INA JARDIOLIN
Face in the Phase of the Apocalypse
acrylic and trash on canvas
To say art is to spread messages and start conversations is idealistic. It’s an admirable way of thinking, but this is the way artists and people within art circles think. One’s own perception is not enough. The truth comes from the full picture. But what does art do for the everyone else outside the circle of the arts?
To most people in its most successful forms art brings inspiration, beauty and/or happiness. In recent times cheap and efficient means of production reign. Sky scrapers and beige boxes are efficient buildings, but the human brain wasn’t made for boxes and monotony. Studies show these bland surrounding make people unhappy while aesthetics pleasing surroundings have positive effects not just on mood but wellness and cognitive function. In another study people in a well decorated hospital wing healed 2 days faster than the ones an ugly one.
People are bombarded with bad news: climate change, political unrest, crime, etc. Now there is a pandemic. In the midst of the quarantine people have thrown their time in to movies, theater, and invested in making their homes more beautiful and lush with plants because people need their spaces to be comforting. In these uncertain times people want to be distracted and comforted.
Where does art’s purpose lie? To say that there is only one way to create comforting and beautiful art is like saying there is only one universally good flavor of ice cream in the world. What is comforting to one person could be unsettling to the next. Some people find beauty in death, others in the intellectual, others in muted colors.
Art and artists are both mirrors and innovators. We take in the world around us and spit out a version if it through filtered through our own lens. We put our art out in to the world to send a specific message, but the audience will always view it with their own lenses and make their own interpretations. To say art has a single purpose and a single successful way of being is an erroneous statement.
Art is as versatile as humans in their function, purpose, and looks and everyone is free to come up with their own definitions of what art is and can be.