Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

How Humans Consciously See Paintings and Paintings Illuminate How Humans See

View through CrossRef
This article illustrates how the paintings of visual artists activate multiple brain processes that contribute to their conscious perception. Paintings of different artists may activate different combinations of brain processes to achieve their artist’s aesthetic goals. Neural models of how advanced brains see have characterized various of these processes. These models are used to explain how paintings of Jo Baer, Banksy, Ross Bleckner, Gene Davis, Charles Hawthorne, Henry Hensche, Henri Matisse, Claude Monet, Jules Olitski, and Frank Stella may achieve their aesthetic effects. These ten painters were chosen to illustrate processes that range from discounting the illuminant and lightness anchoring, to boundary and texture grouping and classification, through filling-in of surface brightness and color, to spatial attention, conscious seeing, and eye movement control. The models hereby clarify how humans consciously see paintings, and paintings illuminate how humans see.
Title: How Humans Consciously See Paintings and Paintings Illuminate How Humans See
Description:
This article illustrates how the paintings of visual artists activate multiple brain processes that contribute to their conscious perception.
Paintings of different artists may activate different combinations of brain processes to achieve their artist’s aesthetic goals.
Neural models of how advanced brains see have characterized various of these processes.
These models are used to explain how paintings of Jo Baer, Banksy, Ross Bleckner, Gene Davis, Charles Hawthorne, Henry Hensche, Henri Matisse, Claude Monet, Jules Olitski, and Frank Stella may achieve their aesthetic effects.
These ten painters were chosen to illustrate processes that range from discounting the illuminant and lightness anchoring, to boundary and texture grouping and classification, through filling-in of surface brightness and color, to spatial attention, conscious seeing, and eye movement control.
The models hereby clarify how humans consciously see paintings, and paintings illuminate how humans see.

Related Results

The Risk that Humans Will Soon Be Extinct
The Risk that Humans Will Soon Be Extinct
AbstractIf it survives for a little longer, the human race will probably start to spread across its galaxy. Germ warfare, though, or environmental collapse or many another factor m...
The peasant paints: Minor painting and peasant cosmopolitics
The peasant paints: Minor painting and peasant cosmopolitics
This article discusses the idea of ‘peasant-painting’ as minor painting, playing with the contrast between ‘paintings-of-peasants’ and ‘paintings-by-peasants’. I argue that the app...
Resonance of Existentialism on Pandemic literature: An Introspection of Pandemic Literature of the Past
Resonance of Existentialism on Pandemic literature: An Introspection of Pandemic Literature of the Past
Literature has always been impacted by the abject state of thought of humans existing in a particular time and era. A sense of meaning, or forging an explanation evinced within lit...
Relational ethics: Writing about birds; writing about humans
Relational ethics: Writing about birds; writing about humans
Philip Armstrong points out that scholars in Animal Studies are ‘interested in attending not just to what animals mean to humans, but what they mean to themselves; that is, to the ...
UNDER AN UNSTARRY SKY: KANTIAN ETHICS AND RADICAL EVIL
UNDER AN UNSTARRY SKY: KANTIAN ETHICS AND RADICAL EVIL
Kantian ethics and concept concerning “radical evil” represent one of the most interesting facets of moral reflection of German philosopher. Using anthropological and philosophical...
Possibilities for Multispecies Approaches in Coffee Landscapes
Possibilities for Multispecies Approaches in Coffee Landscapes
Multispecies approaches can increase our knowledge around the social and ecological dimensions of coffee landscapes. Ethnobiologists combine the social and natural sciences to stud...
Devouring Perspectives: On Cannibal Shamans in Siberia
Devouring Perspectives: On Cannibal Shamans in Siberia
AbstractThroughout Siberia, shamans are suspected of 'devouring' other humans. This article, based on ethnographic literature about Siberian peoples and on fieldwork conducted in T...

Back to Top