Is
it possible for a Yogi to become an artist or can an artist be a Yogi?
What is the relation of Art to Yoga?
The two are not so antagonistic as you seem to think. There is nothing
to prevent a Yogi from being an artist or an artist from being a Yogi.
But when you are in Yoga, there is a profound change in the values of
things, of Art as of everything else; you begin to look at Art from
a very different standpoint. It is no longer the one supreme all-engrossing
thing for you, no longer an end in itself. Art is a means, not an end;
it is a means of expression. And the artist then ceases too to believe
that the whole world turns round what he is doing or that his work is
the most important thing that has ever been done. His personality counts
no longer; he is an agent, a channel, his art a means of expressing
his relations with the Divine. He uses it for that purpose as he might
have used any other means that were part of the powers of his nature.
But does an artist feel at all any impulse
to create once he takes up Yoga?
Why should he not have the impulse? He can express his relation with
the Divine in the way of his art, exactly as he would in any other.
If you want art to be the true and highest art, it must be the expression
of a divine world brought down into this material world. All true artists
have some feeling of this kind, some sense that they are intermediaries
between a higher world and this physical existence. If you consider
it in this light, Art is not very different from Yoga. But most often
the artist has only an indefinite feeling, he has not the knowledge.
Still, I knew some who had it; they worked consciously at their art
with the knowledge. In their creation they did not put forward their
personality as the most important factor; they considered their work
as an offering to the Divine, they tried to express by it their relation
with the Divine.
This was the avowed function of Art in the Middle Ages. The "primitive"
painters, the builders of cathedrals in Mediaeval Europe had no other
conception of art. In India all her architecture, her sculpture, her
painting have proceeded from this source and were inspired by this ideal.
The songs of Mirabai and the music of Thyagaraja, the poetic literature
built up by her devotees, saints and Rishis rank among the world's greatest
artistic possessions.
But does the work of an artist improve
if he does Yoga?
The discipline of Art has at its centre the same principle as the discipline
of Yoga. In both the aim is to become more and more conscious; in both
you have to learn to see and feel something that is beyond the ordinary
vision and feeling, to go within and bring out from there deeper things.
Painters have to follow a discipline for the growth of the consciousness
of their eyes, which in itself is almost a yoga. If they are true artists
and try to see beyond and use their art for the expression of the inner
world, they grow in consciousness by this concentration, which is not
other than the consciousness given by Yoga. Why then should not Yogic
consciousness be a help to artistic creation? I have known some who
had very little training and skill and yet through Yoga acquired a fine
capacity in writing and painting. Two examples I can cite to you. One
was a girl who had no education whatever; she was a dancer and danced
tolerably well. After she took up Yoga, she danced only for friends;
but her dancing attained a depth of expression and beauty which was
not there before. And although she was not educated, she began to write
wonderful things; for she had visions and expressed them in the most
beautiful language. But there were ups and downs in her Yoga, and when
she was in a good condition, she wrote beautifully, but otherwise was
quite dull and stupid and uncreative. The second case is that of a boy
who had studied art, but only just a little. The son of a diplomat,
he had been trained for the diplomatic career; but he lived in luxury
and his studies did not go far. Yet as soon as he took up Yoga, he began
to produce inspired drawings which carried the expression of an inner
knowledge and were symbolic in character; in the end he became a great
artist.
Why are artists generally irregular in their
conduct and loose in character?
When they are so, it is because they live usually in the vital plane,
and the vital part in them is extremely sensitive to the forces of that
world and receives from it all kinds of impressions and impulsions over
which they have no controlling power. And often too they are very free
in their minds and do not believe in the petty social conventions and
moralities that govern the life of ordinary people. They do not feel
bound by the customary rules of conduct and have not yet found an inner
law that would replace them. As there is nothing to check the movements
of their desire-being, they lead easily a life of liberty or license.
But this does not happen with all. I lived ten years among artists and
found many of them to be bourgeois to the core; they were married and
settled, good fathers, good husbands, and lived up to the most strict
moral ideas of what should and what should not be done.
