There are two aspects of thing—the outward and the inward. It is purely a matter of
emphasis with me. The outward has no meaning except in so far as it helps the
inward. All true art is thus the expression of the soul. The outward forms have
value only in so far as they are the expression of the inner spirit in man. Art
of that nature has the greatest possible appeal for me. But I know that many
call themselves artists, and are recognized as such, and yet in their works
there is absolutely no trace of the soul's upward urge and unrest.
All true art must help the soul to realize its inner self. In my own case, I find that I
can do entirely without external forms in my soul's realization. I can claim,
therefore, that there is truly efficient art in my life, though you might not
see what you call works of art about me. My room may have blank walls; and I may
even dispense with the roof, so that I may gaze out at the starry heavens
overhead that stretch in an unending expanse of beauty. What conscious art of
man can give me the panoramic scenes that open out before me, when I look up to
the sky above with all its shining stars? This, however, does not mean that I
refuse to accept the value of production of arts, generally accepted as such,
but only that I personally feel how inadequate these are compared with the
eternal symbols of beauty in Nature. These productions of man's art have their
value only in. so far as they help the soul onward towards self-realization.
I see and find beauty in Truth or through Truth. All Truths, not merely true ideas, but
truthful faces, truthful pictures, or songs are highly beautiful. People
generally fail to see Beauty in Truth, the ordinary man runs away from and
becomes blind to the beauty in it. Whenever men begin to see Beauty in Truth,
then true art will arise.
To a true artist only that face is beautiful which, quite apart from its exterior, shines
with the Truth within the soul. There is ... no Beauty apart from Truth. On the
other hand, Truth may manifest itself in forms which may not be outwardly
beautiful at all. Socrates, we are told, was the most truthful man of his time,
and yet his features are said to have been the ugliest in Greece. To my mind he
was beautiful because all his life was a striving after Truth, and you may
remember that this outward form aid not prevent Phidias from appreciating the
beauty of Truth in him, though as an. artist he was accustomed to see Beauty in
outward forms also.
Truth and untruth often co-exist; good and evil are often found together. In an artist
also, not seldom, the right perception of things and the wrong co-exist. Truly
beautiful creations come when right perception is at work. If these moments are
rare in life they are also rare in art.
These beauties ('a sunset or a crescent moon that shines amid the stars at night') are
truthful, inasmuch as they make me think of the Creator at the back of them. How
else could these be beautiful, but for the Truth that is in the centre of
creation? When I admire the wonder of a sunset or the beauty of the moon, my
soul expands in worship of the Creator. I try to see Him and His mercies in all
these creations. But even the sunsets and sunrises would be mere hindrances if
they did not help me to think of Him. Anything, which is a hindrance to the
flight of the soul, is a delusion and a snare; even like the body, which often
does actually hinder you in the path of salvation.
Young India, 13-11-'24
Truth is the first thing to be sought for, and Beauty and Goodness will then be added upto you. That is what Christ really taught in the Sermon on the Mount. Jesus was, to my mind, a supreme artist because he saw and expressed Truth; and so was Muhammad, the Koran being the most perfect composition in all Arabic literature—at any rate, that is what scholars say. It is because both of them strove first for Truth that the grace of expression naturally came in and yet neither Jesus nor Muhammad wrote on art, That is the Truth and Beauty I crave for, live for, and would die for.
Young India, 20-11-'24
Here too, just as elsewhere, I must think in terms of the millions. And to the millions we cannot give that training to acquire a perception of Beauty in such a way as to see Truth in it. Show them Truth first and they will see Beauty afterwards.... Whatever can be useful to . . . starving millions is beautiful to my mind. Let us give today first the vital things of life and all the graces and ornaments of life will follow.
Young India, 20-11-'24
True art takes note not merely of form but also of what lies behind. There is an art that kills and an art that gives life. True art must be evidence of happiness, contentment and purity of its authors.
Young India, 11-8-'21
We have somehow accustomed ourselves to the belief that art is independent of the purity of private life. I can say with all the experience at my command that nothing could be more untrue. As I am nearing the end of my earthly life I can say that purity of life is the highest and truest art. The art of producing good music from a cultivated voice can be achieved by many, but the art of producing that music from the harmony of a pure life is achieved very rarely.
Harijan, 19-2-'38