What Was Abstract Art? (From the Point of View of Heidegger)

Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 72 (3):291-302 (2014)
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Abstract

To understand and begin to answer the question of this article, I compare Heidegger's position to Hegel's, since the two appear structurally similar and Heidegger is explicitly indebted to Hegel's aesthetics. On the basis of this comparison, I argue that abstract art has the potential to play an important role on Heideggerian grounds. I conclude that modernist art should be understood not as a supplement to the project of self-realization that characterizes Hegelian freedom but rather as a disruptive event that could potentially challenge the constraining technological mindset that is characteristic of our time

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Ingvild Torsen
University of Oslo

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