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  • Art is not mere entertainment. Alongside philosophy and religion, it has been humanity's chief

  • source of consolation. It is what we should turn to in our very worst moments.

  • Here are seven of the most calming works of art ever produced.

  • We are very poor at retaining perspective. Art can help by carrying us out of present

  • circumstances and reframing events against a more imposing or vast backdrop.

  • This is a move being made by the Japanese photographer Hiroshi Sugimoto through his

  • gigantic empty photographs of the Atlantic ocean in a variety of moods. What is most

  • notable in these sublime scenes is that humanity is nowhere in the frame. We are afforded a

  • glimpse of what the planet looked like before the first creatures emerged from the seas.

  • Viewed against such an immemorial scene, the precise discontents of our times matter ever

  • so slightly less. We regain composure not by being made to feel more important, but

  • by being reminded of the miniscule and momentary nature of everyone and everything.

  • In Ansel Adams's photograph, a row of aspens have been surprised by the photographer's

  • light and stand out as strands of silver against the blackness of night. The mood is sombre,

  • but elegant. There is a consoling message within the artistry that can appease our raw

  • grief and anxiety about our mortality and the fleetingness of time. The image invites

  • us to see ourselves as part of the mesmerising spectacle of nature. Nature's rules apply

  • to us as much as they do to the trees of the forest. It's not personal.

  • Leaves always wither and fall. Autumn necessarily follows from spring and summer. The photograph

  • is a reframe device. It invites us to think of our own deaths, is having a natural order,

  • nothing to do with individual justice . The photograph tries to take the personal stink

  • out of what is happening to us.

  • 3. Ludolf Bakhuysen, Warships in a Heavy Storm, 1695

  • In the 17th century, the Dutch developed a tradition of painting that depicted ships

  • in violent storms. These works, which hung in private homes and in municipal buildings

  • around the Dutch republic, had an explicitly therapeutic purpose to them: they were delivering

  • a moral to their viewers, who lived in a nation critically dependent on maritime trade, a

  • message about confidence in seafaring and life more broadly. The sight of a tall sailing

  • ship being tossed to a twenty degree angle in a rough sea looks - to an inexperienced

  • person - like a catastrophe. But there are many situations that look and feel much more

  • dangerous than they really are, especially when the crew is prepared and the ship internally

  • sound.

  • Bakhuysen's Warships in a Heavy Storm looks chaotic in the extreme: how could the people

  • in the picture possibly survive? But the ships were well-designed for just such situations.

  • Their hulls had been minutely adapted through long experience to withstand the tempests

  • of the northern oceans. Bakhuysen wanted us to feel proud of humanity's resilience in

  • the face of apparently dreadful challenges. His painting enthuses us with the message

  • that we can all cope far better than we think; what appears immensely threatening may be

  • highly survivable.

  • The highest selling postcard of art in France is Poppies by Claude Monet.

  • Sophisticated people could be tempted to scorn. They are afraid that such enthusiasms might

  • be evidence of a failure to acknowledge or understand the awful dimensions of the world.

  • But there is another way to interpret this taste of pretty things: that it doesn't

  • arise from an unfamiliarity with suffering, but from an all too close and pervasive involvement

  • with itfrom which we are impelled occasionally to seek relief if we are not to fall into

  • despair. Far from naivety, it is precisely the background of suffering that lends such

  • beauty and dignity to this work of art. Claude Monet hasn't just made a pretty picture;

  • he has bottled hope.

  • Caspar David Friedrich shows us a striking, jagged rock formation, a spare stretch of

  • coast, the bright horizon, far away clouds and a pale sky, all carefully designed to

  • induce us into a mood.

  • The picture does not refer directly to the stresses of our day to day lives. Its function

  • is to give us access to a state of mind in which we are acutely conscious of the largeness

  • of time and space. The work is sombre, but not despairing. And in that condition of mind,

  • we are left, as so often with works of art, better equipped to deal with the intense,

  • intractable and particular griefs that lie before us.

  • The Japanese have an artistic tradition, known as kintsugi, wherein the broken pieces of

  • an accidentally-smashed pot are carefully picked up, reassembled and then glued together

  • with lacquer inflected with a luxuriant gold powder - to create a beautiful ode to the

  • art of repair. In kintsugi, there is no attempt to disguise the damage, the point is to render

  • the fault-lines obvious and elegant. The precious veins of gold are there to emphasise that

  • things falling apart isn't unexpected or panic-inducing: it creates an opportunity

  • for us to mend - and mend redemptively.

  • 'Fernando Pessoa' is a beautifully dark monumental work by Richard Serra, named after a Portuguese

  • poet with a turn for lamentation.

  • The work does not tell us to cheer up or point us in a brighter direction (what people often

  • do when we tell them our troubles). The large scale and monumental character of this intensely

  • sombre sculpture implicitly declares the normality and universality of difficulty. It is confident

  • that we will recognise the legitimate place of solemn emotions in an ordinary life. Rather

  • than leaving us alone with our darker moods, the work proclaims them as central features

  • of life. In its stark gravity, Richard Serra's 'Fernando Pessoa' creates a dignified home

  • for sorrow.

  • Too many books have been written trying to explain what art might be for. In moments

  • of great crisis, the answer becomes only too obvious: art is there to help keep us alive.

  • Our book, "What is Culture for?" , helps us find passion, hope and perspective in the arts.

Art is not mere entertainment. Alongside philosophy and religion, it has been humanity's chief

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