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LAYERS & LAYERS OF DREAMS WITHIN DREAMS

Quite brilliantly,  John Ruskin wrote of the Seven Lamps of Architecture; the seven lamps ,”lamps” meaning that which illuminates the mind or soul of sacred architecture. They are: sacrifice, truth, power, beauty, life, memory, and obedience; and when combined, they enhance devout practice and provide spiritual vitality in the sacred spaces they fill. Ruskin first proposed the seven lamps of sacred architecture in 1848 when he carefully examined the essence of Gothic architecture in Europe.  It was Ruskin who first argued that these seven lamps sustain the essential character of religious architecture,and a framework for our mental architecture, with the role of aesthetics serving to elevate the soul.

Chagall

Chagall

Can the soul be elevated without dreaming? And can the dreamed of activity affect someone else’s dream?

”The first time I ever heard him speak was in the late 1980s, while he was still chief rabbi, at a memorial ceremony for a yeshiva student who had been stabbed to death in Jerusalem’s Old City. I can’t remember a word Eliyahu said, but the fire and brimstone tone of his sermon left an indelible impression. He poured holy rage on the heads of the Arab terrorists and, expecting yet another yawn fest, we were astonished and excited to hear such explicit words coming from a respected rabbi.”

"Inception" stars Leonardo DiCaprio and is directed by Christopher Nolan. Joseph Gordon-Levitt treads his way carefully through a dream in the sci-fi thriller "Inception."

"Inception" stars Leonardo DiCaprio and is directed by Christopher Nolan. Joseph Gordon-Levitt treads his way carefully through a dream in the sci-fi thriller "Inception."

There has always been a particular variant of Judaism that is part of a deeper  ideology, both religious and national; defenders of the faith with statements  measured and considered, that do apparently  stem from no  emotion, a kind of psychological pilfering that constructs little and shares less; manifestations of the less savory liminal states of consciousness that are in an uphill battle with losing a grip on reality. It has fostered  generations of believers and activists in the national-religious camp for whom this particular brand of Jewish racism is a matter of instinct. Artistic expression is essentially limited, ambiguous, incomplete at best, and virtually unnecessary. Their trick is following their own complicate logic so seriously and insidiously that they completely draw fair numbers into their point of view.

http://www.artthrob.co.za/00nov/reviews.html

http://www.artthrob.co.za/00nov/reviews.html

In Jewish legend, the Hatam Sofer required a silversmith who had fashioned two figurines of Moses and Aaron as an adornment to the finials of a Scroll of the Law to remove from the figures the tips of their noses; the depictions of the human figure seen as the acme of an idolatrous image. The rub, is why a complete representation is utterly prohibited whereas, in certain circumstances and subject to certain conditions, an incomplete depiction is permissible. There is a position grounded in the view that inorganic matter is inanimate. It is no more than “wood and stone” ,a refrain common to the Psalmist and the Prophets. The Biblical  Habakkuk’s exclamation–”there is no life”–in the carved image of wood and stone encased in gold and silver (2:18-29), is a reiterated denunciation.

Paul Klee. red balloon

Paul Klee. red balloon

When the object of the depiction is a human being, the effect of the purported transposition into matter is therefore spurious and destructive. The Prophets find an echo in nineteenth-century Vilna when Abraham Paperna denies to the sculptor’s artifact “the attribute of spirit and the inner movements of the soul.”  From twentieth-century Paris Lévinas emphasizes the annihilation that the purported life of artistic infinity imposes on the individual: “Within the life, or rather the death, of a statue, an instant endures infinitely.”

''The installation is set in two parts consisting of a world juxtaposing Judaism with debauchery. Sanctity and holy innocence is perhaps being perverted by sex and filth, where one is caught between the balance of something beautiful and something unholy one might also find the holy distasteful too. The aesthetics of the pieces may show that they are made from cheap recycled material and the artist stresses the metaphor on religion that perhaps it is something material, holy, made from unholy and that beautiful things are perhaps man made from the things we neglect and normally throw away.''

