Art theory as visual epistemology
Introduction: The image and the mind / Harald Klinke -- Pictorial art and epistemic aims / Jochen Briesen -- Tracing out space in video performance / Riikka Niemelä -- Rethinking vision in Eighteenth-century paintings of the blind / Georgina Cole -- Mental and visual ascesis: Seventeenth-century art...
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Format: | UnknownFormat |
Sprache: | eng |
Veröffentlicht: |
Newcastle upon Tyne
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
2014
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Ausgabe: | First published |
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Online Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
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Zusammenfassung: | Introduction: The image and the mind / Harald Klinke -- Pictorial art and epistemic aims / Jochen Briesen -- Tracing out space in video performance / Riikka Niemelä -- Rethinking vision in Eighteenth-century paintings of the blind / Georgina Cole -- Mental and visual ascesis: Seventeenth-century art theory in search of scientific decorum / Ioana Magureanu -- Iconography, narrativity, and tellability in pictures / Michael Ranta -- Voir ou lire: maps as art-art as maps / Karolina Uggla -- Drawing as an epistemological medium in Bellori's Lives / Elisabeth Oy-marra -- The experiments of perception in science and art by Ernst Mach, Dan Graham and Peter Weibel / Romana K. Schular "How can we know? What does knowledge mean? These were the fundamental questions of epistemology in the 17th century. In response to continental rationalism, the British empiricist John Locke proposed that the only knowledge humans can have is acquired a posteriori. In a discussion of the human mind, he argued, the source of knowledge is sensual experience -- mostly vision. Since visilon and picture-making are the realm of art, art theory picked up on questions such as: are pictures able to represent knowledge about the world? How does the production of images itself generate knowledge? How does pictorial logic differ from linguistic logic? How can artists contribute to a collective search for truth? Questions concerning the epistemic potential of art can be found throughout the centuries up until the present day. However, these are not questions of art alone, but of the representational value of images in general. Thus, the history of art theory can contribute much to recent discussions in Visual Studies and Bildwissenschaften by showing the historic dimension of arguments about what images are or should be. What is knowledge? is as much a philosophic question as What is an image? Visual epistemology is a new and promising research field that is best investigated using an interdisciplinary approach that addresses a range of interconnected areas, such as internal and external images and the interplay of producer and perceiver of images. This publication outlines this territory by gathering together several approaches to visual epistemology by many distinguished authors"--Book jacket |
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Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | 148 Seiten Illustrationen |
ISBN: | 9781443854399 978-1-4438-5439-9 |