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Awaken the I of Beauty

I can still recall the emotional overload I felt when I laid eyes on the first gold and stainless Gucci chronograph watch.  The undulating Italian lines of the band were prominently matched against a sleek, sophisticated expression of stopwatch dials and firm masculine design of the face.  It made me feel something profound, simultaneously a deep yearning and affirmation that yes, this was what life can be like.  It presented me with a tangible vision of beauty drawing me inexorably forth into a world where I could stretch to see more, feel more, live more, experience more.  It was absolutely beautiful.  And I had to have it.  I was twelve years old.

Yet that glimpse of beauty held me tight, recurring again and again – the heart-stopping lines of the 1961 Jaguar XKE, the genius of the statue of David at the Accademia in Florence, the grandeur of Lake Tahoe’s Emerald Bay on a crisp winter morning, the tenderness of Lakme’s Flower Duet, the ecstasy of a dozen unfolding layers of a 1989 Domaine Leroy “Les Beaux Monts” as it unfolds on the tongue.  And when I first laid eyes on the woman who would become my wife, words just simply fail.  Every experience a new world opened unto me.  Each immersing me in the majesty of the mystery, drawing me ever forward, pulling me harder as I moved into adulthood, stretching, stretching, ever stretching…

After many years beauty has become a daily perception, art a daily creation.

My closet is carefully organized so that every garment can be seen, a reminder that each morning I am given the opportunity to create, to express a view that this is how the world should be.  Not for everyone, not for many, but for me.  This is what is attractive to me, and this is what is attractive about me.  The masculine impulse to view, and the feminine impulse to show, integrated in the simple act of getting dressed.  When I dress, I can be an artist.  When I cook, I can be an artist.  When I write, I can be an artist.  When I design, I can be an artist.  The ancient act of artistic representation bringing my inside world of tastes, values and dreams to life as a tangible expression in the world I share with others.  My life is my artwork, and the richness of my experience, the depth of my gratitude, the multi-hued textures unfolding on the palette of my spirit just keep getting richer and deeper and more ecstatic.

I believe that this is what happens as we awaken the eye of beauty.  That this is what art does to us.  This is what aesthetics reveals to us.  As Roger Scruton notes, “beauty makes a claim on us: it is a call to renounce our narcissism and look with reverence on the world.”  Reverence, indeed.

Are you in touch with your I of beauty?

The team at Integral Life is committed to bringing aesthetics to the forefront of the deep lifestyle experience (oh yes, the website is on the list).  Look around you: you’re immersed in a world of almost overwhelming aesthetic richness, from food to film, music to art, drama to design, architecture to websites, each giving special access to a new world.  And as art becomes ubiquitous how can we not become numb to the overload, where every next expression has to become louder, more shocking, more ironic to shake us into even noticing?  What if we could refine our own aesthetic sensitivity to the point that we let go of our “addiction to effect,” the provocative surfaces that satisfy our pleasure-needs by avoiding our reason, values and discernment?  What if we started to distinguish deeply between kitsch and quality, where our aesthetic intelligence expands and matures in all of the media-specific ways it is called to engage in a life of deepening beauty? 

Let us make a stand: A maturing capacity for aesthetic engagement is a necessity for living a balanced, Integral Life.

This new project aims to help us cultivate and refine our aesthetic capacities.  We begin with art, where every month we publish an art gallery from a well-known or up-and-coming artist.  This month’s inaugural gallery presents painter Bryce Widom’s 1000 Views of God, presented nearby.  We’re also thrilled to welcome Dr. Michael Schwartz as Integral Life’s new Aesthetics Editor.   Michael is a Professor of Philosophy of Art in the Department of Fine Arts at Augusta State University, where he teaches, lectures, and publishes in the areas of art history, integral aesthetics, education theory, and Continental philosophy.  We hope that these experiences will serve you well, presented in a way to expand your sense of integral semiotics (interpreting the artifacts themselves) and integral pragmatics (analyzing the impact of the artifact on the people around it).

So ask yourself: when’s the last time you got swept away by the beauty around you?

