing Function of Fantasy Behaviour Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 50 3 11 Feshbach S amp Singer R D 1971 Television and Aggression An Experimental Field Study San Francisco Jossey Bass Kelly George 1955 The Psychology of Personal Constructs Vol I II Norton New York 2nd printing 1991 Routledge London New York Peirce Charles Sanders 1931 58 Collected Writings Edited by Charles Hartshorne Paul Weiss amp Arthur W Burks Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Violence in art amp oldid 1219486872 In films, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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