Zen Buddhism And Its Relationship
to Elements of Eastern And Western Arts
Fredric Lieberman
TABLE of CONTENTS
I. Basic Principles of Zen
ZEN IN CHINA shared much with the Taoism of Lao-tzu and Chuang-tzu,
so much that it is difficult to determine how much of Zen has Buddhist
origins, how much Taoist. It is important to remember, in this connection,
that we are speaking of the so-called "philosophical" Taoism and Zen,
as opposed to the later "degenerate Taoism" and "institutionalized Zen"
of more recent times.
The basic premise that the highest truth, or first principle, or Tao,
is not expressible in words or conceivable through logical thought is
common to both Taoism and Zen. Both hold, moreover, that an intuitive
understanding of the first principle is possible, and this is called
enlightenment. The enlightened Taoist sage is considered to have gained
some special knowledge, coupled with arcane skills, and thus becomes
somehow removed from the world, but the Zen Master gains nothing other
than the realization that there is nothing to gain, and is thus more
than ever in the world.
Whereas Lao-tzu poetically says "The Tao that can be named is not the
real (eternal) Tao," the Zen Master takes this for granted; if questioned
on the subject his answer will most likely be a non sequitur, or he
might scream "kwatz!" or strike the disciple. This is not Taoistic quietism
(wu-wei) but action where words will not do. The effect is to force
the student back into his own mind, rather than to foster a dependence
on teachers.
Enlightenment consists in realizing that Buddha-nature exists in everything
and everyone. "See into your own mind" and you will find the Buddha-nature
that has been there all along. The historical Buddha is no greater or
less than the lowest sentient being--all share in Buddha-nature. Scriptures
are useless, ritual leads nowhere. Enlightenment is possible for everyone:
the illiterate can achieve the same experience as the learned scholar.
Eternity is here and now. One need not seek to learn something new,
just realize what is already present.
Buddha-nature is not metaphysical, not something apart from ourselves.
There is nothing to gain from enlightenment. We realize that there is
nothing to realize. Some Zen scholars have been more adamant on this
point than others. Suzuki has said: "Before Zen men are men and mountains
are mountains; during Zen study things become confused; after enlightenment
men are men and mountains are mountains, only one's feet are a little
off the ground." Other scholars hold that there is nothing at all: we
have always been enlightened, and will forever be deluded; Zen enlightenment
consists only in this realization. (Fung 1952:II, 400).
To pass from delusion to enlightenment means to leave one's mortal
humanity behind and enter sagehood. The life of the sage, however, .
. . is no different from that of ordinary men, for "the ordinary mind
is the Tao," and the sage's mind is the ordinary mind. ( Fung 1952:II,402-403).
Buddha-nature lies in the fact of being, not outside it. As Blyth says
(1960a:27): "the -ite is bliss. There is no bliss in anything infinite
or finite. Iteness only is bliss." The universe is an indeterminate,
constantly changing state of iteness. Being and non-being merge. Opposites
share Buddha-nature, differ in their individual essences or spirits.
According to both Zen and Taoism, the attempted control of nature by
man is at once absurd and useless. The history of Western society and
its technology has been the story of man's long struggle to control
nature. The Taoist would say: act like water, through yielding is strength.
When dealing with men rather than nature, the Taoist would counsel that,
after recognizing the inherent power of yielding, one may also use strength
if the particular situation warrants it. The Zen master merely says:
act and don't worry about it; what you do may be right or wrong, neither
is bad. That is, from the universal point of view there is no right
and wrong: these are values superimposed by society--the universe makes
no distinctions or categories. This raises the delicate question or
moral responsibility, but it should be noted that the Zen adept strives
to fulfill the "Four Great Vows" in which it is stated: "I vow to save
all sentient beings." Compassion is also part of Zen.
Of course there is more to Zen than this, but these few ideas should
suffice as background for the following discussion of Zen and the Arts.
II. Zen and the Arts
Many scholars have ventured general comparisons of Eastern and Western
Art. Suzuki (1957:30) suggests that Oriental art depicts spirit, while
Western art depicts form. Watts (1957:174) holds that the West sees
and depicts nature in terms of man-made symmetries and super imposed
forms, squeezing nature to fit his own ideas, while the East accepts
the object as is, and presents it for what it is, not what the artist
thinks it means. Gulick puts it this way:
Oriental artists are not interested in a photographic representation
of an object but in interpreting its spirits . . . . Occidental art
. . . exalts personality, is anthropocentric . . . . Oriental art .
