"'Art for art's sake'" is the usual
English rendition of a
French slogan, '''l'art pour l'art''', which is credited to
Théophile Gautier (
1811–
1872). Some argue Gautier was not the first to write those words. They appear in the works of
Benjamin Constant, and
Edgar Allan Poe, in his essay "
The Poetic Principle", argues that
: ''We have taken it into our heads that to write a poem simply for the poem's sake [...] and to acknowledge such to have been our design, would be to confess ourselves radically wanting in the true poetic dignity and force: — but the simple fact is that would we but permit ourselves to look into our own souls we should immediately there discover that under the sun there neither exists nor can exist any work more thoroughly dignified, more supremely noble, than this very poem, this poem per se, this poem which is a poem and nothing more, 'this poem written solely for the poem's sake'''.
[1]
Gautier, however, was the first to adopt the phrase as a slogan. "Art for art's sake" was a
bohemian creed in the
nineteenth century, a slogan raised in defiance of those who — from
John Ruskin to the much later
Communist advocates of
socialist realism — thought that the value of art was to serve some
moral or
didactic purpose. "Art for art's sake" affirmed that
art was valuable ''as'' art, that artistic pursuits were their own justification and that art did not need moral justification — and indeed, was allowed to be morally subversive.
In fact,
James McNeill Whistler wrote the following in which he discarded the accustomed role of art in the service of the state or official religion, which had adhered to its practice since the
Counter-Reformation of the sixteenth century:
: ''Art should be independent of all claptrap —should stand alone [...] and appeal to the artistic sense of eye or ear, without confounding this with emotions entirely foreign to it, as devotion, pity, love, patriotism and the like''
[2]
Such a brusque dismissal also expressed the artist's distancing himself from
sentimentalism. All that remains of
Romanticism in this statement is the reliance on the artist's own eye and sensibility as the arbiter.
The explicit slogan is associated in the history of English art and letters with
Walter Pater and his followers in the
Aesthetic Movement, which was self-consciously in rebellion against
Victorian moralism. It first appeared in English in two works published simultaneously in
1868: Pater's review of
William Morris's poetry in the ''
Westminster Review'' and in ''
William Blake'' by
Algernon Charles Swinburne. A modified form of Pater's review appeared in his ''
Studies in the History of the Renaissance'' (1873), one of the most influential texts of the Aesthetic Movement.
An attempt at a
Latin version of the slogan, "'''ars gratia artis'''", is used as a slogan by
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and appears in the oval around the roaring head of
Leo the Lion in their
motion picture logo.
Criticisms
Artists such as
Leopold Senghor and
Chinua Achebe have criticised the slogan as being a limited and Eurocentric view on art and creation.
In "Black African Aesthetics," Seghnor argues that "art is functional" and that "in black Africa, `art for art's sake' does not exist."
Achebe is more scathing in his collection of essays and criticisms
Morning Yet on Creation Day he asserts that "art for arts sake is just another piece of deoderised dog shit."
Notes
1. The Poetic Principle
2. Refined Palette, , Owen, Edwards, Smithsonian Magazine,
See also
★
Critical theory
★
Walter Benjamin
External link
★
''Dictionary of the History of Ideas'': Art for Art's Sake