Arnold Hauser Quotes

Arnold Hauser was a Hungarian art historian who was perhaps the leading Marxist in the field. He wrote on the influence of change in social structures on art. His The Social History of Art argued that art—which, after a paleolithic period of naturalism, began as "flat, symbolic, formalized, abstract and concerned with spiritual beings"—became more realistic and naturalistic as societies became less hierarchical and authoritarian, and more mercantile and bourgeois .

✵ 8. May 1892 – 28. January 1978
Arnold Hauser: 34   quotes 0   likes

Famous Arnold Hauser Quotes

“The new Christian ideal of life did not at first alter the outward forms of art, but did alter its social function.”

The Social History of Art, Volume I. From Prehistoric Times to the Middle Ages, 1999, Chapter IV. The Middle Ages

“We read the works of the older literature differently from those of our own age; we enjoy them purely aesthetically, that is, indirectly, disinterestedly, perfectly aware of their fictitiousness and of our self-deception.”

Source: The Social History of Art, Volume IV. Naturalism, impressionism, the film age, 1999, Chapter 1. Naturalism and Impressionism

Arnold Hauser Quotes about art

“The art of representing the human figure in the ancient world begins and ends with ‘frontality’.”

The Social History of Art, Volume I. From Prehistoric Times to the Middle Ages, 1999, Chapter III. Greece and Rome

Arnold Hauser Quotes about age

“The late Middle Ages not merely has a successful middle class—it is in fact a middle-class period.”

The Social History of Art, Volume I. From Prehistoric Times to the Middle Ages, 1999, Chapter IV. The Middle Ages

Arnold Hauser Quotes

“Folk-art signifies the poetical, musical and pictorial activities of those strata of the population which are uneducated and not urbanized or industrialised.”

Arnold Hauser, cited in: Bihar Tribal Research Institute (1961). Bulletin of the Bihar Tribal Research Institute. Vol. 3-4, p. 144

“The historical importance of the Carracci is extraordinary; the history of the whole of modern ‘church art’ begins with them.”

Source: The Social History of Art', Volume II. Renaissance, Mannerism, Baroque, 1999, Chapter 9. The Baroque of the Catholic Courts

“Such specialization and depersonalization of enquiry led inevitably to a taste for mere erudition and a temptation to eclecticism.”

The Social History of Art, Volume I. From Prehistoric Times to the Middle Ages, 1999, Chapter III. Greece and Rome

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