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John Berger

  • iFERhas quoted3 days ago
    although every image embodies a way of seeing, our perception or appreciation of an image depends also upon our own way of seeing.
  • iFERhas quoted3 days ago
    Yet when an image is presented as a work of art, the way people look at it is affected by a whole series of learnt assumptions about art.
  • iFERhas quoted3 days ago
    History always constitutes the relation between a present and its past.
  • iFERhas quoted3 days ago
    Consequently fear of the present leads to mystification of the past.
  • iFERhas quoted3 days ago
    When we are prevented from seeing it, we are being deprived of the history which belongs to us. Who benefits from this deprivation? In the end, the art of the past is being mystified because a privileged minority is striving to invent a history which can retrospectively justify the role of the ruling classes, and such a justification can no longer make sense in modern terms. And so, inevitably, it mystifies.
  • iFERhas quoted3 days ago
    When we are prevented from seeing it, we are being deprived of the history which belongs to us. Who benefits from this deprivation? In the end, the art of the past is being mystified because a privileged minority is striving to invent a history which can retrospectively justify the role of the ruling classes, and such a justification can no longer make sense in modern terms. And so, inevitably, it mystifies.
  • shehas quoted2 years ago
    The Surrealist painter Magritte commented on this always-present gap between words and seeing in a painting called The Key of Dreams.
  • shehas quoted2 years ago
    The reciprocal nature of vision is more fundamental than that of spoken dialogue. And often dialogue is an attempt to verbalize this – an attempt to explain how, either metaphorically or literally, ‘you see things’, and an attempt to discover how ‘he sees things’
  • shehas quoted2 years ago
    Yet, although every image embodies a way of seeing, our perception or appreciation of an image depends also upon our own way of seeing.
  • shehas quoted2 years ago
    When we ‘see’ a landscape, we situate ourselves in it. If we ‘saw’ the art of the past, we would situate ourselves in history. When we are prevented from seeing it, we are being deprived of the history which belongs to us. Who benefits from this deprivation? In the end, the art of the past is being mystified because a privileged minority is striving to invent a history which can retrospectively justify the role of the ruling classes, and such a justification can no longer make sense in modern terms. And so, inevitably, it mystifies.
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