Available Formats
Artistic Creation: A Phenomenological Account
By (Author) Jeff Mitscherling
By (author) Paul Fairfield
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
2nd July 2021
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
The arts: general topics
Theory of music and musicology
153.35
Paperback
192
Width 153mm, Height 220mm, Spine 13mm
268g
Artistic creation has proven remarkably resistant to philosophical analysis. Artists have long struggled to explain how they do what they do, and philosophers have struggled along with them. This study does not attempt to offer a comprehensive account of all creativity or all art. Instead it tries to identify an essential feature of an activity that has been cloaked in mystery for as long as history records. Jeff Mitscherling and Paul Fairfield argue that the process by which art is created has a good deal in common with the experience of the audience of a work, and that both experiences may be described phenomenologically in ways that show surprising affinities with what artists themselves often report.
Relying on the accounts of various artists as well as on the resources of ancient and contemporary philosophy, this welcome study develops a phenomenologically oriented account of artistic creation, at the center of which lies the concept of intentionality. It presents the model of call and response and on such a basis argues that tracking intentionality, which is not of our own making, constitutes the core of artistic creation. Clearly written and well argued, this inspiring study is a pleasure to read. Avoiding technical jargon, this book addresses a broad audience and it will appeal to anyone with an interest in the fundamental questions that concern artistic creativity. -- Saulius Geniusas, Husserl Archiv Kln
Mitscherling and Fairfield present an innovative and gripping analysis of intentionality, arguing that it is key for creativity and artistic production. Dismissive of the idea that creation comes from nothing or out of nowhere, the philosophers develop a rich notion of noticing and following what is objectively given in the world, culture, and others in order to show how humans imaginatively and artistically bring forward novel, creative works. Drawing from the experience and testimony of artists, poets, musicians and writers, they make a compelling case for the source of creativity lying in the turning of our conscious attention to what is already calling or appealing to us, to what is already at work in us. This engaging book with its inviting writing style is a masterful exploration of one of humanitys richest capabilities. -- Antonio Calcagno, King's University College at Western University
Jeff Mitscherling is professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Guelph.
Paul Fairfield is professor of philosophy at Queens University at Kingston.