https://www.blurb.co.uk/b/11320118-utopias-11
Ideas of Nature
Travalgen, 1951 Peter Lanyon |
West Penwith, 1949 Peter Lanyon |
Corliss steam engine exhibited in 1876. From Scientific American |
The belief that the future would be different from the past also emerged from the industrial revolution. The idea that ways of working could change without there being an end-point prepared society to understand Darwin's theory of natural selection in 1859. Modern art also started within the new paradigm. The 1863 Salon des Refusés exhibition in Paris subverted the rigid aesthetics of of the Académie des Beaux-Arts by showing paintings rejected by their official annual exhibition, unleashing continual artistic change.
Art and science followed parallel paths in the renaissance when the evolution of perspectival drawing advanced with the development of optics, but there was a gradual divergence over the following centuries. Initially, modern art seemed to promise a renewed relationship with science, with some similarity of methods and interests. Several impressionist artists explored the perception of colour, overlapping with scientists' investigations of light. Art historians have seen links between Einstein's theory of relativity and cubist painting. (1) Art 'movements' such as futurism and surrealism were accompanied by manifestos, prompting expressions of loyalty or scepticism similar to the reactions of scientists to today's cosmological 'M-theories' such as; string theory, 'Brane theory and supersymmetry
Paths of subatomic particles revealed in a bubble chamber. Created by collisions after acceleration by high-voltage electricity, their paths are constrained by intense magnetic fields. |
Physics stretched the definition of nature in way that could not be depicted in landscape art. The science journal Nature that started in 1869 was concerned mostly with physics. Norman Lockyer, the first editor of the journal, had previously used spectroscopy to co-discover the gas helium in the sun 27 years before it was known on Earth. In a letter to Lockyer, James Joseph enthused about the title of the new publication: “What a glorious title, Nature - a veritable stroke of genius to have hit upon. It is more than Cosmos, more than Universe. It includes the seen as well as the unseen, the possible as well as the actual. Nature and Nature’s God, mind and matter.." (2) As a mathematician, Joseph knew that nature is more than a landscape. The word 'naturalist' became restricted to those who study animals and plants and became subtly different from 'scientist'.
Kathmandu, Nepal. Surveyed by an ESA satellite, depicted in false-colour infra-red. |
Attempts at reconciling science and art have always been problematic. The issue is not only one of a separation of concerns but also difference of vision. Evolution has provided us with senses that are just good enough for survival. Science has extended our ability to see further into the electromagnetic spectrum; infra-red, x-rays, radio waves as well as forming images with electrons, but crucially it is through our own senses that we live. It is this aspect of existence that art celebrates. The uncanny images of nature made by technology can be as unfamiliar as abstract art, which itself has always been on a path away from a simplistic depiction of nature.
Holger Cahill lamented the move away from figurative art in his introduction to the catalogue New Horizons in American Art (3) to the 1936 exhibition of work done under the Federal Art Project of the Works Progress Administration: "Nature was no longer a harmony to be studied. It became something that furnished occasions for the exercise of a technique...Art in other words, had its own harmony, independent of nature. This idea was carried to its final term by the Cubists who declared that art need have no frame of reference in nature at all." Cahill did not claim that landscape art had ever been about 'realistic' observation but he wrote that before modern art "Nature had been had been conceived as a principle underlying the forms and phenomena of the visual world, drawing them into a harmonious and purposive whole, benevolent and somehow friendly to man's interests and ideals." (3)
Golden, Colorado by Eugene Trentham. The picture was reproduced in black and white in New Horizons in American Art. The book posits a style of 'folk art' as an alternative to 'European' abstract art. |
Because of the symbolic or allegorical tendency within landscape pictures, combined with selectivity favouring scenes that are beautiful, picturesque or sublime, landscape art reflects more a state of mind than reality. The values inherent in landscape art were eloquently expressed by Henry David Thoreau in his 1854 book Waldron - or Life in the Woods.
Thoreau wrote about self-reliance and living in close harmony with nature. He was critical of industrial 'progress'. For a period of time he chose to live in a hut at Waldron Pond near Concord in Massachusetts, so as to be as close as possible to the flora and fauna of the woods. His observations about the seasonal changes of plants and trees are of interest to climate-change scientists today. For Thoreau, Waldron Pond functioned as a microcosm, a miniature version of an ideal but beleaguered world in which industry and intensive farming were kept at bay.
The Weather Project by Olafur Eliasson in the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern in 2003. A representation of the visible surface of our sun created by 200 sodium lights. If the generation of electricity by thermonuclear power is ever achieved it will be in a machine placed in a facility that would be very similar to the Turbine Hall at the Tate. The device will effectively be an artificial sun created by technology. The building occupied by Tate Modern originally contained the Bankside power station and was designed by Sir Gilbert Scott. At the peak of its output Bankside power station used 67 tons of fuel-oil per hour to generate 300 MW of electricity. Thermonuclear fusion generates approximately one million times as much energy as chemical combustion. Sunlight produced by thermonuclear fusion in our sun is the source of energy for all life on Earth. Sir Gilbert Scott was also the architect for Liverpool Anglican Cathedral. |
1) Laporte, Paul M. "Cubism and Science." The Journal of aesthetics and art criticism, 1949, Vol.7 (3), p.243-256
(2) https://www.nature.com/nature/history-of-nature
(3) Cahill, H, and Federal Art Project. New Horizons in American Art. New York: Published for the M.O M.A. reprinted by Arno, 1969.
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https://www.blurb.co.uk/b/11320118-utopias-11