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Rudolf Arnheim (July 15, 1904 – June 9, 2007) was a German-born writer, art and film theorist, and perceptual psychologist. He learned Gestalt psychology from studying under Max Wertheimer and Wolfgang Köhler at the University of Berlin and applied it to art.
The Psychology of Art (1925) by Lev Vygotsky (1896–1934) is another classical work. Richard Müller-Freienfels was another important early theorist. [8] The work of Theodor Lipps, a Munich-based research psychologist, played an important role in the early development of the concept of art psychology in the early decade of the twentieth century.
Models based on this idea have been used to describe various visual perceptual functions, such as the perception of motion, the perception of depth, and figure-ground perception. [16] [17] The "wholly empirical theory of perception" is a related and newer approach that rationalizes visual perception without explicitly invoking Bayesian formalisms.
Toronto: Art Canada Institute, 2013. E-Book Archived 2017-07-25 at the Wayback Machine. Clayton, Richard, Anti-realism and Scepticism, Realism and Common Sense retrieved July 17, 2007; Chandler, Daniel, Visual Perception 3 retrieved July 17, 2007; Christo and Jeanne Claude: The Art of Christo and Jeanne-Claude retrieved July 17, 2007
Gombrich was the author of many works of cultural history and art history, most notably The Story of Art, a book widely regarded as one of the most accessible introductions to the visual arts, [3] and Art and Illusion, [4] a major work in the psychology of perception that influenced thinkers as diverse as Carlo Ginzburg, [5] Nelson Goodman, [6 ...
For the history of art, Svetlana Alpers published a pioneering study on The Art of Describing: Dutch Art in the Seventeenth Century (Chicago 1983) in which she took up an earlier impulse of Michael Baxandall to study the visual culture of a whole region of early-modern Europe in all its facets: landscape painting and perception, optics and ...
Frank Tong is a cognitive neuroscientist and centennial professor of psychology at Vanderbilt University. [1] He grew up in Toronto, Canada.Tong is recognized for his research on the neural bases of human visual perception, visual consciousness, attentional selection, face and object recognition, and visual working memory.
Evolutionary ancestry has hard-wired humans to have affective responses for certain patterns and traits. These predispositions lend themselves to responses when looking at certain visual arts as well. Identification of subject matter is the first step in understanding the visual image. Being presented with visual stimuli creates initial ...