III
ESTERDAY I tried to show how the anthroposophical world-conception
stresses, more intensively than is possible under the influence of
materialism, the artistic element; and how Anthroposophy feels about
architecture, about the art of costuming (though this may call forth
smiles), and about sculpture as dealing artistically with the form of
man himself, whose head, in a certain sense, points to the whole human
being.
Let us
review the most important aspects of this threefold artistic perception
of the world. In architectural forms we see what the human soul expects
when it leaves the physical body at death or otherwise. During earth
life the soul is (so I said) accustomed to enter into spatial relations
with its environment through the physical body, and to experience spatial
forms. But these are only outer forms. When at death the human soul
leaves the physical world, it tries, as it were, to impress its own
form on space; looks for the lines, planes and forms which can enable
it to grow out of space and into the spiritual world. These are the
forms of architecture insofar as they are artistic. Thus, if we would
understand architecture's artistic element we must consider the soul's
space-needs after it has left the three-dimensional body and
three-dimensional world.
The artistic
element in costuming represents something else; and I have described
the joy of primitive people in their garments, and their sense —
on dipping down into the physical body — of finding in it a sheath
which did not harmonize with what they had experienced during their
sojourn in the spiritual world; and how out of this deprivation there
arose an instinctive longing to create clothes which in color and pattern
corresponded to their memory of pre-earthly existence. The costumes
of primitive peoples represent what might be called an unskillful copying
of the astral nature of man as it existed before he entered earthly
life.
Thus a
contrast. Whereas architecture shows the human soul's striving on its
departure from the body, the art of costuming shows the human soul's
striving after descent into the physical world.
Which
brings us to a consideration of sculpture.
If we
feel, intimately, the significance of the formation of man's head (my
last point yesterday) as a metamorphosis of his entire body formation
minus head, during his previous incarnation; if we see it as the work
of the higher hierarchies on the force relationship of a previous life,
then we understand the head, especially its upper part. If, on the other
hand, we see correctly the middle of man's head, his nose and lower
eyes, then we understand how this part is adapted to his chest formation,
for the nose is connected with the chest's breathing. And if we see
correctly the lower head, mouth and chin, then we understand that, even
in the head, there is a part adapted to the purely earthly. In this
way we can understand the whole human form. Furthermore, the super-sensible
human being manifests himself directly in the arching of the upper skull,
and the protrusion or recession of the lower skull, the facial parts.
For an intimate connection exists between the vaulting of the head and
the heavens; also an inner connection between the middle of the face and
everything circling the earth as air and ether; also between mouth and chin
and man's limb and metabolic system, the last an indication of how man
is fettered to earth. In this way we can understand the whole human
form as an imprint of the spiritual on the immediate present; which
means seeing man artistically.
To sum up: in sculpture
we behold, spiritually, the human being as he is placed into the present;
in architecture we behold something connected with his departure from the
body; and in the art of costuming something connected with his entrance
into that body. Which means a sharp contrast: whereas architecture begins
with the erection of tombs, sculpture shows how man, through his earthly
form's direct participation in the spiritual, constantly overcomes the
earthly-naturalistic element, how, in every detail of his form and in its
entirety, he is an expression of the spiritual.
Thus we
have considered those arts which are concerned with spatial forms and
which illustrate the different ways in which the human soul is related
to the world through the physical body.
If we
approach a step nearer the spaceless, we pass from sculpture to painting,
an art experienced in the right way only if we take into full account
its special medium.
Today, in the fifth
post-Atlantean age, painting has assumed a character leading to naturalism.
Its prime manifestation is the loss of a deeper understanding for color.
The intelligence employed in contemporary painting is a falsified
sculptural one. Painters see even human beings this way. The cause is
space-perspective, an aspect of painting developed only after the fifth
post-Atlantean period. Painters express through lines the fact that
something lies in the background, something in the foreground; their
purpose being to conjure up on canvas an impression of spatially formed
objects. But in doing so they deny the first and foremost attribute
of their special medium. A true painter does not create in space, but
on the plane, in color, and it is nonsense for him to strive for the
spatial.
