Beauty between Space, Place, and Landscape
Beauty between Space, Place, and Landscape
Recovering the Substantive and Normative Character of Beauty
Author(s): Paolo FuriaSubject(s): Fine Arts / Performing Arts, Architecture, Human Geography, Environmental Geography, Aesthetics, Sociology of Culture
Published by: Spoločnosť pre estetiku na Slovensku a Inštitút estetiky a umeleckej kultúry Filozofickej fakulty Prešovskej univerzity v Prešove
Keywords: Beauty; Place; Space; Landscape; Standardization
Summary/Abstract: Notions of space and place are often used interchangeably in everyday speech, but they are distinguished both conceptually and historically. When put in relation to space and place, beauty reveals all its vitality and ties to socio-political issues, like: why do we consider a place beautiful and another place ugly? How do taste judgments about places influence planning, tourism, heritage policies, urban, and landscape architecture? I will develop my argument in four points. First, I will shortly pin down the main tenets of a concept of beauty that is inherently spatial, by rephrasing Roger Scruton’s insights on the beautiful and Ed Casey’s notion of ‘implacement’. Second, I will address the interconnection between the modern emergence of a quantitative and objectivist concept of space and a non-relational idea of beauty. Third, I will expose the relationship between the concept of place, idiographic and qualitative, and the emergence of a site-specific, phenomenologically based concept of beauty. In conclusion, I will show how non-relational conceptions of beauty risk to colonize aesthetic experience and I will take a stand for a relational conception of beauty against the risk of standardization of both landscape appreciation and planning.
Journal: ESPES
- Issue Year: 12/2023
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 60-74
- Page Count: 15
- Language: English