One of the ways in which abstract art is explained is by analogy with music. It's like a song without words - a shape without recognisable form. It's reducing visual perception down to its basic elements of colour and form without the distraction of recognition intruding. In discussing a particular work by Kandinsky, one of abstract arts earliest practitioners, the presenter drew attention to the composition as comparable to the composition of a piece of music. The idea is that just as you might throw any old random notes down on a sheet of music and produce a cacophony of disordered sound, so the same applies to color and form on a canvas. If however the notes are positioned according to certain rules of musical notation, combination etc, then harmony results ; aesthetic quality is drawn from the combination where previously there was none. This, the argument runs, applies equally to the positioning of form and color on the canvas and furthermore for the same reason. It is a reflection of a principal of an aesthetic reality that exists at a more fundamental level; that juxtaposition of certain 'vibrations', be they of colour or sound will produce harmony, where random positioning will not. This say the abstractionists, will be reflected in the visual just as much as the auditory experience.
Well, this might be so - indeed who am I to deny it. But I'm going to stick my neck out and say that for all the reading I've done ( not much, but a bit) the programs I've watched (many) and the thinking I've applied to it - I still don't get it. By the end of my 90 minutes I was no closer to seeing any rules that did not seem random and arbitrary, pretentious explanatory tricks that could easily have been cooked up from any random ingredients and presented as serious explanation, than I was at the start. So I think I'm not being unfair in saying that (in my opinion) the experiment in stretching the bounds of creativity that is abstract art has been a failure.......
BUT........
It has failed in the most wonderful way possible and has created some of the most beautiful, challenging, mind-blowing art I have ever seen. So I'm going to stop trying to understand this creative activity, ignore all the explanatory bullshit and just accept it for what it is. A case of "Shut up and look at the pictures!"