Please,
do not believe me so fantastic as to object to a feeling for space;
in the evolution of mankind the development of spatial perspective on
the plane was a necessity; that fact is self-evident. But it must now
be overcome. This does not mean that in the future painters should be
blind to spatial perspective, only that, while understanding it, they
should return to color-perspective, employ color-perspective.
To accomplish
this we must go beyond theoretic comprehension; the artistic impulse
does not spring from theory; it requires something more forceful, something
elemental. Fortunately it can be provided. For that purpose I suggest
that you look again at some words of mine about the world of color as
reported excellently by Albert Steffen in the weekly
Das Goetheanum.
[ 1 ]
(The report reads better than the original lectures.) This is the first
aspect.
I shall
now deal with the second problem.
In nature
we see objects which can be counted, weighed and measured; in short,
objects dealt with in physics. They appear in various colors. Color,
however — this should have become perfectly clear to anthroposophists
— color is something spiritual. Now we do see colors in certain
natural entities which are not spiritual; that is, in minerals. Recent
physicists have made matters easier for themselves by saying that colors
cannot inhere in dead substances because colors are mental; they exist
within the mind only; outside, material atoms vibrating in dead matter
affect eye, nerve, and something else undetermined; as a result of which
colors arise in the soul.
This explanation
shows physicists at a loss in regard to the problem of color. To throw
light on it, let us consider from a certain aspect the colorful dead
mineral world.
As pointed
out, we do see colors in purely physical things which can be counted,
measured, weighed on scales. But what is perceived in physics does not
give us colors. We may employ number, measure and weight to our heart's
content: we will not arrive at color. That is why physicists say that
colors exist only in the mind.
I would
like to explain by way of an image. Picture to yourselves that I hold
in my left hand a red sheet, in my right a green one, and that with
these colored sheets I carry out certain movements. First I cover the
red with the green, then the green with the red, making these motions
alternately; and in order to give them more character do something additional:
move the green upward, the red downard. Say I have today carried out
this maneuvre. Now let three weeks pass, at which time I bring before
you not a green and red sheet, but two white sheets, and repeat the
movements. You immediately remember that, contrary to my present use
of white sheets, three weeks ago I produced certain visual impressions
with a red and a green sheet. For politeness' sake let us assume that
all of you have such a vivid imagination that, in spite of my moving
white sheets, you see before you, through recollecting phantasy, the
colored phenomenon of three weeks ago, forget all about the white sheets
and, because I carry out the same motions, see the same color harmonies
called forth, three weeks ago, with the red and green. Because I carry
out the same gestures, by association you see what you saw three weeks
ago.
The case
is similar when we see in nature, for instance, a green precious stone.
Only, the jewel is not dependent on this moment's soul-phantasy; it
appeals to a phantasy concentrated in our eye, for this human eye with
its blood and nerve fibers is in truth constructed by phantasy; it is the
result of an effective imagination. And inasmuch as our eye is an organ
imbued with phantasy, we cannot perceive a green gem in any other way
than that in which, in the immeasurably distant past, it was spiritually
constructed out of the green color of the spiritual world. The moment
we confront a green precious stone, we transport our eye back into ages
long past, and green appears because at that time divine-spiritual beings
created this substance through a purely spiritual green. The moment
we see green, red, blue, yellow, or any other color in a precious stone,
we look back into an infinitely distant past. For (to repeat for emphasis)
in beholding colors, we do not merely perceive what is contemporary,
we look back into distant time-perspectives. Thus it is quite impossible
to see a colored jewel merely in the present, just as it is impossible,
while standing at the foot of a mountain, to see in close proximity the
ruin at its top; being removed from it, we have to see it in
perspective.
In confronting
a topaz, say, we look back into time-perspective; look back upon the
primal foundation of earthly creation, before the Lemurian epoch of
evolution, and see this precious stone created out of the spiritual;
that is why it appears yellow. Physics (I have characterized a recent
stand) does something absurd. It places behind the world swirling atoms
which are supposed to produce colors within us, when all the time it
is divine-spiritual beings, creative in the infinitely distant past,
who call forth, through colored minerals, a living memory of primeval
acts of creativity.