It’s there, right now.  It can change your life.  Look around you. The design of a bookcase. The hue of your shoes, the artwork on your wall, the print and texture of your shirt.  Listen, is there music playing? All of this beauty, all of this art, is opening new worlds to your senses, and your ability to perceive and appreciate beauty more deeply is intrinsic to your ability to just inhale more life in every moment.  And in every breath, inhaling to fullness, exhaling to freedom, staying still with what is, giving birth to what’s next, each moment the ultimate creative act.  And you, the artist, and your life, the artwork.

Thank you for making my world more beautiful with your attention and intention.

Warm loving regards,

 

Robb Smith

P.S.  We’re pleased to announce that at Integral Spiritual Experience we will be offering a contemplative art gallery designed to enhance the aesthetic richness of your experience.  If you are not yet registered to attend, please join us – we just opened up our final 50 spots!


Call For Submissions: If you would like your own art to be considered for a future Integral Life Art Gallery, please submit samples of your work as well as a brief description of how the Integral vision has informed your process to Angie at: art (at) integrallife (dot) com

 

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3 faces of beauty

huh. . . reflecting a moment on your thoughts and experience with beauty, Robb, and was struck (can't quite tell yet if it's an ah-ah, or maybe it's more like a Homer Simpson 'duh' moment ) by the 3 faces - or 4 quadrants -  of beauty. That is, as an inner experience (UL) of a state shift (UR) provoked or inspired through relationship / communion (LL) with some form in the material world (R-Q's).

huh. . . well, so what, I ask? (I dunno, I haven't thought of that yet!). okay, I'll take a stab. The capacity of beauty to inspire awe in people such that they are rendered speechless (which you experience with your wife, and I can see why!) may have a function in the Goodness axis of the "the good, the true, and the beautiful". Let's see, awe seems to interrupt our usual programming (biases, scripts, etc), which would then seem to allow for a moment of potential for something new to emerge. So when groups aren't being 'good' with each other, and their scripts and biases are contributing to this, (like in protracted ethnic conflict) then the moment of awe that beauty induces may disrupt the script enough to allow a new dynamic to emerge in or between the groups. Of course, oopsie, this could backfire, too (the case of Helen of Troy comes to mind).

 

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Intention and Beauty

There must be an intention within to be able to cultivate the I of Beauty.  Some of us artists have an inate tendency toward viewing the world around them with an awakened I.  Others have not developed this I of Beauty as much, but sometimes are hit over the head by it dispite this unawakened state.  The trouble is, there can be so much beauty in the simplest of objects, people, animals, and envioronment that we miss it on a daily basis.  Beauty for me was when my new daughter was laid in my arms for the first time. Her tiny eyelashes, perfect little feet and hands, perfect lips that searched for nourishment from me, was the most beautiful scene for me.  Today, I see it revealed in my Grandchildren, over and over in new combinations, with new wisdom from them, and I am filled every time by the perfection of every moment I am with them.

We make choices.  We choose to see or stay blind to the beauty around us. Cultivating the I of beauty is a really good idea. We miss the perfection of our lives all the time. It is not only beauty in Art we have not cultivated. We need to see it in the situations of life that move us forward, or that stop us in our tracks and cause us to evaluate what has to change. Don't get me wrong. As an artist myself, I appreciate new visions of beauty from other artists. It stretches us to see objects from another's viewpoint. We deffinately need to develop discernment for beauty, but not just in "Art."  I am about to start my own Life Coaching business. I am going to use color and Mural art in my offices, and Meditation/Reiki room. Color and visual cues promote calmness, serenity, thinking, contemplation, and idea building. I will be using it to support my personal growth, and that of others around me.

I appologize if I have not related this topic in the language of Integral Theory. I am new to this and sit on the fringes watching the work that you all ar doing.  My boyfriend is in the Masters of Integral Theory program at JFKU. I pointed him in that direction earlier this year because Spirit lead me to you guys. I will be getting this down by osmosis I guess.

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Beauty

This was beautifully written Rob. Thank you. I'm reminded of how inspired I was when I experienced an exihibit of Bill Freeland at Swarthmore College. He constructs sculptors of materials such as wood, rock, metal, concrete, straw and the like. After the exhibit I began to see all objects, including man made objects as works of art. I read about the artist at a later time and he said that this is the intent of his work.

May all beings experience beauty.

Stan