Abstract
This paper highlights that nowadays, due to the rapid changes in conceptual art research, food can successfully become independent art object. Providing opinions of four authors, including such famous researchers as Cynthia Freeland, Blake Gopnik, William Deresiewicz, and Fabio Parasecoli, the author compares food with art through matching their functions, ways of expression, emotional background, and influence. Conclusion confirms that despite highly close and vivid connection between art and food, food cannot be considered true art object, as it has the lack of emotional and cognitive richness within the deep narrative and representational character.
Keywords: cognitive, foodism, haute cuisine.
Food as Art Object
Nowadays, the concept of art and beauty is changing rapidly. It has become not surprising today that something ugly, disgusting, shocking, and controversial is considered true art. For instance, it is appropriate to provide the thoughts of a well-known art researcher Cynthia Freeland, who mentions in her But Is It Art? that art is more than expression, as it is cognitive act, which “communicates complex thoughts” (Freeland, 2002, p.154). For Freeland, almost everything can be the object of art, including food. Analyzing emotions, which art causes in human soul, she insists that “the attractiveness of food served up in dishes decorated” (Freeland, 2002, p.129) on the picture can lead to strong emotional realization of love and pleasure. Obviously, food can definitely be the same attractive and interesting art object, catalyst of emotions, as anything else, which the viewers used to evaluate as art.
Another important point of view, which analyzes food as art object, is the article in The Washington Post entitled “The Big Debate: Can Food Be Serious Art?”. This article provides a set of arguments for and against the fact whether food is serious art or not. Food is compared with other areas of art, including music, photography, painting, and design. In fact, after reading the article, it becomes apparent that food is no less significant art object, than any picture, photo, or musical piece. Food and art have much in common, considering their way of expression, sensory pleasure, experience, goal, popularity, and attendant management. The argument for food’s ability to cause critics and disruptive attitude seems to be especially important and bright: “Does any other art form threaten its audience quite as cooking does?” (Gopnik, 2009).
Comparing the previous article with the post from The New York Times entitled “A Matter of Taste?”, it becomes obvious that it has more detailed description of what to consider art and how it can match with food. First of all, the author of “A Matter of Taste?” insists that art and food have a common issue – human senses and pleasures. Moreover, it is possible to suggest that food can be not only art object, since it is able even to replace art as such. There is the new term, so-called foodism, which reflects food as the popular direction in market industry and production, since it becomes the most important category in life. In fact, food has already ceased to be just the means to stave off hunger. People create the great business chains, based on food, as “Food, for young people now, is creativity, commerce, politics, health, almost religion” (Deresiewicz, 2012). Obviously, food is art now, since it factually matches the same qualities, which art has. However, the author points that it is important to remember that foodism cannot replace art, as food “is not narrative or representational, does not organize and express emotions” (Deresiewicz, 2012).
The last opinion, which is important to provide, is the article of professor of food studies “Is Food Art? Chefs, Creativity, and the restaurant Business?” on Huffington Post. Fabio Parasecoli makes the emphasis that food as art object should be investigated not only as products and dishes, but as the whole industry of food establishments. Food expresses the same creativity and innovations, as art does. Moreover, innovations in food industry become the true directions, trends, which are shared by chefs all over the world in the same way, as art sphere does. Food can be successfully compared with high art, since there is even the special term haute cuisine, which reflects the most creative approaches in cooking. Especially talented chefs are purely like artists, since “They are ready to show off, to shock, and to entertain” (Parasecoli, 2013). Obviously, if consider food not as the set of usual dishes, but as the highly intellectual, talented, and creative activity, it is possible to suggest that food is one of the most amazing and interesting art objects.
In fact, all four sources, which are used to describe food as art object, can be considered quite similar. All of them show that it is natural today to find food as the same reliable, creative, and interesting art object. Four different authors highlight that food require the same creativity, open-minded and talented attitude as any other usual art object. However, different articles point out slightly different accents in their understanding food. While Cynthia Freeland provides quite general image of art as the cognitive action and controversial area, where food plays the role of emotional catalyst, Gopnik in his “The Big Debate: Can Food Be Serious Art?” concludes that food is the same functional and profitable object of art, as music, photography, painting, and so on. Besides, Deresiewicz in “A Matter of Taste?” insists that despite highly expanded adoration of food and the appearance of foodism as the new art trend, food cannot be considered purely art, as it does not have the same emotional and cognitive depth. Contrast to this point, professor Parasecoli in “Is Food Art? Chefs, Creativity, and the restaurant Business?” makes the emphasis on food industry and restaurant business as the objects of art. He thinks that creative and innovative experiments of the most gifted chefs express such a new art trend as haute cuisine.
In conclusion, the author would like to conclude that today, food and food industry occur to be the center of various human talents, including creativity, lateral way of thinking, original tastes, and emotional background. In fact, the entire process of food production, including cooking, supply, organization, design, and richness of taste, can be successfully compared with art, as it has approximately the same influence on a person. However, due to quite limited emotional and cognitive spheres, food cannot be surely considered true object of art, since it has no ability to satisfy spiritual needs and mental interests, preferring sensual feeling as dominating.
References
Deresiewicz, W. (2012, October). A Matter of Taste?. The New York Times.
[On-line Newspaper] Retrieved October 26, 2012 from http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/28/opinion/sunday/how-food-replaced-art-as- high-culture.html?_r=0
Freeland, C. (2002) But Is It Art?: An Introduction to Art Theory. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Gopnik, B. (2009, September). The Big Debate: Can Food Be Serious Art? The Washington Post. [On-line Newspaper] Retrieved September 23, 2009 from http://www.washingtonpost.com/wpdyn/content/article/2009/09/22/AR2009092 203137.html
Parasecoli, F. (2013, August). Is Food Art? Chefs, Creativity, and the restaurant Business?. Huffington Post. [On-line Newspaper] Retrieved August 29, 2013 from http://www.huffingtonpost.com/fabio-parasecoli/food-art_b_3830791.html
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