And we
can press on to the plant world.
Every
spring, when a green carpet of plants is spread over the earth, whoever
is able to understand this emergence of greenness sees not merely the
present, but also the ancient Sun existence when the plant world was
created out of the spiritual, in greenness. We see both mineral and
plant colors in the right way when they stimulate us to see in nature
the gods' primeval creative activity.
This requires
an artistic living with color, which involves experiencing the plane
as such. If someone covers the plane with blue, we should sense a retreat,
a drawing back; if with red or yellow, we should feel an approach, a
pressing forward. In other words, we acquire color-perspective instead
of linear perspective: a sense for the plane, for the withdrawal and
surging forward of color. In painting, the linear perspective which
tries to create an impression of something essentially sculptural upon
the plane falsifies; what must be acquired is a sense for the movement
of color: intensive rather than extensive. Thus, if a true painter wishes
to depict something aggressive, something eager to jump forward, he uses
yellow-red; if something quiet, something retreating into the distance,
blue-violet. Intensive color-perspective! A study of the old masters
reveals that some early Renaissance painters still had what belonged
to all pre-Renaissance painters: a feeling for color-perspective. Only
with the advent of the fifth post-Atlantean period did linear perspective
displace color-perspective.
It is
through color-perspective that painting gains a relationship to the
spiritual. Strange that today painters chiefly ask themselves: Can we
by rendering space more spatial transcend space? Then they try to depict,
in a materialistic manner, a fourth dimension. But the fourth dimension
can exist only through annihilation of the third, somewhat as debts
annihilate wealth. For we do not, on leaving three-dimensional space, enter
a four-dimensional space; or, better said, we enter a four-dimensional
space which is two-dimensional, because the fourth dimension annihilates
the third; only two remain as reality. If we rise from matter's three
dimensions to the etheric element, we find everything oriented
two-dimensionally, and can understand the etheric only if we conceive of
it so. Now you may demur: Yes, but in the etheric I move from here to
there, which is to say three-dimensionally. Very well, but the third
dimension has no significance for the etheric, only the other two
dimensions. The third dimension expresses itself through red, yellow,
blue, violet, in the way explained; for in the etheric it is not the third
dimension which changes, but color. Regardless of where the plane is
placed, the colors change accordingly. Only then can we live with and in
color; live two-dimensionally; rise from the spatial arts to those which,
like painting, are two-dimensional. We overcome the merely spatial. Our
feelings have no relation to the three space-dimensions; only our will.
By their very nature, feelings are bound within two dimensions. That is
why they are best represented by two-dimensional painting.
You see,
we have to struggle free from three-dimensional matter if we would advance
from architecture, costuming as an art, and sculpture. Painting is an
art which man can experience inwardly. Whether he creates as a painter
or just lives in and enjoys a painting, it is a soul event. He experiences
inner by outer; experiences color-perspective. We cannot say, as in
the case of architecture, that the soul is striving to create the forms
it needs when it gazes back into the body; nor, as in the case of sculpture,
that the soul is trying to depict man's shape in such a way that it
is placed into space full of present meaning. None of this concerns
painting. It makes no sense in painting to speak of anything as inside
or outside; of the soul as inside or outside. In experiencing color
the soul is within the spiritual. Really, what is experienced in painting
— despite the imperfections of pigments — is the soul's
free moving about in the cosmos.
With music
it is different. Now we do not merge inner with outer, but enter directly
into that which the soul experiences as the spiritual or psycho-spiritual;
leave space entirely. Music is line-like, one-dimensional; is experienced
one-dimensionally in the line of time. In music man experiences the
world as his own. Now the soul does not assert something it needs upon
descending into or leaving the physical; rather it experiences something
which lives and vibrates here and now, on earth, in its own soul-spirit
nature. Studying the secrets of music, we can discover what the Greeks,
who knew a great deal about these matters, meant by the lyre of Apollo.
