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On Beauty by Miles Mathis

The whole history
of aesthetics and art criticism has concerned itself with the definition,
reduction, deconstruction or destruction of beauty. At various times the
question of beauty has engulfed the entire question of art, as in Hellenistic
times or during the 18th century. And even now, when beauty is supposed to have
been explained away, an inordinate amount of ink still flows as to its nature.
We have been told that beauty is a myth, that it is a product of culture, that
it is a mental construct, that it is relative, that it is reducible to usefulness,
or nature or sex. It has been called a tool of domination, or conversely, the
shield of the passive and weak. In the first instance it is said to be man's
fiction to keep woman down. In the second instance it is woman's protection
from man, her guarantee against violence—in the same way that a baby's beauty
protects it from adults, assuring, in most instances, that it will be cared
for.
The problem is that beauty has successfully resisted all reduction and
deconstruction. No explanation of beauty, for or against, has been at all
persuasive. No one can explain, or explain away, the beauty of a flower, much
less of a human being. In the case of flowers, I might point out that we are
not bees: we have no real use for flowers. They do not need our protection, we do
not need their loyalty or affection. Meal worms are more potentially useful to
us than flowers, since they are more nourishing; but no one would argue that
meal worms are more beautiful. Apple blossoms are more useful than orchids,
since they presage apples; and yet we prefer orchids, which presage nothing but
lots of work.
As for human beauty, it has also resisted any final connection to use or
biology. No one can seriously argue that attractive men and women are better
mothers or fathers, or better husbands or wives, or even better lovers.
Consensus is to the contrary: because they can get away with it, they are more
likely to be selfish lovers, undependable spouses, and spotty parents. And yet
their appeal never dies. Those too craven to date them watch them on TV and
dream about them. Why? No one can say.
Modern social critics tell us that these pathetic dreams and fantasies are
created by advertisers or political parties or "the patriarchy." But the
advertisers and other conmen did not need to create our fantasies in order to
use them against us. The idea of human beauty is as ancient as we are. It
exists in tribal cultures and it exists in matriarchal cultures. It has been
shown to exist in infants, who gaze more often at attractive people. What
cultural myth are infants in the grip of? Where, exactly, did they learn to be
prejudiced?
It is clear to anyone with a spark of honesty that beauty exists, and that it
does not exist as a subcategory of politics or philosophy. It is not good or
evil, it is not intrinsically ennobling or corrupting. It is a complex
objective characteristic, in the same way that "blue" is a simple
objective characteristic. Nor is beauty in the eye of the beholder. A woman may
prefer a man who looks like her father or her first childhood sweetheart, but
that has nothing to do with beauty. Beauty attracts, familiarity attracts,
other psychological traits attract, but this does not make beauty the same as
familiarity or psychology. Given two men, neither of whom looks like her father
and neither of whom are allowed to speak, a woman will invariably be attracted,
initially, to the handsomer one. Everybody knows this.
Some have pointed to the Eskimos' preference for fat women and other similar
examples as proof that there is no standard of beauty, but again, this has
nothing to do with beauty. The Eskimos do not prefer fat women for their
beauty, they prefer them for their warmth. As tribal people, they do not have
the luxury of choosing mates for artistic reasons. Only the wealthiest people
in the most advanced cultures have been able to afford to ignore the
necessities of life such as staying warm, finding and preparing food, bringing
up children. When all this is done for them, they are free to hone their
artistic sensibilities. Of course I am not going to argue that modern culture,
or any super-wealthy culture, is not decadent in a thousand different ways. But
I am going to argue that the conception of beauty as it still exists in modern
culture is not at all decadent.
A hundred years ago Tolstoy attacked all the arts for being decadent, and I
agree with his argument, for the most part. However, Tolstoy attacked art as a
practice, at the end of the 19th century. He did not attack the concept of
beauty. Art, in practice, has continued to decline, as I have asserted in
previous articles, but the conception of beauty, where it has survived, is much
the same as it was in Tolstoy's time. In some ways it has even refined itself.
Take the ballet, for instance. Tolstoy's argument that the ballet, in being
such an all-consuming specialty, was detrimental to its practitioners—which
detriment was not at all outweighed by the joy it brought to its audience—is
difficult to counter. Like all specializations, the arts can be deforming.
However, the ballet is one of the few arts that improved in the 20th century. I
therefore have great difficulty in accepting that, for instance, George Balanchine's eye for gazelle-like
women is an example of decadence. It may be that this is what the human
conception of beauty is, freed from all external or biological factors. I think
there are very few ballet aficionados, male or female, who would maintain that
the ballet was more beautiful to watch a hundred years ago, or even fifty years
ago, when the dancers of both sexes were heavier. The old films are difficult
to watch—the primas are so comparatively ungainly. If the point is and was to
look swanlike, then clearly contemporary dancers have perfected their
craft—mostly by perfecting their bodies. This has been achieved partly by a
more rigorous training, but even more by the recruitment of more swanlike
people to begin with. Male dancers have also become leaner and more athletic
and more beautiful. Compare someone like Peter Martins with
his predecessors. He is both better and better looking. This is not a cultural
prejudice, it is a precondition of the ballet. A form of dance which has the
central precepts of grace and extension must refine itself in this direction,
in the same way that basketball must refine itself in the direction of taller
people and horse racing in the direction of lighter people.
