Clive Bell

Clive Bell
Arthur Clive Heward Bellwas an English art critic, associated with formalism and the Bloomsbury Group. Bell died, aged 83, in London...
NationalityEnglish
ProfessionCritic
Date of Birth16 September 1881
art reality details
Detail is the heart of realism, and the fatty degeneration of art.
art mean feelings
We have no other means of recognising a work of art than our feeling for it.
art quality degrees
There must be some one quality without which a work of art cannot exist; possessing which, in the least degree, no work is altogether worthless.
art men two
Art and religion are, then, two roads by which men escape from circumstance to ecstacy.
beautiful art mean
We all agree now - by 'we' I mean intelligent people under sixty - that a work of art is like a rose. A rose is not beautiful because it is like something else. Neither is a work of art. Roses and works of art are beautiful in themselves.
art men occupation
Art and relligion are not professions: they are not occupations for which men can be paid. The artist and the saint do what they have to do, not to make a living, but in obedience to some mysterious necessity. They do not product to live - they live to produce.
art people peculiar
All sensitive people agree that there is a peculiar emotion provoked by works of art.
appreciation art ideas
The representative element in a work of art may or may not be harmful, but it is always irrelevant. For to appreciate a work of art, we must bring with us nothing from life, no knowledge of its affairs and ideas, no familiarity with its emotions.
art tools unattractive
Let the artist have just enough to eat, and the tools of this trade: ask nothing of him. Materially make the life of the artist sufficiently miserable to be unattractive, and no-one will take to art save those in whom the divine daemon is absolute.
art peculiar emotion
The starting-point for all systems of aesthetics must be the personal experience of a peculiar emotion. The objects that provoke this emotion we call works of art.
art mark appeals
It is the mark of great art that its appeal is universal and eternal.
art moving color
What quality is shared by all objects that provoke our aesthetic emotions? Only one answer seems possible— significant form. In each, lines and colors combined in a particular way; certain forms and relations of forms, stir our aesthetic emotions. These relations and combinations of lines and colors, these aesthetically moving forms, I call ‘Significant Form’; and ‘Significant Form’ is the one quality common to all works of visual art.
art air rose
A rose is the visible result of an infinitude of complicated goings on in the bosom of the earth and in the air above, and similarly a work of art is the product of strange activities in the human mind.
art world emotion
The forms of art are inexhaustible; but all lead by the same road of aesthetic emotion to the same world of aesthetic ecstasy.