Sunday, September 27, 2009

Rudolf Arnheim


above: Rudolf Arnheim Photograph by John Gay, (c) National Portrait Gallery, London


in the 1950's Rudolf Arnheim wrote in his landmark book Art and Visual perception:

"Art may seem to be in danger of being drowned by talk. Rarely are presented with a new specimen of what we are willing to accept as genuine art. Yet we are overwhelmed by a flood of books, articles, dissertations, speeches, lectures, guides [my emphasis]...

...we feel tempted to assume that art is unsure in our time because we think and talk to much about it...

..We are neglecting the gift of comprehending things by what our senses tell about them. Concept is split from percept, and thought moves among abstractions. Our eyes are being reduced to instruments by which to measure and identify..."

How do our eyes let us wander, imagine, and play in a visceral way? 

Arnheim seems to be really pushing the point that our minds to a degree have already been made up when we look at something, we've been told what to feel, and we're losing (remember this is the 1950's!) our ability to let our own perceptions guide our cognitive creation in meaning.

Perhaps this is a psychological symptom of  proto-post-modernism*; and interrelationships  of  various media  simultaneously originating from and influencing the culture and society at large?


*did i really just type that word?


A begining

This is an exploration.

At the core of the exploration is two questions:
First,  What kind of psychological stimuli/meaning/information is produced/carried  solely by visual images? 
Second, the first's antithesis: What kind of psychological stimuli/meaning/information is produced/carried  solely by text?

Which demands a third- "How do these overlap/relate, or contradict one another?"
The answers to these will not be found, but this blog hopes explore and map the Visual Event.

I'll be posting images and hopefully succinct bits of text that very well may begin to resemble a sketchbook and allow me to provide the flickers of ideas I'm collecting from others regarding an idea of the visual unlocking the visceral.