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Art Is Long. . “Artis long and life is short.”That famous sayingwas coined more than 2,000years ago by Hippocrates, the founder of Greek medicine, and subsequent developments have proved him right. For the “art”to which he refers is the art of healing that has indeed been long in growing and developing and, in the process, incidentally , made life gradually a little less short. In his period and long after, the notion of art denoted any skill based on knowledge;in other words, both what we now call “science,”and what we call “art.” aim of bridging the rift that has meanwhile come to separate these two branches of human creativity.It is precisely those of us who welcome this effort who sometimes feel that artistswould do well to remember the words of Hippocrates. No scientist has to be told that any progress at which he aims must take as its starting point the present state of knowledge.Artists sometimes appear to hope that they can start from scratch and create a new art by one leap of the imagination. One may admire the ingenuity ,wit and courage of such attempts, and yet feel that this new art will remain stillborn precisely because it lacks the background and support of a tradition. I fully realize that to some the very word traditionis like a red rag to a bull, but to emphasize the role of tradition-in art as well as in science-is not tantamount to a longing for the good old days. It can be supported by purely theoretical considerations: our aesthetic no less than our cognitive experiences are inseparable from our expectations. Both the thrill of surprise and the satisfaction of familiarity rest on our previous knowledge,belief and experience. Whether we read a scientificpaper, watch a game or visit an exhibition, we can never understand what is going on without a minimum of information previously acquired. Learning to understand is a complex process, hard to explain in a few words, but we all have experienced its difficultiesand its pleasures. I do not want to be misunderstood. New art forms may certainly emerge in the future as they have emerged in the past-I am thinking of calligraphyin China or instrumental music in the West. No doubt, also, science and technology may still contribute to such developments, as has indeed happened with photography and the cinema, but in all these cases it has taken time for standards to develop and creativity to be appreciated. It was for this reason that I concluded my book on decoration and pattern-making, which I called The Sense o f Order;as follows: It may not be inappropriate to recall these origins in ajournal that has set itself the The study of the pattern-maker’scraft no less than the study of any other art suggeststhat whatwe need is patience. It takes time for a system of conventionsto crystallize till every subtlevariation counts. Maybe we would be more likely to achieve a new languageof form if we were less obsessedwith novelty and change. If we overloadthe system we lose the support of our sense of order [11. ERNST GOMBRICH Leonard0 Honorary Editor 19Briardale Gardens London NW3 7PN United Kingdom Reference 1.Ernst Gombrich, The Sense o f Order: A Study in the PsychologyofDecoratiue Art (Ithaca,NY CornellUniv. Press, 1979). 61995ISAST LEONARDO,Vol. 28,No. 4,p. 237,1995 237 ...

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