''The installation is set in two parts consisting of a world juxtaposing Judaism with debauchery. Sanctity and holy innocence is perhaps being perverted by sex and filth, where one is caught between the balance of something beautiful and something unholy one might also find the holy distasteful too. The aesthetics of the pieces may show that they are made from cheap recycled material and the artist stresses the metaphor on religion that perhaps it is something material, holy, made from unholy and that beautiful things are perhaps man made from the things we neglect and normally throw away.''

This has always been in opposition to a thinking that explores the overlap between revelation and aesthetic form from within the perspective of Judaism. An example is setting the Jewish philosophy of Martin Buber and Franz Rosenzweig alongside its immediate visual environment in the aesthetics of early German modernism, most notably alongside “the spiritual in art” as it appears in the art and art theories of Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, and Franz Marc. The modern shape of revelation—and “the spiritual in art” that emerges from this conversation—builds upon a vocabulary of form-creation, sheer presence, lyric pathos, rhythmic repetition, open spatial dynamism, and erotic pulse that was unique to Germany in the first quarter of the twentieth century, but is in evidence in all of the West. There is an  identifiable  sensual root that is brought to bear upon the modern image of revelation and “the spiritual in art.”

Dina Podolsky

Dina Podolsky

There are philosophic/ theological principles that Judaism employs in looking at and relating to the world as a whole. These entail principles that determine its aesthetic outlook; aesthetics implying general and universal principles applied to all art. Thus, there can be no aesthetics of Jewish art, but certainly a Jewish aesthetic of art. The denial of any form of universality, even within a reasonable Jewish aesthetic context that is ultimately rooted in the prohibition of idolatry and of certain types of pictorial representation, has ultimately to create a new aesthetic based  on ethnocentric and volatile dimensions that by ”destiny” seems to create its own narrative, though one that tends to be predictable:

” In the early 1950s, he was still a firebrand and was sentenced to 10 months in prison for his membership in an ultra-Orthodox underground group that collected arms and firebombs with the intention of imposing the laws of the Torah on the young state. Upon his release, however, he changed tack and quickly aligned himself with the influential Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Nissim and the politicians of the Mizrahi Party. Decades later, he admitted in an interview that his underground activity was wrong but added, “I haven’t changed my views, but the path I chose then was mistaken.”

Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944) Transverse Line, 1923  141 x 202 cm  Oil on canvas  Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Dusseldorf

Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944) Transverse Line, 1923 141 x 202 cm Oil on canvas Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Dusseldorf

The talmud is seen by Elie Wiesel as an opening to Judaism seen through the aesthetic dimension. ”It shows the aesthetics of Judaism, that Judaism is not only a philosophy, not only a set of ethical codes, but a thing of beauty. I study the talmud to find the beauty of Judaism. ” This inner realm that  Wiesel evokes pulls apart the fragile veil of our supposed reality to reveal dreamscapes within that can be quite explosive. The aesthetic is like in the film ”Inception”  by Christopher Nolan, where Cobb,plays the leader of a group of ”extractors” ; people who are able to participate in and shape the dreams of others; the revelation giving impetus to the expression of the aesthetic, which in a chicken and egg issue, could be the source of religion, yet finds itself repressed by the children it gave birth to. Discriminated by its multiple valences of reality…..

''Threesome (1944), by Felix Nussbaum (1904-1944). Oil/Canvas, 100x80cm In Threesome, painted in January 1944, Nussbaum portrays himself as a pious Jew in  hiding with his wife Felka and his son Jaqui. The triangular composition is reminiscent  of renaissance sacral art. The painter identifies himself fully with the religion to which he was thrown back as a result of the persecution by National Socialism, whereas his  wife merely endures the situation. Felix Nussbaum describes here in one of his last pictures  the situation of all those persecuted which lies somewhere between  fear of death and vague hope. ''

''Threesome (1944), by Felix Nussbaum (1904-1944). Oil/Canvas, 100x80cm In Threesome, painted in January 1944, Nussbaum portrays himself as a pious Jew in hiding with his wife Felka and his son Jaqui. The triangular composition is reminiscent of renaissance sacral art. The painter identifies himself fully with the religion to which he was thrown back as a result of the persecution by National Socialism, whereas his wife merely endures the situation. Felix Nussbaum describes here in one of his last pictures the situation of all those persecuted which lies somewhere between fear of death and vague hope. ''

