In this book, Gino Zaccaria offers a philosophical meditation on the issue of art in light of its originary sense. He shows how this sense can be fully understood provided that our thinking, on the one hand, returns to the ancient Greek world where it must heed the voice and hints of the goddess Athena, and, on the other hand, listens to artist-thinkers close to our current epoch, such as Czanne, van Gogh and Boccioni. Indeed, the path of this meditation has as its guide the well-known sentence by the painter from Aix-en-Provence, which reads: Je vous dois la verite en peinture, et je vous la dirai !. What will finally appear in this way will not be an abstract or historical notion of art, but its enigma; that is to say, the promise of another initiation of art itself.
Gino Zaccaria is Professor of Philosophy and Aesthetics at Bocconi University (Milan). He has published various monographs and essays in the fields of ontology and metaphysics (according to a hermeneutic-phenomenological approach), with particular focus on the dialogue between philosophy, poetry, art and science. His last book is a study on the concept of the Null in the poetical thought of Giacomo Leopardi (Pensare il nulla, Pavia 2015). He has also edited books and published Italian translations of works by Friedrich Hölderlin and Georg Trakl. He is co-editor in chief of the international journal eudia - Yearbook for Philosophy, Poetry and Art (www.eudia.org) and co-director of the international research project ScienzaNuova (www.scienzanuova.org). Presently is he working on a book dedicated to the phenomenology of time and space.
Preface Acknowledgements
Introduction
Lexicon of a Thought-Path towards the Provenance of Art
0.1 Preamble
0.2 Path-Word Elucidations
0.3 List of Other Path-Words
0.4 Path-Word Maps
part 1: Potencys Art, Salubritys Art
1 The Dynamism of Boccioni
The Futurist Foundation of Artwork: Immersion into Potency and Energy
1.1 A Brief Premise
1.2 Universal Dynamism
1.3 The Morpho-Radio-Chromatic Model (Potency-Power, Energy, Space-Time)
1.4 Unacceptability (towards Czanne and van Gogh)
2 The Light of Czanne
Errantry into the Sun
2.1 Ardour
2.2 First Step: Solar Awfulness, Light and Flagrance
2.3 Second Step: Colour
2.4 Third Step: The Painting of Verity
2.5 Naturalness of the Grand Magicien
3 The Frugality of van Gogh
Errantry into the Mistral, into Salubriousness
3.1 Le ton local
3.2 Truth and Absconsion
3.3 Nature, Truth and Art
3.4 Wind
3.5 Salubrity and Frugality
part 2: Athena and the Enigma
1: Sciency for Art
4 Elucidations of Some Further Path-Words
4.1 Irrefragableness
4.2 Excandescence
4.3 Businessisation
4.4 The Apperceptive Acception of Truth
4.5 Truth, Verity
4.6 The Scope of Being, Truth and Verity
5 The En-Wording of Art
5.1 The Play
5.2 The Realm of Errantry
6 Science and Sciency, Art and Errantry
6.1 From Science to Sciency
6.2 Sciency for Art
6.3 Mother-Speech
6.4 Art and History, Geniture and Inition
2: Athena
7 Loci of the Goddess
7.1 The Art of Athena
7.2 The Reigning Goddess
7.3 The Hymn
8 Eye, Prefulgence,
8.1 The and Tones
8.2 The Glaucous Eye-Cast, the Glaucous Myrance
8.3 Glaucousness and Prefulgence
8.4 The Multiform
8.5 The Eyes Gift
9 The Salubrious-Divine Myrance
9.1 The Marvel of the Scope of Being
9.2 Excursus. The of Leopardi (a Vage Digression into Immensity)
9.3 The of the Goddess
10 Prefulgence, and Salubrity
10.1 Grace and Want (Thinking towards the of Heraclitus)
10.2 The Three Eyes of the Scope of Being
11
11.1 The Salubrious Concent
11.2 Elucidation of
11.3 Athenaic (Ubiquity-)Nullibiety
12 The Heart of Salubriousness
12.1 Athenas Heart
12.2 Towards the Bent, towards the Things
12.3 The Bidance of Salubrity and the Greek Deity
13 Athenaicness and Salubriousness
13.1 Towards the Art of Chastity
13.2 The Atlas Metope
14 Salubriousness and Art
14.1 Originariness of the Calls
14.2 The Wild Olive
14.3 Vesper
14.4 Which Path?
3: The Enigma
15 Art and Errantry, Vagancy and Vagisness
15.1 The Secret of Art
15.2 The Stele of Schism
15.3 Chastity: Errantry
15.4 The Ultimate Horizon
16 The Enigma of Art
16.1 Dis-may
16.2 The Long History and Geniture
18 The Onset of the Nay-Say
18.1 Spontaneity, , T
18.2 The Uniqueness of Athena
18.3
part 3: The Two Arts (a Hint)
19 and
Nature and Art
19.1 as Assurgency
19.2 Art and Art
19.3 Groundlessness
Bibliography
Cited and Reference Works
Consulted Dictionaries
Classical Sources
Online Resources
Index of Classical Authors Index of Modern Authors
All those interested in the philosophy and history of art, in hermeneutics and cultural studies, and anyone concerned with either the Classics or with the beginnings of the art of the last century.