What is experienced musically is really man's hidden adaptation to the
inner harmonic-melodic relationships of cosmic existence out of which
he was shaped. His nerve fibers, ramifications of the spinal cord, are
marvelous musical strings with a metamorphosed activity. The spinal
cord culminating in the brain, and distributing its nerve fibers throughout
the body, is the lyre of Apollo. Upon these nerve fibers the soul-spirit
man is “played” within the earthly sphere. Thus man himself
is the world's most perfect instrument; and he can experience artistically
the tones of an external musical instrument to the degree that he feels
this connection between the sounding of strings of a new instrument,
for example, and his own coursing blood and nerve fibers. In other words,
man, as nerve man, is inwardly built up of music, and feels it artistically
to the degree that he feels its harmonization with the mystery of his
own musical structure.
Thus,
in devoting himself to the musical, man appeals to his earth-dwelling
soul-spirit nature. The discovery by anthroposophical vision of the
mysteries of this nature will have a fructifying effect, not just on
theory, but upon actual musical creation.
In discussing
the various arts I have not been theorizing. It is not theorizing when
I say: In beholding the lifeless material world in color we stir cosmic
memory: and through anthroposophical vision learn to understand how
in precious stones, in colored objects of all kinds, we call to mind
the creative acts of the primordially active gods; and feel, therefore,
the enthusiasm which only an experience of the spiritual kindles. This
is no theorizing; this permeates the soul with inner force. Nor does
any theory of art emerge therefrom. Only artistic creation and enjoyment
are stimulated. For true art is an expression of man's search for a
relationship with the spiritual, whether the spiritual longed for when
his soul leaves the body, or the spiritual which he desires to remember
when he dips down into a body, or the spiritual to which he feels more
related than to his natural surroundings, or the spiritual as manifested
in colors when outside and inside lose their separateness and the soul
moves through the cosmos, freely, swimming and hovering, as it were,
experiencing its own cosmic life, existing everywhere; or (our last
consideration) the spiritual as expressed in earth life, in the
relationship between man's soul-spirit and the cosmic, in music.
Which
summary brings us to the world of poetry and drama.
Often
in the past I have called attention to the way poetry was felt in ancient
times when man still had a living relationship to the spirit-soul world,
when poetry, including poetic dramas, by reason of that fact, was artistic
through and through. Yesterday I pointed out that in artistic ages it
would not have been considered sensible for playwrights to copy on the
stage the way Smith and Jones move in the market place of Gotham or
at home, inasmuch as their movements and conversation, there, are much
richer than in any stage representation; that it would have seemed absurd,
for instance, to the Greeks of the classical age; they never could have
understood naturalism's strange attempt to imitate nature right down to
“realistic” stage sets. Just as it would not be true painting
if we tried to project color into three-dimensional space instead of
honoring its own dynamics, so it is not stage art if we have no artistic
feeling for its own particular medium. Actually a thorough-going naturalism
would preclude a stage room with three walls and an audience in front
of it. There are no such rooms; in winter we would freeze to death in
them. To act entirely naturalistically one would have to close the stage
with a fourth wall and play behind it. But how many people would buy
tickets to a play enacted on a stage closed on four sides? Though speaking
in extremes, I refer to a reality.
| Diagram 3 Click image for large view | |
Now I
must draw your attention again to the way Homer begins his Iliad:
“Sing, oh Goddess, the wrath of Achilles, Son of Peleus.”
This is no mere phrase. Homer experienced in a positive way the need
to raise himself up to the level of a super-earthly divine-spiritual
being who would make use of his body in artistic creation. Epic poetry
points to the upper gods, those considered female because they transmitted
fructifying forces: the Muses. Homer had to offer himself up to these
upper gods in order to bring to expression, in the events of his great
poem, the thought element of the cosmos. Epic poetry always means letting
the upper gods speak; means putting one's person at their disposal. Homer
begins his Odyssey this way: “Tell me, oh Muse, of that
ingenious hero who wandered afar,” meaning Odysseus. Never would it
have occurred to him to impose upon the people something which he himself
had seen or thought out. Why do what everybody can do for himself? Homer
put his organism at the disposal of the upper divine-spiritual beings
that they might express through him how they perceived earthly human
relationships. Out of such a collaboration arises epic poetry.
