Tolstoy, Leo, graf, 1828-1910.

What is art? / Leo Tolstoy ; translated by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky. - London ; New York : Penguin Books, 1995. - [xxvi], 201 p. ; 20 cm. - Penguin classics . - Penguin classics. .

Includes bibliographical references (p. xxv-[xxvi]).

During the decades of his world fame as sage and preacher as well as author of War and Peace and Anna Karenin, Tolstoy wrote prolifically in a series of essays and polemics on issues of morality, social justice and religion. These culminated in What is Art?, published in 1898. Although Tolstoy perceived the question of art to be a religious one, he considered and rejected the idea that art reveals and reinvents through beauty. The works of Dante, Michelangelo, Shakespeare, Beethoven, Baudelaire and even his own novels are condemned in the course of Tolstoy's impassioned and iconoclastic redefinition of art as a force for good, for the progress and improvement of mankind. In his illuminating preface Richard Pevear considers What is Art? in relation to the problems of faith and doubt, and the spiritual anguish and fear of death which preoccupied Tolstoy in the last decades of his life.

0140446427 (pbk.) 9780140446425 (pbk.)

96171654

GB95-88111


Arts--Philosophy.
Arts and morals.

Visual arts

BH39 / .T62413 1995 N70 / .T722 1995

700/.1 709