| Literature DB >> 28894418 |
Aleksandra Sherman1, Clair Morrissey2.
Abstract
Scientists, humanists, and art lovers alike value art not just for its beauty, but also for its social and epistemic importance; that is, for its communicative nature, its capacity to increase one's self-knowledge and encourage personal growth, and its ability to challenge our schemas and preconceptions. However, empirical research tends to discount the importance of such social and epistemic outcomes of art engagement, instead focusing on individuals' preferences, judgments of beauty, pleasure, or other emotional appraisals as the primary outcomes of art appreciation. Here, we argue that a systematic neuroscientific study of art appreciation must move beyond understanding aesthetics alone, and toward investigating the social importance of art appreciation. We make our argument for such a shift in focus first, by situating art appreciation as an active social practice. We follow by reviewing the available psychological and cognitive neuroscientific evidence that art appreciation cultivates socio-epistemic skills such as self- and other-understanding, and discuss philosophical frameworks which suggest a more comprehensive empirical investigation. Finally, we argue that focusing on the socio-epistemic values of art engagement highlights the important role art plays in our lives. Empirical research on art appreciation can thus be used to show that engagement with art has specific social and personal value, the cultivation of which is important to us as individuals, and as communities.Entities:
Keywords: art appreciation; art as social practice; empirical aesthetics; neuroaesthetics; other-understanding; self-understanding
Year: 2017 PMID: 28894418 PMCID: PMC5581397 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2017.00411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Factors influencing art appreciation.
| States (e.g., mood, affect, attention) Traits (e.g., self-concept, social schemas, personality, cognitive and perceptual capacities) Prior experience (e.g., domain specific expertise, memory, tastes, interests, culture) | Perceptual analysis | Emotional appraisal (e.g., negative, positive, mixed emotions) |
| Formal properties (e.g., symmetry, statistical profile, harmony, dynamism, style) | Directed attention | Social knowledge |
An information processing account of art appreciation denoting self and other referential processing as well as the immediate and longitudinal socio-epistemic outcomes. Note that this table lists factors and processing mechanisms relevant to art appreciation but does not highlight the temporality or connectivity between the factors. For a review of models that differ on these dimensions, see Pelowski et al. (.
Open questions.
| (How) Are the processes relevant to self-understanding (e.g., self-reflection, self-awareness, metacognition, self-concept/schema/belief revision, insight, epiphany) recruited during art appreciation? | (How) Are the processes relevant to other-understanding (e.g., perspective-taking/cognitive empathy, imitation/mimicry, affective empathy/emotional resonance) recruited during art appreciation? |
Outstanding questions for investigating the psychological and neurobiological relationships between self-understanding, other-understanding, and art appreciation.