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The Shape of Art: Place, Relevance, and the Living Force Between Adorer and Adored

The Shape of Art: Place, Relevance, and the Living Force Between Adorer and Adored

FromThe Emerald


The Shape of Art: Place, Relevance, and the Living Force Between Adorer and Adored

FromThe Emerald

ratings:
Length:
37 minutes
Released:
Jan 21, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Bette Midler recently made headlines for tweeting a picture of three girls at a museum distracted by their phones instead of admiring the art. Yet the context in which we view art tends to be just as compartmentalized and distracting as a phone. Today on the podcast, we look at varying visions of art in cultural context — from the paleolithic caves to Indian temples to modern performance art — and move towards a conclusion that art, perhaps, isn’t just in the object. It’s in the state and quality of interaction between subject and object. Art, in its traditional context, reinforces the animate force of life, and is a gateway for an experience of this animate force. And if the observers aren’t delivered into a state of rapture by the art, perhaps it’s not a reflection on them, but on the entire context in which we view and compartmentalize art.Support the show
Released:
Jan 21, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (85)

The Emerald explores the human experience through a vibrant lens of myth, story, and imagination. Brought to life through the wise, wild, and humorous vision of Joshua Michael Schrei — a teacher and lifelong student of the cosmologies and mythologies of the world — the podcast draws from a deep well of poetry, lore, and mythos to challenge conventional narratives on politics and public discourse, meditation and mindfulness, art, science, literature, and more. At the heart of the podcast is the premise that the imaginative, poetic, animate heart of human experience — elucidated by so many cultures over so many thousands of years — is missing in modern discourse and is urgently needed at a time when humanity is facing unprecedented problems. The Emerald advocates for an imaginative vision of human life and human discourse as it questions deep underlying assumptions about societal progress.