There is one way in which Yoga may stop the artist's productive impulse.
If the origin of his art is in the vital world, once he becomes a Yogi
he will lose his inspiration or, rather, the source from which his inspiration
used to come will inspire him no more, for then the vital world appears
in its true light; it puts on its true value, and that value is very
relative. Most of those who call themselves artists draw their inspiration
from the vital world only; and it carries in it no high or great significance.
But when a true artist, one who looks for his creative source to a higher
world, turns to Yoga, he will find that his inspiration becomes more
direct and powerful and his expression clearer and deeper. Of those
who possess a true value the power of Yoga will increase the value,
but from one who has only some false appearance of art even that appearance
will vanish or else lose its appeal. To one earnest in Yoga, the first
simple truth that strikes his opening vision is that what he does is
a very relative thing in comparison with the universal manifestation,
the universal movement. But an artist is usually vain and looks on himself
as a highly important personage, a kind of demigod in the human world.
Many artists say that if they did not believe what they do to be of
a supreme importance, they would not be able to do it. But I have known
some whose inspiration was from a higher world and yet they did not
believe that what they did was of so immense an importance. That is
nearer the spirit of true art. If a man is truly led to express himself
in art, it is the way the Divine has chosen to manifest in him, and
then by Yoga his art will gain and not lose. But there is all the question:
is the artist appointed by the Divine or self-appointed?
|
|
(Ref: Collected Works
of the Mother, Vol 3, P 104-107)
|
|
*
|
|
As for Leonard
de Vinci, Michel Ange (Mother spelled this name in French) and Raphael,
I cannot put them on the same level. The two first are far greater than
the last. They both belong to the world of creative force, Leonard with
more subtlety and quiet, deep vision and purity, Michel Ange with more
force and power especially in his sculptures which are incomparably
magnificent. Raphael is more mental and superficial.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
In the physical
world, of all things it is beauty that expresses best the Divine. The
physical world is the world of form and the perfection of form is beauty.
Beauty interprets, expresses, manifests the Eternal. Its role is to
put all manifested nature in contact with the Eternal through the perfection
of form, through harmony and a sense of the ideal which uplifts and
leads towards something higher.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
Supreme art expresses the Beauty
which puts you in contact with the Divine Harmony.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
If art is to manifest something
in the divine Life, there also a vast and luminous peace must express
itself.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
Beauty is joyous offering of Nature.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
True art means the expression of
beauty in the material world. In a world wholly converted, that is to
say, expressing integrally the divine reality, art must serve as the
revealer and teacher of this divine beauty in life.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
In art also we must remain on the
heights.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
Good taste is the aristocracy of
art.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
The true painting aims at creating
something more beautiful than the ordinary reality.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
You cannot learn to be an artist
with tricks - it is as if you wanted to realise the Divine by imitating
religious ceremonies.
Above all and always the most important thing is Sincerity.
Develop your inner being - find your soul, and at the same time you
will find the true artistic expression.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
Modern art is an
experiment, still very clumsy, to express something other than the simple
physical appearance. The idea is good - but naturally the value of the
expression depends entirely on the value of that which wants to express
itself.
At present almost all artists live in the lowest vital and mental consciousness
and the results are quite poor.
Try to develop your consciousness, endeavour to discover your soul,
and then what you will do will be truly interesting.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
Artistic sensibility: a powerful
aid to fight ugliness.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
All and everything can be artistic
if it is done in an artistic spirit.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
Beauty is a great power.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
Spiritual beauty has a contagious
power.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
Beauty does not get its full power
except when it is surrendered to the Divine.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
The beauty of tomorrow: beauty
which will express the Divine Power.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
The beauty of tomorrow manifesting
the Divine: a beauty that exists only by the Divine and for the Divine.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
Beauty is not sufficient in itself,
it wants to become divine.
|
| |
|
*
|
| |
Pure sense of beauty can be acquired
only through a great purification.
|
| |
|
*
|
|
|
The ideal of Beauty moves towards
its infinite goal.
|