The Psychology of Art

By John Lewis


On the necessity to differentiate between the structural and functional elements of the psychology of art...

The psychology of art is a fancy matter and this description serves only as an introduction to a 'growing' discipline of study. Psychology types the idea of many features of life and art or expression of art in any form and especially through sculpture and painting is also primarily based on psychological theories and understanding. The relation between psychology and art is almost inevitable; there will be no art with out psychology and vice versa. The artist begins with a blank canvas on which he/ she initiatives his or her personal psychological being and art stays because the medium of such projection. Thus art can finest be defined as a medium through which an artist or creative individual initiatives his or her emotions and frustrations and deeper psychological necessities. This way art is intricately linked to psychology. But the psychology of art as a formal self-discipline has not found intensive recognition and has only very lately gained recognition in western universities.

The psychology of art is nonetheless an enchanting field of study because it analyzes the core of creativity and supplies clarification for the mental processes of the artist specifically and the artistic individual in general. Yet curiously, psychology of art is not just limited to understanding the mental processes of the artist but also the mental processes involved in perceiving the art. Thus a psychology of art supplies clarification and understanding of the phenomena of creativity, the mental processes of the artist, in addition to the thought processes of the perceiver. It is comprehensive in its method not only due to its range of clarification but also as a result of art psychology entails explanations from completely different branches of psychology comparable to Gestalt psychology of perception, psychology of type and performance/order and complexity, Jungian psychoanalysis, the psychology of consideration and Experimental psychology in addition to Freudian symbolism.

The psychology of artwork is interdisciplinary, successfully integrating artwork, structure, philosophy (metaphysics and phenomenology), aesthetics, study of consciousness, visual notion, and psychoanalysis. From philosopher John Dewey to psychoanalyst Carl Gustav Jung, intellectuals of the 20th century influenced the emergence of a psychology of artwork that seemed to have moved past the mind processes of the artist to include the process of creation and also its notion analyzing artwork from biological, social, psychological and philosophical perspectives. Dewey and Jung each influenced the study of artwork inside social and cultural contexts and are largely chargeable for the understanding of artwork in its present form.

Art is obviously a inventive process and is thus a deep psychological process as well. Art may well be explained with the theory of notion and as a cognitive process. The Gestalt concept of visual notion would supply one of the foremost explanations on artwork creation and perception. The Gestalt theorists had been the 20th century psychologists who systematically studied perceptual processes in humans and among the well-known Gestaltists had been Wolfgang Khler, Kurt Koffka, Max Wertheimer, and Kurt Lewin. The rules of notion as given in Gestalt psychology targeted on proximity or contiguity, similarity, continuity, closure, area/symmetry and determine and ground.

Thus Gestalists described perception as a process that involved not simply the object but also the context as perception of objects is affected by what surrounds these objects so to Gestaltists, things are all the time 'greater than the sum of their parts'. As art can also be primarily about perception, our perception of any art object would depend upon these Gestalt ideas as effectively and we are inclined to see continuity or closure or even perceive movement in static objects. Gestalt psychology has been used extensively to explain and perceive 'visual illusions'. For example, objects which are located closer to each other might be perceived as forming a group. In the event you've seen some of these pictures that designate the ideas of Gestalt, you will shortly perceive that there is extra to art than simple brush strokes; art is as a lot a technique of perception (including phantasm) as it's a technique of creation. If an artist efficiently creates a visual phantasm, he's nearly like a magician. Yet art has a number of dimensions in its study and clarification and from Gestalt understanding of type and construction that gives a 'structural' clarification of the organizational ideas of art, we now have to know the 'practical' features of art as well. This in turn is offered by psychoanalysis and symbolism.

Within the early 20th century Sigmund Freud pioneered the study of artwork in its psychoanalytic kind by considering the artist as essentially a neurotic who deals along with his psychic pressures and conflicts through his inventive impulses. Freud was interested within the 'content material' or subject material of artwork that mirrored the inner conflicts and repressed wishes of the artist and artwork to Freud as to any psychoanalyst at present is considered as essentially a projection of the artist's mind and thought process. Freud believed that unconscious needs and fantasies of the artist makes way from the interior and manifests as the exterior on canvas through art. Thus if an artist fantasizes about beautiful virtuous women, he paints angels in heaven as a kind of 'sublimation' of his deeper wish. Thus any artwork work is immediately related to the artist's inner world and his unconscious areas of the mind.

One college of artwork that was immediately influenced by the Freudian concept and immediately manifests the unconscious is Surrealism which started within the early 20th century, initially as an offshoot of a cultural motion, Dadaism. Surrealism emphasizes on the combination of artwork and life and with psychoanalytic influences focuses on the unconscious desires. From the psychology of Jacques Lacan to the philosophy of Hegel, Surrealism was largely shaped by philosophy, psychology and cultural changes and has been one of the most revolutionary actions within the historical past of art.

Some of its well-known proponents had been Andr Breton and extra lately Salvador Dali. In truth Dali's work may very well be seen as virtually a visual illustration of Freud's emphasis on dream evaluation, unconscious needs as well as hallucinations and free association. Sexual symbolism, an important part of Freudian evaluation has been extensively used by surrealists. Freud and surrealism highlighted a closer hyperlink between insanity, sexuality and artwork however this kind of portrayal met with some opposition as well. However, Carl Jung's psychoanalysis and emphasis on artwork as a type of cultural expression was extra acceptable to some artists and Jung remains as the most influential psychoanalyst in artwork historical past along with his optimistic and constructive portrayal of art. In accordance with Jung, artwork and different forms of inventive endeavor may access the 'collective unconscious' and supply appreciable insights on not just the process of creativity but additionally the cultural elements within the mind which are carried across generations. In Jungian psychology artwork as a psychological process could be an assimilation of the cultural experiences of the artist so it is accessible to an wider community.

Thus the psychology of art because it develops to a serious self-discipline and space of study could be considered as having distinct branches -

o Structural Psychology of Art - that which emphasizes on the 'structural' elements of perceiving artwork through kind, organization as understood with Gestalt rules and common emphasis on structure, also with the rules of physiology and visual notion

o Practical Psychology of Art - that which emphasizes on artwork as a inventive process representing the 'functional' elements or psychological dynamics of the artist, the content material moderately than the shape and may very well be understood with the insights of psychoanalysis and phenomenology.

The structural department relates primarily to the perceiver and the process of perception of art and the practical department pertains to the artist and the process of creation of art. Each these dimensions could be equally essential and complement one another in a comprehensive conceptual psychology of art.




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