. . has been cosmocentric. It sees man as an integral part of nature
. . . . The affinity between man and nature was what impressed Oriental
artists rather than their contrast, as in the West. To Occidentals,
the physical world was an objective reality--to be analyzed, used, mastered.
To Orientals, on the contrary, it was a realm of beauty to be admired,
but also of mystery and illusion to be pictured by poets, explained
by mythmakers, and mollified by priestly incantations. This contrast
between East and West had incalculable influence on their respective
arts, as well as on their philosophies and religions. (1963:253-255).
Art in the West has developed a complex linguistic symbolism through
which the artist manipulates his material to communicate something to
his audience. Art as communication is basic to Western aesthetics, as
is the corollary interrelationship of form and content. Music is considered
a language of feeling (Hanslick 1957) and consists of"sonorous moving
forms." A landscape painting in the Western tradition is not merely
an aesthetically pleasing reproduction; the artist uses his techniques
of balance, perspective, and color, to express a personal reaction to
the landscape--his painting is a frozen human mood. The aesthetic object
is used as a link between the audience and the artist's feelings. And
the artist's technique is used to create an illusion of the forms of
reality.
The Zen artist, on the other hand, tries to suggest by the simplest
possible means the inherent nature of the aesthetic object. Anything
may be painted, or expressed in poetry, and any sounds may become music.
The job of the artist is to suggest the essence, the eternal qualities
of the object, which is in itself a work of natural art before the artist
arrives on the scene. In order to achieve this, the artist must fully
understand the inner nature of the aesthetic object, its Buddha nature.
This is the hard part. Technique, though important, is useless without
it; and the actual execution of the art work may be startlingly spontaneous,
once the artist has comprehended the essence of his subject.
Belief in the superiority of spiritual mastery over technical mastery
is evidenced by numerous stories of bushido matches (Japanese sword
fighting) in which untrained monks defeated trained samurai because
they naturally comprehended the basic nature of the bushido contest,
and had no fear of death whatsoever.
A Chinese painter was once commissioned to paint the Emperor's favorite
goat. The artist asked for the goat, that he might study it. After two
years the Emperor, growing impatient, asked for the return of the goat;
the artist obliged. Then the Emperor asked about the painting. The artist
confessed that he had not yet made one, and taking an ink brush he drew
eight nonchalant strokes, creating the most perfect goat in the annals
of Chinese painting.
The style of painting favored by Zen artists makes use of a horsehair
brush, black ink, and either paper or silk. It is known as sumi-e.
The great economy of means is necessary to express the purity and simplicity
of the eternal nature of the subject, and also because it is a generalizing
factor. Zen art does not try to create the illusion of reality. It abandons
true to life perspective, and works with artificial space relations
which make one think beyond reality into the essence of reality. This
concept of essence as opposed to illusion is basic to Zen art in all
phases.
An interesting example of the varieties of approach to artistic representation
is that of dance gesture in Asia.
Indian dance gestures, called mudra, have developed from a simple
representative system to a highly abstract linguistic symbolism which
can express non physical states of being; this development is remarkably
similar to that which occurred in the history of Chinese writing: the
slow development from pictographic to ideographic characters. The mudra
are not immediately recognizable in most cases, and must be learned.
A mudra might represent the beating of a drum with nearly imperceptible
fingermotion, or perhaps a matching body motion. There is no drum, no
physical activity of actual beating.
The contemporary opera of China (Peking Opera) is a relatively late
development. Little is known of the earlier forms of Chinese opera in
relation to their actual performance, though many texts are still extant.
Dance gesture in Peking Opera is part of a bewildering gamut of highly
stylized gestures, costumes, masks, and properties, all of which lead
the initiated to immediate recognition of the characters and story being
presented. Most dance gestures, though imaginative and graceful, are
easily recognizable without instruction. When beating a drum, the hands
and body move as if beating a drum: no drum is used, but even the uninitiated
cannot mistake the meaning of the action. The gestures of Peking Opera
are pictographic rather than ideographic, and are greatly stylized by
convention.
In Japanese no drama, a Zen inspired form, the gestures have
been abstracted by simplification, rather than imagination. As in sumi-e
painting, the barest possible means are employed. But the aesthetics
demands that we do not violate the basic nature of no: that it is a
drama. It is not reality, nor does it attempt the illusion of reality:
rather, it suggests reality in its essence. If completely imaginative
gestures were used, one would be impressed with the skill of the performer
in conjuring up before our eyes invisible drums or boats or swords.
