英文摘要 |
"This paper investigates how ancient Chinese mountain-water-paintings actually work and aesthetically appropriate ways of responding to such pictures. Since antiquity, western aesthetics, which has now become global in scope, has focused on questions concerning the symbolic depiction of real or imaginary objects, visual perception, personal expression, and hermeneutics of the image. In order to complete these perspectives, this paper is concerned with the ethical signification of works of art, as well as with the ethical dimension of aesthetic behavior. What is argued for is an“aesthetics of transformation”. Broadly speaking, we do not only“dwell”and“live”in the realm of the imaginary; we also“live”in artistic images. Beyond mere contemplation, we also engage with artistic images in existentially decisive ways. The aesthetic experience of ancient Chinese mountain-water-painting, in particular, is apt to disclose to the spectator situational access to the real world he or she is actually living in. The real-life situation referred to by a picture should not be conflated with some purely imaginary world perceived in the picture, as such a world would necessarily be restricted to the deceptive and fictitious presence and validity of a mere iconic“as if”. By examining the aesthetic practices of pre-modern China, combined with a critical study of art-theoretical text sources, this article makes the following claim: an eminent mountain-water-picture actually leads the spectator back into his or her own lifeworld, transforming mere intuition or aesthetic contemplation into the existentially relevant disposition of“dwelling”. The ethical result of aesthetics thus consists in a life relation to the surrounding world. This disposition of“being-towards-the-world”is enacted by the spectators at the very site and in the very situation of their looking at the picture. A detailed analysis of the peculiar structure and characteristics of the image, the act of painting, as well as ways and goals of aesthetic contemplation, supports discussion concerning what exactly is meant by such an existential“dwelling in the image”." |