And the
art of the drama? It originated — we need only to think of the
period prior to Aeschylus — from a presentation of the god Dionysus
working up out of the depths. At first it was Dionysus alone, then Dionysus
and his helpers, a chorus grouped around him as a reflection of what
is carried out, not by human beings, but by the subterranean gods, gods
of will, making use of human beings to bring to manifestation not the
human but divine will. Only gradually, in Greece, as man's connection
with the spiritual fell into oblivion, did the divine action depicted
on the stage turn into purely human action. The process took place
between the time of Aeschylus, when divine impulses still penetrated
human beings, and the time of Euripides, when men appeared on the stage
as men, though still bearing super-earthly impulses. Real naturalism
became possible only in modern times.
In poetry
and drama man must find his way back to the spiritual.
Thus we
may say in summary: Epic poetry turns to the upper gods, drama to the
lower gods. True drama shows the divine world lying below the earth,
the chthonic world, rising up onto the earth for the reason that man
can make himself into an instrument for the action of this netherworld.
In contrast, epic poetry sees the upper spiritual world sink down; the
Muse descends and, making use of man through his head, proclaims man's
earthly accomplishments or else those out in the universe. In drama
the subterranean will of the gods rises up from the depths, making use
of human bodies in order to give free reign to their wills.
| Diagram 4 Click image for large view | |
One might
say: Here we have the fields of earthly existence: out of the clouds
descends the divine Muse of epic art; out of earthly depths there rise,
like vapor and smoke, the Dionysian, chthonic divine-spiritual powers,
working their way upward through men's wills. We have to penetrate earth
regions to see how the dramatic element rises like a volcano, and the
epic element sinks down from above, like a blessing of rain. And it
is right here on this same plane with ourselves that the cosmic element
is enticed and made gay, joyous, full of laughter, through nymphs and
fire spirits; right here that the messengers of the upper gods cooperate
with the lower: right here in the middle region that man becomes lyrical.
Now man does not feel the dramatic element rising up from below, nor
the epic element sinking down from above; he experiences the lyrical
element living on the same plane as himself: a delicate, sensitive,
spiritual element, which does not rain down upon forests nor erupt like
volcanoes, splitting trees, but, rather, rustles in leaves, expresses
joy through blossoms, wafts gently in wind. In whatever on our own plane
lets us divine the spiritual in matter, stretching hearts, pleasantly
stimulating breath, merging our souls with outer nature, as symbol of
the soul-spiritual world — in all this there lives and weaves
a lyrical element which looks up, with happy countenance, to the upper
gods, and down, with saddened countenance, to the gods of the underworld.
The lyrical can tense up into the dramatic-lyrical or quiet itself down
into the epic-lyrical. For the hallmark of the lyrical, whatever its
form, is this: man experiences what lives and weaves in the far reaches
of the earth with his middle nature, his feeling nature.
You see,
if we really enter the spirituality of world phenomena, we gradually
transform dead abstract concepts into a living, colorful, form-bearing
weaving and being. Because what surrounds us lives in the artistic,
mere intellectual activity can, almost unnoticed, be transformed into
artistic activity. That is why we constantly feel a need to enliven
impertinently abstract conceptual definitions — physical body,
ether body, astral body, all such concepts, these impertinently rigid,
philistine and horribly scientific formulations — into artistic
color and form. This is an inner, not merely outer, need of
Anthroposophy.
Therefore the hope may
be expressed that all mankind will extricate itself from naturalism,
drowned as it is in philistinism and pedantry through everything
abstract, theoretical, merely scientific, practical without being really
practical. Man needs a new impetus. Without this impulse, this swing,
Anthroposophy cannot thrive. In an inartistic atmosphere it goes short
of breath; only in an artistic element can it breathe freely. Rightly
understood, it will lead over to the genuinely artistic without losing
any of its cognitional character.
Notes:
1. Vol. II, 1922, No. 7-9:
Vortraege Rudolf Steiner's ueber das Wesen der Farbe,
(Rudolf Steiner's Lectures Concerning the Nature of Color.)
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