Our thoughts would be bound up in the intricacies of technique, rather
than free to comprehend the underlying eternal truth. No, reality is
not imitated in no drama: the essence of reality, that which is eternal,
the Buddha nature in its general and particular forms is depicted.
Therefore, when a drum is to be beaten, an elaborate (but not too elaborate)
toy drum is used as a prop, usually very small, and the performer beats
upon it without sounding, and in a visual rhythm completely free of
the accompanying music! We cannot possibly imagine that a real person
is playing a real drum; we are forced beyond the surface of reality
into the emptiness of essence, the just being so.
This forced abandonment of external reality is everywhere obvious in
no. If a boat is called for in the story, an imaginary boat would let
us imagine our own private imitation of reality: the no prop is a simple,
open bamboo frame, wrapped in white paper: a public denial of external
reality.
To complete the cycle, we must consider the proletarian theater of
Japan, the kabuki. Here the aesthetic demands utmost imitation
and dramatization of reality. Revolving stages and painted sets reproduce
to the letter any city or country scene (and occasionally even ocean
scenes). When a drum is to be beaten in kabuki, a real drum is
really beaten. The overly dramatic quality of kabuki is most
unZen, perhaps even antiZen. Today kabuki is vastly popular with
all classes of people in Japan, but no remains an aristocratic, highly
specialized art, inaccessible to most of the population.
It is strange that the peculiar nature of Zen aesthetics created a
dramatic form, the no, which is so isolated from the main stream of
social arts, while at the same time fostering a poetic form, the haiku,
which has become immensely popular.
The haiku, as developed by Basho, and to a lesser extent by Issa, was
couched in the popular idiom and avoided literary sounding phrases.
It is poetry which celebrates the commonplace.
Gazing at the flowers
of the morning glory
I eat my breakfast. --Basho
Within the highly restrictive verseform of seventeen syllables, the
haiku presents a precisely chosen objective slice of nature, and its
earthiness is accessible to all who can read or hear it read; it carries
out in poetry the ideals of Hui Neng, the Sixth Patriarch of Zen Buddhism,
who democratically held that every man has the same ability and opportunity
to become enlightened regardless of education or status.
The aesthetic of haiku is not far removed from that of sumi e or no.
The basic principle is still: the most of the essence with the least
possible means. One must work within only a few syllables, and eschew
the high-flown dramatic language typical of other genres.
Zen music is more difficult to discuss. A discussion of no music in
detail would become overly technical, therefore this section shall be
confined to a few general remarks of an introductory nature, to provide
a basis for later discussion.
The Japanese have long been aware of the sounds of nature and have
identified these with music. The Chinese have been a bit more hesitant
to identify music as being those sounds produced by nature. In The Tale
of Genji, music of nature plays at least an equal part with human music.
Thus, in Zen-influenced music, one might expect to find an aesthetic
situation similar to that in the other Zen arts: the essence of the
sounds of nature suggested by the least possible means. Or, in further
abstracted form: the essence of sound itself suggested by the least
possible means. Both have a part in Zen music. It is first necessary
to determine, then, the nature of sound as the Japanese heard it.
Sound exists in opposition to silence, and music must reflect this
basic fact. Sounds take their being from silence and return to it. The
inner nature of sound seems to be connected in some mysterious fashion
to its transitory character. There is also in sound a sense of continual
change, a "becoming," an inexorable leading from tone to tone and finally
back into silence.
Western music aesthetics is based upon the concept of a discrete tone
as a building block of larger forms, which are in turn combined at various
architectonic levels to create a movement or complete piece (for instance,
the notes C,E,G may sound simultaneously as a chord, or sequentially
as part of a melodic phrase; the chord or phrase may be combined with
other chords or phrases to produce harmonic or melodic sections, which
are in turn combined to produce sub divisions of movements, et cetera).
However, Zen music refuses to establish fixed pitch levels as building
blocks, rather connects sounds together which are continually becoming
one another, coalescing. From these sounds, longer melody lines are
developed, but there is never a sense of architectonic structure, always
free movement from idea to idea.
In no music, which is primarily composed of utai or singing and hayashi
or orchestra, the rhythmic element is the underlying key. And the rhythm
of no music is constructed in a fashion similar to that just discussed
in connection with pitch level organization. Rather than a series of
rhythmic building blocks on a fixed time constant as in Western music,
no music utilizes a continually varying time structure, which effectively
suggests varying degrees of kinetic tension. Each sound has its own
rhythmic point in space time, and is not thought of as part of a pattern
based on fixed clock time; it is itself and not related to any imaginary
superimposed pattern.
