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(1994) The question of hermeneutics, Dordrecht, Springer.

The enigma of art

phenomenology of aesthetic experience or archaeology of the work of art?

Arion Lothar Kelkel

pp. 427-450

In 1905 Wilhelm Dilthey published his famous Das Erlebnis and die Dichtung (Experience and Poetry) in which he tried to show the intrinsic link between lived experience and art, literature and poetry in particular. With Goethe in mind, Dilthey saw poetry as the representation and expression of life. Art, he asserts, is thoroughly "Erlebniskunst" (art of experience).1 But what does this concept in all its ambiguity mean? How can we understand a claim so reminiscent of a romantic conception of art, that is, the unconscious expression of genius? Has art never really been anything more than the authentic expression of the intensity of the artist's inner life or of the aesthetic pleasure which art-lovers experience? Isn't the work of art then, in the last analysis, simply the produced or perceived object of a single subjective experience? Or could it be something more, its essence originating elsewhere, beyond the closed sphere of human subjectivity in which artistic creation or aesthetic pleasure is lived? Does art not radically transcend all subjectivity and all lived experience, all Kunsterlebnis (experience of art)? Art seems threatened with its demise when reduced to a lived aesthetic, but has some chance of survival when restored to its proper reign.2

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-011-1160-7_18

Full citation:

Kelkel, A.L. (1994)., The enigma of art: phenomenology of aesthetic experience or archaeology of the work of art?, in T. J. Stapleton (ed.), The question of hermeneutics, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 427-450.

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