Cubist Realism

From the Renaissance to the early twentieth century, “almost all painting had obeyed a convention: that of one-point perspective,” says Robert Hughes ( The Shock of the New , 16-7). Renaissance perspective has come to seem natural, just the way we actually see, but Hughes points out that it is actually “a form of abstraction,” a “generalization,” and “an ideal view, imagined as being seen by a one-eyed, motionless person who is clearly detached from what he sees.” It is the point of view of a God-like spectator, “who becomes the person on whom the whole world converges, the Unmoved Onlooker.”

What actually happens when we see something is quite different: “Look at an object: your eye is never still. It flickers, involuntarily restless, from side to side. Nor is your head still in relation to the object; every moment brings a fractional shift in its position, which results in a minuscule difference of aspect. The more you move, the bigger the shifts and differences become. If asked to, the brain can isolate a given view, frozen in time, but its experience of the world outside the eye is more like a mosaic than a perspective set up, a mosaic of multiple relationships, none of them . . . wholly fixed. Any sight is a sum of different glimpses.”

For all its abstraction, Cubism was in part a “proposition about the way we see,” about the way we actually see.

We’re glad you’re enjoying First Things

Create an account below to continue reading.

Or, subscribe for full unlimited access

 

Already a have an account? Sign In