Another genre, the music of the shakuhachi fits this aesthetic perfectly.
It is primarily a melodic instrument (an open, vertical flute) and is
extremely difficult to play; the performer gently coaxes the tones out
of the instrument, producing an incredible variety of timbre and pitch
gradation. The Chinese predecessor of this instrument (hsiao) was considerably
easier to play and could manage discrete tones without any trouble.
The influence of Zen on the nature of this instrument began when it
came to Japan.
III. Zen and Contemporary
Western Art
Artists and philosophers have long been faced with the problem of what
is expressed in a work of art (or, put in another way, what is created
in a work of art). At the beginning of this century many Western artists
found traditional answers to this problem unsatisfactory, being disturbed
by the difficulty in pinpointing meaning as felt by different audiences.
The same work of art, they found, was likely to instill quite different
feelings in any two audiences, both of which may be opposite to the
artist's intention; the question then arises: who is right? is anyone
right? The plethora of aesthetic theories resulting from this soul searching
resulted in general agreement on the side of formalism as opposed to
referentialism. In music, formalism means that the music is thought
of as not expressing or meaning anything outside of itself (except through
specific learned habit responses); music cannot refer to a specific
external happening or emotion; however there remains disagreement as
to the exact nature of this internalized musical expression. Stravinsky
holds that music cannot express anything but music: we follow the evolution
of a musical idea with purely intellectual interest (Stravinsky 1956).
Leonard Meyer posits a semiconscious level of emotional affect caused
by basic psychological responses to musical sound terms (Meyer 1956).
The differences between Meyer and Stravinsky are not so great, however,
as those between the formalists in general and the recent group of musicians
under the intellectual leadership of John
Cage. Cage says:
. . . the support of the dance is not to be found in the music but
in the dancer himself, on his own two legs, that is, and occasionally
on a single one
Likewise the music consists of single sounds or groups of sounds
which are not supported by harmonies but resound within a space of
silence From this independence of music and dance a rhythm results
which is not that of horses' hooves or other regular beats but which
reminds us of a multiplicity of events in time and space--stars, for
instance, in the sky, or activities on earth viewed from the air.
We are not, in these dances and music, saying something. We are simpleminded
enough to think that if we were saying something we would use words.
We are rather doing something. The meaning of what we do is determined
by each one who sees and hears it. At a recent performance . . . a student
turned to a teacher and said, "What does it mean?" The teacher's reply
was, "Relax, there are no symbols here to confuse you. Enjoy yourself!
I may add there are no stories and no psychological problems. There
is simply an activity of movement, sound, and light ... (Cage 1961:
94 96).
I have quoted Cage at length, because of his nearness to Zen aesthetics,
and the clarity with which it is expressed. Cage's conception of music
differs from that of the formalists in that he does not feel the need
for any musical idea as such. The sounds themselves are to be listened
to aesthetically. The difference between noise and music is in the approach
of the audience. Roughly stated, noise is heard, music is listened to;
this is not a general definition, but the subjectivism should be clear.
"There are no symbols here to confuse you" Just the aesthetic object,
to be contemplated for its own sake.
When we read Cage's manifesto on music, his connection with Zen becomes
clear:
nothing is accomplished by writing a piece of music
nothing is accomplished by hearing a piece of music
nothing is accomplished by playing a piece of music (Cage 1961:xii)
This reads as if a quote from a Zen Master: "in the last resort nothing
gained." (Fung, 1952: II, 401). Cage studied Zen with Daistez Suzuki
when the master was lecturing at Columbia University in New York. Thus
we see that Cage has consciously applied principles of Zen to solve
his personal aesthetic problem. He does not try to superimpose his will
in the form of structure or predetermination in any form.
Cage has, in fact, created a method of composition from Zen aesthetics.
It was originally a synthetic method, deriving inspiration from elements
of Zen art: the swift brush strokes of Sesshu and the sumi-e painters
which leave happenstance ink blots and stray scratches in their wake,
the unpredictable glaze patterns of the cha no yu potters, the eternal
quality of the rock gardens, the great open spaces in the paintings
of Wang Wei and Mu Ch'i. Then, isolating the element of chance as vital
to artistic creation which is to remain in harmony with the universe,
he selected the oracular I Ching (Classic of Changes, an ancient Chinese
book) as a means of providing random information which he translated
into musical notations. Later, he moved away from the I Ching to more
abstract methods of indeterminate composition: scores based on star
maps, and scores entirely silent, or with long spaces of silence, in
which the only sounds are supplied by nature or by the uncomfortable
audience. "Just let the sounds be themselves."
