“Art is not a study of positive reality, it is the seeking for ideal truth.”
John Ruskin (1819–1900) English writer and art critic
L'art n'est pas une étude de la réalité positive; c'est une recherche de la vérité idéale.
La Mare au Diable, ch. 1 (1851); Frank Hunter Potter (trans.) The Haunted Pool (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1895) p. 15
“Art is not a study of positive reality, it is the seeking for ideal truth.”
John Ruskin (1819–1900) English writer and art critic
Charles de Gaulle (1890–1970) eighteenth President of the French Republic
La politique, quand elle est un art et un service, non point une exploitation, c'est une action pour un idéal à travers des réalités. <br class="br">Press conference, June 30 1955 <br class="br">Fifth Republic and other post-WW2 <br class="br">Source: "Le Général de Gaulle et la construction de l'Europe" https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wg4ZAQAAIAAJ (1967), pg 33. note: 1950s
Karl Marx (1818–1883) German philosopher, economist, sociologist, journalist and revolutionary socialist
About Beauty
(1857/58)
Andrei Tarkovsky book Sculpting in Time
Source: Sculpting in Time (1986), p. 113
Context: Art is realistic when it strives to express an ethical ideal. Realism is striving for truth, and truth is always beautiful. Here the aesthetic coincides with the ethical.
Karel Čapek (1890–1938) Czech writer
R.U.R. supplement in The Saturday Review (1923)
Context: Be these people either Conservatives or Socialists, Yellows or Reds, the most important thing is — and that is the point I want to stress — that all of them are right in the plain and moral sense of the word... I ask whether it is not possible to see in the present social conflict of the world an analogous struggle between two, three, five equally serious verities and equally generous idealisms? I think it is possible, and that is the most dramatic element in modern civilization, that a human truth is opposed to another human truth no less human, ideal against ideal, positive worth against worth no less positive, instead of the struggle being as we are so often told, one between noble truth and vile selfish error.
George Holmes Howison (1834–1916) American philosopher
Source: The Limits of Evolution, and Other Essays, Illustrating the Metaphysical Theory of Personal Ideaalism (1905), The Art-Principle as Represented in Poetry, p.183
Joshua Reynolds (1723–1792) English painter, specialising in portraits
Discourse no. 12; vol. 2, p. 104.
Discourses on Art
George Sand (1804–1876) French novelist and memoirist; pseudonym of Lucile Aurore Dupin
L'art pour l'art est un vain mot. L'art pour le vrai, l'art pour le beau et le bon, voilà la religion que je cherche....
Letter to Alexandre Saint-Jean, (19 April 1872), published in Calmann Lévy (ed.) Correspondance (1812-1876). Eng. Transl by Raphaël Ledos de Beaufort in Letters of George Sand Vol. III, p. 242