Of course some would define human beauty as sexual attractiveness and be done
with it, in which case the Eskimos' preference is hard to separate from beauty.
But if you define beauty as artistic usefulness rather than sexual usefulness
you take a different road altogether. From what we know, Balanchine found his
primas sexually useful as well, but they were chosen in the first instance
because he knew they could demonstrate grace on the stage better than anyone
else. As it is with dance, it is also with painting. Painting may be thought of
as an instant of dance, and what is pleasing to the choreographer is also
pleasing to the painter, for the same reason.
The question then becomes, why do we find a swan to be more beautiful than a
goose? Some would say that it is because the swan resembles a woman, but then
we are trapped in a vicious circle. The swan resembles the woman and the woman
resembles the swan. Where in all this is the original concept of beauty? Fluid
movement would appear to be a part of it, but everything else is difficult to
isolate. "A proud bearing of the head," for instance, obviously
applies to the woman first and the swan only by simile, but does a proud woman
adopt a beautiful pose in order to awe, or do we find pride beautiful? The
first it must be, since ugly people striking proud poses do not become
beautiful. But then this means that beauty is "what a beautiful person
does," which is not a very helpful definition.
Good looks are hard to define, but they are pretty easy to isolate
experimentally. It is turning out that they are also standard to a very large
degree. Within some easily understandable variations, there is amazing
agreement on what constitutes a beautiful man and woman. That is, some may
prefer dark skin or hair, or light, but very few prefer short necks, fingers,
or toes, large ankles or waists, thin lips, baldness, small eyes, deformations,
or signs of age. These are uncomfortable facts for everyone of us, since even
those with long fingers or necks will develop signs of age, but they are facts
nonetheless. Trying to write them off as signs of cultural or sexual prejudice
is only an evasion. Even if we insist on calling them prejudices, they will
continue to exist. We can call night a solar prejudice but that will not stop
it from getting dark.
Women like to pretend that it is only men who have strong physical
"prejudices". Women's other prejudices (financial, social, etc.) may
override their physical preferences more often than they do in men, but this does
not make women more pure or spiritual. We are all driven by our instincts, and
ranking these instincts is a pure sort of folly. If history has taught us
anything it is that scolding people for their sexual preferences is the surest
of all possible ways of wasting your breath.
Besides, what is pleasing aesthetically and what is pleasing sexually aren't
necessarily the same thing. As I have said before, nudity in art need be
neither pornographic nor erotic. I can only speak from my own experience, but
for me aesthetic appreciation does not always imply erotic appreciation, or the
reverse. Aesthetic admiration is often rather chilly and cerebral, which may
explain the obsession Hollywood and high fashion and the ballet all have had
for skinny ice princesses. It may also explain the odd asexual nature of many
famous artists, from Leonardo to Sargent. Aesthetics may have less to do with
the sensual pleasure of desire and gratification, and more to do with the sort
of mathematical joys of harmony and balance. This would explain the close
connection between classical music, painting, and the ballet, as well as the
close creative tie between Balanchine and Stravinsky. Beauty may or may not be
nothing more than transcendentalized sexual attraction, but the fact is that at
this late a date in history it is transcendentalized, for whatever
reason. That is, it has disconnected from sex. The beauty of a nude causes a
spiritual thrill that is unlike the thrill of a caress. I am not going to argue
that it is a higher or purer thrill. In fact it is certainly less intense. The
important thing is that it is different.
So how has it evolved? Why has extension (long limbs, long neck, etc.) come to
signify beauty? A long neck confers no natural benefit upon a woman—she does not
graze the tops of trees or look out above the forest canopy for predators. Nor
is it clear that things like long fingers or thick hair are more harmonious
than not. A small waist and thick hair may signify youth, but what about pretty
feet and a long neck? Many perfectly healthy youths have stubby toes and necks.
In fact, sturdy people seem to be less easily injured, have more stamina, and
live longer than these frail gazelle-like creatures preferred by artists. If we
worship health we should worship the sturdy and long-lived. If we worship
harmony, we should worship the round and bald, for what is more harmonious than
a circle?
Are we simply under the spell of a few powerful and perverted men: Praxiteles,
Botticelli, Balanchine? Or is there something to the long fascination with lean
and sinewy youths of both sexes—the Phrynes and Lolitas and Tadzios? Do angels
or fairies really look like this perhaps? Or is this where nature is pushing us
in the very long run?—perpetual adolescents with knee-length tresses?
I don't know and neither does anyone else. Personally I find the angel and
fairy myths more compelling than the myths of biology or politics. Beauty as
biology or politics or culture or sex is demonstrably false, whereas beauty as
an approximation of the divine is beyond proof. It is charming precisely
because it leaves intact the mystery of all art.
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