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Perception of expression distinguishes our cognitive activity in a
pervasive, significant and peculiar way, and manifests itself
paradigmatically in the vast world of artistic production. Art and
Expression examines the cognitive processes involved in artistic
production, aesthetic reception, understanding and enjoyment. Using
a phenomenological theoretical and methodological framework,
developed by Rudolf Arnheim and other important scholars interested
in expressive media, Alberto Argenton considers a wide range of
artistic works, which span the whole arc of the history of western
graphic and pictorial art. Argenton analyses the representational
strategies of a dynamic and expressive character that can be
reduced to basic aspects of perception, like obliqueness, amodal
completion, and the bilateral function of contour, giving new
directions relative to the functioning of cognitive activity. Art
and Expression is a monument to the fruitful collaboration of art
history and psychology, and Argenton has taken great care to
construct a meaningful psychological approach to the arts based
also on a knowledge of pictorial genres that allows him to
systematically situate the works under scrutiny. Art and Expression
is an essential resource for postgraduate researchers and scholars
interested in visual perception, art, and gestalt psychology.
The essays in Space, Image and Reform in Early Modern Art build on
Marcia Hall's seminal contributions in several categories crucial
for Renaissance studies, especially the spatiality of the church
interior, the altarpiece's facture and affectivity, the notion of
artistic style, and the controversy over images in the era of
Counter Reform. Accruing the advantage of critical engagement with
a single paradigm, this volume better assesses its applicability
and range. The book works cumulatively to provide blocks of
theoretical and empirical research on issues spanning the function
and role of images in their contexts over two centuries. Relating
Hall's investigations of Renaissance art to new fields, Space,
Image and Reform expands the ideas at the center of her work
further back in time, further afield, and deeper into familiar
topics, thus achieving a cohesion not usually seen in edited
volumes honoring a single scholar.
As the theoretical alignments within academia shift, this book
introduces a surprising variety of realism to abolish the old
positivist-theory dichotomy that has haunted Art History. Demanding
frankly the referential detachment of the objects under study, the
book proposes a stratified, multi-causal account of art history
that addresses postmodern concerns while saving it from its errors
of self-refutation. Building from the very basic distinction
between intransitive being and transitive knowing, objects can be
affirmed as real while our knowledge of them is held to be
fallible. Several focused chapters address basic problems while
introducing philosophical reflection into art history. These
include basic ontological distinctions between society and culture,
general and "special" history, the discontinuity of cultural
objects, the importance of definition for special history, scales,
facets and fiat objects as forms of historical structure, the
nature of evidence and proof, historical truth and controversies.
Stressing Critical Realism as the stratified, multi-causal approach
needed for productive research today in the academy, this book
creates the subject of the ontology of art history and sets aside a
theoretical space for metaphysical reflection, thus clarifying the
usually muddy distinction between theory, methodology, and
historiography in art history.
This monograph presents a synthesis and reconstruction of Rudolf
Arnheim's theory of media. Combining both Arnheim's well-known
writings on film and radio with his later work on the psychology of
art, the author presents a coherent approach to the problem of the
nature of a medium, space and time, and the differentia between
different media. The latent ontological commitments of Arnheim's
theories is drawn out by affirming Arnheim's membership in the
Brentano school of Austrian philosophy, which allows his theories
to be clarified and strengthened, particularly with the
metaphysical writings of Roman Ingarden. The resulting theory is
relational, portraying essential medial differences with neutral
criteria and allowing for a rigorous definition of a medium. The
way in which a medium is based on the inherent dispositions of
medial materials creates a highly appealing theory that is
determinate without being deterministic. The theory is thus highly
timely as people in media studies seek to address the determinate
nature of media after the post-medium condition. The book will
appeal to researchers and graduate students in cultural and media
studies as well as architecture and design.
This book is an account of the theory and practice of practitioners
of the so-called "second" or "younger" Viennese school associated
with Hans Sedlmayr and Otto Pacht and their short-lived journal,
Kunstwissenschaftliche Forschungen. It demonstrates the strong
dependence of these writers on the work of Gestalt psychology which
was emerging at the time. Gestalt theory emerges as the master key
to interpreting Sedlmayr and Pacht's ideas about art and history
and how it affected their practices. This fresh interpretive
apparatus casts light on the power and originality of Sedlmayr's
and Pacht's theoretical and empirical writings, revealing a
practice-based approach to history that is more attuned to the
visuality of art. Verstegen demonstrates the existence of a
genealogy of Vienna formalism coursing throughout most of the
twentieth century, encompassing Johannes Wilde and his students at
the Courtauld as well as Otto Demus in Byzantine studies. By
bringing Gestalt theory to the surface, he dispels
misunderstandings about the Vienna School theory and attains a
deeper understanding of the promise that a Gestalt analytic holism
- a non-intuitionist account of the relational logic of sense - is
offered.
Arnheim, Gestalt and Art is the first book-length discussion of the
powerful thinking of the psychologist of art, Rudolf Arnheim.
Written as a complete overview of Arnheima (TM)s thinking, it
covers fundamental issues of the importance of psychological
discussion of the arts, the status of gestalt psychology, the
various sense modalities and media, and developmental issues. By
proceeding in a direction from general to specific and then
proceeding through dynamic processes as they unfold in time
(creativity, development, etc.), the book discovers an
unappreciated unity to Arnheima (TM)s thinking. Not content to
simply summarize Arnheima (TM)s theory, however, Arnheim, Art, and
Gestalt goes on to enrich (and occasionally question) Arnheima
(TM)s findings with the contemporary results of gestalt-theoretical
research from around the world, but especially in Italy and
Germany. The result is a workable overview of the psychology of art
with bridges built to contemporary research, making Arnheima (TM)s
approach living and sustainable.
Perception of expression distinguishes our cognitive activity in a
pervasive, significant and peculiar way, and manifests itself
paradigmatically in the vast world of artistic production. Art and
Expression examines the cognitive processes involved in artistic
production, aesthetic reception, understanding and enjoyment. Using
a phenomenological theoretical and methodological framework,
developed by Rudolf Arnheim and other important scholars interested
in expressive media, Alberto Argenton considers a wide range of
artistic works, which span the whole arc of the history of western
graphic and pictorial art. Argenton analyses the representational
strategies of a dynamic and expressive character that can be
reduced to basic aspects of perception, like obliqueness, amodal
completion, and the bilateral function of contour, giving new
directions relative to the functioning of cognitive activity. Art
and Expression is a monument to the fruitful collaboration of art
history and psychology, and Argenton has taken great care to
construct a meaningful psychological approach to the arts based
also on a knowledge of pictorial genres that allows him to
systematically situate the works under scrutiny. Art and Expression
is an essential resource for postgraduate researchers and scholars
interested in visual perception, art, and gestalt psychology.
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