Ever since antiquity, philosophers have pointed to
the supposed 'divine' character of music, and following
Pythagoras's discovery of the mathematical basis of the
musical scale, have posited a link between the
mathematical order of music, the physical order of the
universe and the moral order of human society. Both
practising artists and moralists came to believe that,
by demonstrating an analogy with music, they could claim
a dignity and value for their art - whether painting,
architecture or sculpture - that it might otherwise
lack. Why was this so? What was the point of such
analogies? What advantages was music believed to enjoy,
by comparison with the visual arts? Artists and critics
frequently cited music as a manifestation of God-given
order to which visual arts should aspire. But on what
evidence was this belief in the inherently systematic
character of music based; and in practical terms, how
might visual art seek to emulate any such divine order
or system? In what way might Gothic cathedrals have been
based on systems of harmonic proportion? How did
Poussin's search for a compositional principle derived
from antique 'modes' in music resemble, or differ from,
Palladio's attempts to embody musical 'harmonies' in
architecture? And how did each artist conceive of the
sense and value of such analogies? Systematic answers to
such questions have hitherto been lacking, and, for the
first time, Professor Vergo makes direct and detailed
comparisons between musical and pictorial practices in
the long period covered by the book. He also provides a
broad analysis of changes in the character of the
analogies drawn at different times, using in his
analyses critical and philosophical sources as well as
evidence about artistic and musical practice. That
Divine Order will be of interest to art historians and
musicologists, to practising artists and musicians, to
students of cultural history and those concerned with
aesthetic theory and interdisciplinary studies.
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