New WWTF-funded project on Empirical Aesthetics

01.07.2016

"Universal aesthetics of lines and colors? Effects of culture, expertise and habituation"

PIs: Rosenberg & Leder

Lines and colors are the basic formal elements of painting. Whether an artwork is perceived as being serene, dynamic, sad or cheerful is heavily determined by the interplay of these artistic media. Yet, how are such perceptions actually generated in spectators and why do spectators like particular pictures, but dislike others? Artists, art historians and psychologists have grappled with these questions for centuries, but their findings had to remain complementary. There is however general agreement among artists (such as Kandinsky and Mondrian) and psychologists that lines and colors generate definite perceptions in spectators.

In an interdisciplinary cooperation between art history and cognitive psychology, this WWTF-funded Opens external link in new windowproject examines the assumption that the perception of lines and colors is basic to the aesthetic effects and liking of painting. We test this assumption by looking at the impact of single lines and single colors on a perceptual and aesthetic level, and extent this to more complex interactions between elements, up to actual artworks. By examining the role of art-specific expertise and cultural background (planned is a comparative study of Austrian and Japanese spectators), we question the assumption of a universal perception of lines and colors. Our final goal is to gain critical insight into the aesthetic perception of lines and colors and take a decisive step towards an interdisciplinary cognitive science of art.

For more information please check the project website or get in touch via e-mail (contact: Hanna Brinkmann).