The article that I decided to read was called “The Smart Set: Can Food Be Art?” by Sara Davis who is a marketer for a university press and a writer in food in art and literature at Scenes of Eating. The basis of her article is discussing how she believes that asking the question of “is food art?” is the wrong question to be asking. What she thinks the real questions to be asked are: can food be crafted with artistry? can food convey meaning? can food be a vehicle or inspiration for some of humanity’s better qualities? should food be taken seriously as a subject of study? She went on to discuss both sides of the argument by pointing out such terms as “ear candy” and “eye candy” being invented for a reason. She talks about how food can not be considered art is one in the same with speaking about how music then can not really be considered art either. She states that William Deresiewicz (a writer who wrote and article shortly before hers about how food isn’t art) argues that “food is not art on the premise that art must be narrative or at least symbolic — which would also designate Imagist poetry, abstract expressionism, and numerous musical compositions as mere craftsmanship.” She goes on to counteract that argument by saying that food is an intersection of human relationships, and that “Memory, allusions, personal and cultural relationships, and aesthetic judgments are meaningful associations that anyone can experience, though of course we don’t all experience them the same way.” I went on to read Deresiewicz’s article and the quote that he made that stuck out so clearly to me was this: A tall, green-eyed astronaut fell in love with a lawyer who recently lost her job: when you can cook me a dish that says that—and tell me how you’d change it if the astronaut were dark instead of fair—then we can talk about food as a narrative medium…food evokes emotions: but so do sunsets, or train sounds, or the cigarette smell of a bar. Food embodies ideas: but so does everything that’s made. To evoke is not to represent, and to embody is not to express.”
What I see in reading both of these articles and comparing it to the essay that we read this week is that the argument is that food is a craftsmanship, but not an art. Tefler towards the end of the essay goes on to say that “art is original creation, whereas craft is carrying out an instruction, following a convention or employing a technique”(15) and then goes on to give the example that the architect of a building is the artist, but the masons and wood carvers are the craftsmen. In that sense it would seem that food is nothing more than craftsmanship, and goes with what Deresiewicz would constitute as being art. To him it must tell a story, represent something and be able to evoke and express more than emotions. Telfer does make note, however, of how cookery can be constituted as a performance and performance may be an art. Not only that, but that the person who is making the food could be considered a performance artist because they are interpreters of recipes as well as creators. This goes with what Davis was arguing in asking the questions can food be crafted with artistry? can food convey meaning? can food be a vehicle or inspiration for some of humanity’s better qualities? should food be taken seriously as a subject of study?
Personally, I think that if a chef wanted to tell a story of a tall, green-eyed astronaut who fell in love with a lawyer who recently lost her job, he or she could. Food can be a form of expression for some professional chefs out there They want to use food as a narrative medium for not only the pallet, but also for the mind. Another point that Davis makes is that even in following a recipe, or even not, no two dishes will be alike. The strawberries you get in strawberry season to make that strawberry short cake is not going to be the same as if you get them in the off season. Is what people like to constitute as an art form not one in the same? No matter how hard any of us will try, we will never be able to make a Jackson Pollock drip painting the way that he did. Not even he could replicate the same painting in his own style, and I think that food follows those same conventions.
Soul Food. (n.d.). The American Scholar:. Retrieved October 26, 2014, from http://theamericanscholar.org/soul-food/#.VE3asUtH1FI
The Smart Set: Can Food Be Art? – December 6, 2012. (n.d.). The Smart Set: Can Food Be Art? – December 6, 2012. Retrieved October 26, 2014, from http://www.thesmartset.com/article/article12061201.aspx