Can we recognize beauty?
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Deep and dense, but we should think about it.
Have a great day.
: )
LauroThe Washington Post conducted an experiment in which world famous violinist Joshua Bell busked a busy Washington, D.C. metro stop during rush hour. The experiment aimed to see how many people would stop and listen if they heard a concert-quality, professional musician performing, even if he appeared at a subway stop. A second outcome indicates that very few people stop to throw money at someone they encounter as a street musician, even if that someone ordinarily commands $100 a seat in a concert venue.
So on Friday morning, January 12, Joshua Bell set himself up at the L'Enfant Plaza in D.C. and began to play Bach's Chaconne on a Stradivarius violin (worth about $3.5 million.). After 43 minutes, 5 more classical pieces, and 1,097 people passing by, Joshua Bell had made $32.17 (not counting $20 received from one person who recognized him).
The lack of recognition and response surprised the researchers and editors at the Washington Post, who had worried about crowd control. Leonard Slatkin, music director of the National Symphony Orchestra, speculated that a classical musician would get more notice in Europe.
"It was a strange feeling, that people were actually, ah . . ."
(the word doesn't come easily)
". . . ignoring me." (Bell is laughing. It's at himself.)Interpretations of the Bell experiment range from hand-wringing laments over American "backwardness" to eulogies pointing out classical music's "irrelevance."
Washington Post writer Gene Weingarten echoed Kant's words regarding beauty: conditions must be optimal for the recognition of beauty. It is not that Americans are unable to appreciate beauty per se, just that appreciating art while on the way to a busy work day is extremely difficult. In a concert hall, space has been carved out for appreciation: the audience is attentive because they have nowhere else to go.
On the other hand, one could use this experiment to argue that beauty is in fact entirely socially constructed, a concept invented to make a group of snooty elitists feel good about themselves and their music. If no one appreciates Bell in the subway, then the great applause he receives in the concert hall seems somehow inflated, contrived.
German musicologist Theodor Adorno once lamented that we love the price we paid for our ticket more than the music itself. (!!!)
Adorno is often dismissed as a pessimistic naysayer, but he raises an interesting point: economic value is related to demand. And populists would argue that economic value is the only kind of value that exists.
Thus, the most intriguing point raised by this experiment is that the aftermath revives tropes that have floated around in our culture for eons: low art versus high art, the masses versus knowledgable elites, science/economics versus inherent beauty. Who knew that centuries of Western Philosophy were lurking in a busy Metro subway that day?
(Washington Post Staff Writer, By Gene Weingarten,
Sunday, April 8, 2007; Page W10) -
Well, I would have said hello if I had been there!
Stop n smell the roses, listen to the birds, slow down n enjoy the gifts were given!
xxoo -
i remember reading the complete intense writing when this was first done..it actually brings up like, 100 additional points...everything from appreciating higher forms of talent, art and musicianship..to everyone being so self involved to everyone having ear buds and ipods in and missing real musicians..to people not appreciating the worth of something until you put a tangiable value on it..etc etc to the 1oth power..glad you noticed this:):)sorry..if this is a disjointed message, i've been performing and traveling all day and i'm scattered..hahaha
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Very nice Lauro! Deep....I like Deep!
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Thank you for posting this.
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Thank you guys for reading it. Have a great weekend.
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violinist?
i would have probably ignored...
great guitarist? or singer?
would have stopped listened and gave money...
its about what catches my interest
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