“ A work of art that wants the right form is for that very reason no right or true work of art: and it is a bad way of excusing an artist, to say that the content of his works is good and even excellent, though they want the right form. ”
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Science of Logic (1816). copy citation
Author | Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel |
---|---|
Source | Science of Logic |
Topic | excuse art |
Date | 1816 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | Translated by William Wallace |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/55108/55108-h/55108-h.htm |
Context
“but want of form in this case is the same as bad form, and means the defect of the right form, not the absence of all form whatever. So far is this right form from being unaffected by the content that it is rather the content itself. A work of art that wants the right form is for that very reason no right or true work of art: and it is a bad way of excusing an artist, to say that the content of his works is good and even excellent, though they want the right form. Real works of art are those where content and form exhibit a thorough identity. The content of the Iliad, it may be said, is the Trojan war, and especially the wrath of Achilles. In that we have everything, and yet very little after all;”
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