Many young composers and painters have followed in Cage's footsteps,
and the school of chance art found the necessity of setting up categories
to properly delimit the various types of chance composition. These categories
are at present three in number and are described as follows.
1) Music indeterminate of composition. This category includes pieces
created through the use of some random system which effectively isolates
the composer's will from the final manuscript. The piece, as notated
by the composer is then performed, as accurately as possible, by the
2) Music indeterminate of performance. This category includes pieces
which make use of improvisation, and has taken much from Jazz. The
performer is given freedom in interpreting the score.
3) Combinations, in varying degrees, of categories 1 and 2. The third
category is the most recent, and the most populated. As might be expected,
violent reactions have issued from conservative quarters, and Alan
Watts was moved to protest (1959:11 14):
Today there are western artists avowedly using Zen to justify the
indiscriminate framing of simply anything--blank canvases, totally
silent music, torn up bits of paper dropped on a board and stuck where
they fall, or dense masses of mangled wire. The work of the composer
John Cage is rather typical of this tendency. In the name of Zen,
he has forsaken his earlier and promising work with the "prepared
piano," to confront audiences with Ampex taperecorders simultaneously
bellowing forth random noises. There is, indeed, a considerable therapeutic
value in allowing oneself to be deeply aware of any sight or sound
that may arise. For one thing, it brings to mind the marvel of seeing
and hearing as such. For another, the profound willingness to listen
to or gaze upon anything at all frees the mind from fixed preconceptions
of beauty, creating, as it were, a free space in which altogether
new forms and relationships may emerge. But this is therapy; it is
not yet art ....
Just as the skilled photographer often amazes us with his lighting
and framing of the most unlikely subjects, so there are painters and
writers in the West, as well as in modern Japan, who have mastered
the authentically Zen art of controlling accidents . . . The real
genius of Chinese and Japanese Zen artists in their use of controlled
accidents goes beyond the discovery of fortuitous beauty. It lies
in being able to express, at the level of artistry, the realization
of that ultimate standpoint from which "anything goes" and at which
"all things are on one suchness." The mere selection of any random
shape to stick in a frame simply confuses the metaphysical and the
artistic domains; it does not express the one in terms of the other.
"Methinks he doth protest too much." How does Watts know the extent
to which accidents are "controlled" in Zen art? How is it possible to
control an accident? Is the accident desired, or accidental? What quality
is more admired, the "fortuitous beatuy" or the accidental ness? And
how to relate the kunstgewerbe of the potters to the sumi-e. These and
similar questions must remain unanswered for the present. Cage simply
answered Watts's diatribe (1961:XI):
What I do, I do not wish blamed on Zen, though without my engagement
with Zen (attendance at lectura by Alan Watts and D. T. Suzuki, reading
of the literature) I doubt whether I would have done what I have done.
I am told that Alan Watts has questioned the relation between my work
and Zen. I mention this in order to free Zen of any responsibility for
my actions. I shall continue making them, however.
From recent statements, it is certain that Cage still considers his
actions experimental; however, he stresses the need for subjective aesthetic
appreciation of these actions. The haiku poet can imbue any landscape
with poetic feeling, once that landscape has been appreciated aesthetically.
The admission of aesthetic contemplation seems to be a mellowing in
Cage's approach to music, but there certainly remains one element of
traditional Zen arts missing in his work. And that is the concept of
essence or eternal quality. Cage does not attempt to suggest, nor to
restrict his means or materials. He has escaped so far from discipline
that his chance elements more often than not operate in a completely
free field, with no external restrictions whatsoever.
This is not Zen, because basic to Zen art is the restriction of means
to an absolute minimum. Cage is admittedly eclectic; he feels no need
to adopt an entire system of aesthetics for the sake of a few of its
principles. He has thus taken the "anything goes" freedom of Zen and
Zen arts and combined it with sensuous means surpassing the Wagnerial
orchestra. The only self restriction is that of disallowing the composer's
will to influence the choice of sounds. Thus, the all overimpression
of Cage's aesthetics has the hydraulic flavor of classical Taoism rather
than that of Zen.
The most important question at this point is: will Cage move in the
direction of "musical patterns," or will he continue taking from Zen
and find some way to "express the most with the least." It would seem
that either direction is possible, but because of Cage's predilection
against "patterns" (implying "meaning" and "symbol"), economy of means
would be more probable. One can only wait and see.
Fredric Lieberman
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|
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UCSC | Arts
Division
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