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Art & Creativity Quote by Walter Pater

"All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music"

About this Quote

Pater’s line is a manifesto disguised as an observation: the highest ambition of painting, poetry, even criticism is to become less like argument and more like sensation. Music, in his telling, is the art form that dodges the usual burdens of representation. It doesn’t have to depict a landscape, narrate a plot, or persuade you of a thesis. It arrives as pattern, tempo, intensity - meaning that hits the body before it sorts itself into ideas. For a Victorian critic writing in an era of moralizing novels and earnest “messages,” that’s a sly provocation.

The intent is partly defensive. Aestheticism, the movement Pater helped sharpen, was often accused of being frivolous: art-for-art’s-sake as a retreat from social duty. By elevating music as the ideal, Pater reframes “mere beauty” as discipline rather than decadence. Music is rigor: structure without explanation, emotion without sermon. If other arts “aspire” to it, they’re chasing a purity where form and content can’t be pried apart.

The subtext is also about authority. Critics traffic in language, and language loves to pretend it’s in charge. Pater quietly undercuts his own profession: the best art makes commentary feel clumsy, because the point isn’t paraphrasable. Context matters here: late-19th-century Europe was fetishizing the symphony (and Wagner) as near-religion, while modernity’s skepticism about stable meanings was creeping in. Pater hears that shift early. He’s betting on an art that can survive when certainty can’t - by becoming music-like: immersive, autonomous, and stubbornly beyond translation.

Quote Details

TopicArt
Source
Verified source: The School of Giorgione (Walter Pater, 1877)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music. (Reprinted in The Renaissance (later eds.), p. 134 (1912 Macmillan printing)). Primary-source location: Walter Pater’s essay "The School of Giorgione" was first published in The Fortnightly Review (new series), October 1877. It was later reprinted in book form in Pater’s The Renaissance: Studies in Art and Poetry (added in a later edition; many bibliographies note it was added to the 3rd edition, 1888). The page reference supplied comes from a scanned Macmillan printing of The Renaissance (dated 1912 in the scan), where the sentence appears in the chapter/essay "THE SCHOOL OF GIORGIONE" on p. 134. (Scan: Internet Archive PDF.)
Other candidates (1)
Conditions of Music (Alan Durant, 1985) compilation95.0%
Alan Durant. ' All Art Constantly Aspires towards the Condition of Music ' Formulated in the mid nineteenth century ,...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Pater, Walter. (2026, February 9). All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-art-constantly-aspires-towards-the-condition-156230/

Chicago Style
Pater, Walter. "All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-art-constantly-aspires-towards-the-condition-156230/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-art-constantly-aspires-towards-the-condition-156230/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Pater: All Art Aspires to the Condition of Music
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About the Author

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Walter Pater (August 4, 1839 - July 30, 1894) was a Critic from England.

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