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This book explores the nature of one of the most ancient tools for
nonverbal communication: drawings. They are naturally adaptable
enough to meet an incredibly wide range of communication needs. But
how exactly do they do their job so well?
Avoiding the kinds of aesthetic rankings of different graphic
domains so often made by art historians and critics, Manfredo
Massironi considers an extensive and representative sample of
graphic applications with an open mind. He finds a deep mutuality
between the material components of images and the activation of the
perceptual and cognitive processes that create and decipher them.
Massironi first examines the material components themselves: the
mark or line, the plane of representation (the angle formed by the
actual drawing surface and the depicted objects), and the position
of the viewpoint relative to the depicted objects. The roles played
by these three components are independent of the content of the
drawing; they function in the same way in concrete and abstract
representations. He then closely scrutinizes the choices made by
the person planning and executing the drawings. Given that any
object can be depicted in an infinite number of different ways, the
drawer performs continuous work emphasizing and excluding different
features. The choices are typically unconscious and guided by his
or her communicative goals. A successful graph, be it simple or
complex, is always successful precisely because the emphasized
features are far fewer in number than the excluded ones. Finally,
he analyzes the perceptual and cognitive integrations made by the
viewer.
Drawings are not simply tools for communication but important
instruments for investigating reality and its structure. Richly
illustrated, the book includes a series of graphic exercises that
enable readers to get a sense of their own perceptual and cognitive
activity when inspecting images. Massironi's pathbreaking taxonomy
of graphic productions will illuminate all the processes involved
in producing and understanding graphic images for a wide audience,
in fields ranging from perceptual and cognitive psychology through
human factors and graphic design to architecture and art history.
This book explores the nature of one of the most ancient tools for
nonverbal communication: drawings. They are naturally adaptable
enough to meet an incredibly wide range of communication needs. But
how exactly do they do their job so well?
Avoiding the kinds of aesthetic rankings of different graphic
domains so often made by art historians and critics, Manfredo
Massironi considers an extensive and representative sample of
graphic applications with an open mind. He finds a deep mutuality
between the material components of images and the activation of the
perceptual and cognitive processes that create and decipher them.
Massironi first examines the material components themselves: the
mark or line, the plane of representation (the angle formed by the
actual drawing surface and the depicted objects), and the position
of the viewpoint relative to the depicted objects. The roles played
by these three components are independent of the content of the
drawing; they function in the same way in concrete and abstract
representations. He then closely scrutinizes the choices made by
the person planning and executing the drawings. Given that any
object can be depicted in an infinite number of different ways, the
drawer performs continuous work emphasizing and excluding different
features. The choices are typically unconscious and guided by his
or her communicative goals. A successful graph, be it simple or
complex, is always successful precisely because the emphasized
features are far fewer in number than the excluded ones. Finally,
he analyzes the perceptual and cognitive integrations made by the
viewer.
Drawings are not simply tools for communication but important
instruments for investigating reality and its structure. Richly
illustrated, the book includes a series of graphic exercises that
enable readers to get a sense of their own perceptual and cognitive
activity when inspecting images. Massironi's pathbreaking taxonomy
of graphic productions will illuminate all the processes involved
in producing and understanding graphic images for a wide audience,
in fields ranging from perceptual and cognitive psychology through
human factors and graphic design to architecture and art history.
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