”I’m not sure when it first dawned upon me that Eliyahu was also a racist. Perhaps it was when I learnt of how close he had been to Rabbi Meir Kahane, the slain leader of the religious-fascist Kach Party. Eliyahu had passionately eulogized Kahane at his funeral in messianic terms and also wrote a glowing preface to one of Kahane’s books in which described the rabble-rouser as a man to whom “the path of God was always his leading light.”

It was hard to come to terms with his racism because he always struck me as an urbane and relatively “open” rabbi. He had an instinctive understanding for whoever he was in contact with, capable of holding discussions with anyone without giving off an impression of condescension, as do most ultra-Orthodox rabbis. His halakhic rulings were also surprisingly moderate for a man of his background. Instead of being based on the strict letter of Jewish law, they were compassionate and tailor-made to the Jew asking the question, not the rabbi delivering the answer.”

The primary reason for avoiding figurative representation in the sacred art of Judaism and Islam for that matter, was  to avoid illusion or corruption of the human imagination. But do deny its employment is to adhere to the theory ”X” school that people are inherently bad, and any manner of noble lie, moral suasion and arm twisting is justified in keeping the herd under lock. guard and trembling fear.  More precisely, illusion, projects one “order” of reality onto another, this means that every artistic creation must be treated according to the laws of its domain of existence and must make these laws intelligible. While man cannot change these laws he seeks to understand and interpret them. “In Judaism there is a perpetual insistence on the one hand that art is not employed or enjoyed for its own sake nor certainly as an object of worship.”  Lindsay Jones explains how the notion of truth as seen in biblical text and the exegesis of revelation can be understood:

Yet there is on the other hand receptivity to the notion that the artwork that embellishes religious manuscripts and ceremonial objects along with synagogue architecture and decoration, can and thus should facilitate a beautification of the commandments. Thus historically, Jews even while respecting biblical prohibitions against representational art have been quite willing to acknowledge that art and architecture have a major role to play in bringing meaning and emotion to religious architecture and thus enhancing the fulfillment of God’s revelatory instructions to the Jewish people.”

In the film, ”Inception”, the extractors or dream thieves, can teach clients how to safeguard secrets locked away in their subconscious, or how to steal them from unfortified minds. Presented with the inverse challenge of implanting an idea in someone’s head, Cobb the leader,  assembles his team and designs an intricate mind heist that leads them through layers and layers of dreams within dreams. The potential idea of multiple people sharing the same dream in intriguing. The creation of aesthetic realities that are appropriated for specifics, but are universal in nature; are the repressive and tribal characteristics of religion ultimately a losing battle to keep the genie bottled up and prevent a visual expression of that relationship between dreams and memory.

”Once you remove the privacy, you’ve created an infinite number of alternative universes in which people can meaningfully interact, with validity, with weight and with dramatic consequences” ( Christopher Nolan )

”Eliyahu’s compassionate manner to Jews from all walks of life and religious persuasion made his racist utterances all the more disturbing. He ruled, for example, that Jewish settlers in the West Bank can harvest the olive trees of their Palestinian neighbors and steal their crops as the land inherently belongs to the Jewish people. He repeatedly told a packed audience at the Mercaz Harav Yeshiva following the terror attack there that “even when we seek revenge, it is imperative to remember that a thousand Arabs are not worth one yeshiva student.” During Operation Cast Lead in Gaza he wrote to the prime minister at the time, Ehud Olmert, that there was nothing wrong with indiscriminately bombing and killing Palestinian citizens if this would make the battlefield safer for Jewish soldiers.”

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Posted by Dave on Jul 22nd, 2010 and filed under Feature Article, Ideas/Opinion, Marketing/Advertising/Media, Miscellaneous, Modern Arts/Craft, Visual Art/Sculpture/etc.. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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