| Literature DB >> 30127756 |
Matthew Pelowski1, Helmut Leder1, Vanessa Mitschke1,2, Eva Specker1, Gernot Gerger1,3, Pablo P L Tinio4, Elena Vaporova1, Till Bieg1,5, Agnes Husslein-Arco6.
Abstract
Installation art is one of the most important and provocative developments in the visual arts during the last half century and has become a key focus of artists and of contemporary museums. It is also seen as particularly challenging or even disliked by many viewers, and-due to its unique in situ, immersive setting-is equally regarded as difficult or even beyond the grasp of present methods in empirical aesthetic psychology. In this paper, we introduce an exploratory study with installation art, utilizing a collection of techniques to capture the eclectic, the embodied, and often the emotionally-charged viewing experience. We present results from an investigation of two pieces, both part of Olafur Eliasson's exhibition "Baroque, Baroque" held at the Belvedere museum in Vienna. These were assessed by pre- and post-viewing questionnaires focusing on emotion, meaning-making, and appraisals, in tandem with mobile eye tracking to consider viewers' attention to both installed artworks and/or to the museum environment. The data showed differences in participants' emotional states, appraisals, and visual exploration, which together paint a picture of the aesthetic reactions to the works. These differences also showed how viewers' appraisal strategies, meaning making, and physical actions facilitated relatively more or less deep engagement with, and enjoyment of, the art. The results are discussed in terms of their implications for museum studies, art education, and theory in empirical aesthetics.Entities:
Keywords: aesthetic emotion; art perception; installation art; mobile eye-tracking; museum study
Year: 2018 PMID: 30127756 PMCID: PMC6088181 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
What was the artwork meaning? Wishes vs. wonders.
| Meaning type | Answer, translated from original German (participant number) |
|---|---|
| (31.4%) Experiential/emotion-baseda | (3) To (the viewer) the pictures seem terrifying |
| (5) It represents the cycle of life | |
| (8) I think it represents the connection between modern and classical art. The half ring is closed through the mirror and builds an unity in its reflection, also with the classical pictures on the opposite walls. Maybe it should represent a cycle that is linked to the acts of war that are shown in the pictures. | |
| (13) Modern art (optical illusion) linked to classical art. Transition. Infinity. Unity. | |
| (14) floating weightless sphere in space. No existence of space and time and gravity. The question of the persistence in life? Being exists only in the here and now? Reminds of the universe- > orbit of the sun. | |
| (16) It shows the human being as a part of the masses and it shows that its death is just one of many others and nothing special. | |
| (17) The artwork is astonishing. One feels drawn in to the situation by the mirror, like an untertow. It brings one down to earth again, how good our life in fact is, far away from battle, blood and death. But will this change in the future? | |
| (22) And again I don’t know, presumably: the history of the mankind is an eternal cycle. Again and again war and destruction. | |
| (30) Sadness, calm atmosphere | |
| (32) Cycle of war. The war cannot bring peace, but only new conflicts. | |
| (35) The blurring and interaction of the link between illusion and reality. | |
| (37) I think the intention was to show how the form alters depending on the angle from which the artwork is viewed. The circle/oval changes from each perspective | |
| (41) paintings of battles were shown and I think the meaning of the mirror was to lead the recipient to believe that everything was bigger and wider than depictable on the pictures. Although I found the circle in the middle was very impressive, because it seemed to float in the air, I could not think of any meaning | |
| (42) little, the optic circle reminded me a bit of the “doom”, the never-ending up and down of wars (with reference to the paintings) | |
| (43) In the battles many lose their lives and take the bullet for their country. Nature gets destroyed as well. General destruction. But also new, good things can emerge from that. | |
| (48) It plays at least with the optical illusion of a levitating object. It might advert to closed-ness or endlessness due to the imagery and the mirror. | |
| (64.7%) Descriptive meaning | (1) detailed depiction of battles |
| (2) moderate meaning in the art sector | |
| (6) Depiction of battles to provide documentation | |
| (7) The artworks are historical and show various battle scenes. They (the artworks) tell the visitors how and where battles were fought in the past and maybe they serve as a general reminder of the cruelties of war. | |
| (9) It shows war on several locations | |
| (10) Maybe the circle denotes a connection between the artworks (repetition of war) | |
| (11) To represent various battle scenes. How spatially extended they could be. | |
| (12) Several battles were depicted. | |
| (15) Mid-level meaning, because it depicts historical events, but without being a remarkably popular art piece. | |
| (18) paintings of various battles around the year 1700, historical, detailed | |
| (19) War | |
| (20) To me it was like an orbit | |
| (21) Seeing a piece of history | |
| (23) pictures of battles | |
| (24) The artworks were about battles at various places. | |
| (25) War theater, battle | |
| (26) Depiction of battlegrounds, tries to unify to a great artwork. | |
| (27) Depiction of a war scene. The pictures in a chronological order, beginning with gunfire etc. | |
| (28) the artist obviously had a preference for battles. I am impressed by the details of the paintings and I am wondering the whole time how long it took him to paint these artworks. Ha ha. It was surely exciting for the contemporary people to look at pictures of heroic battles. But I mostly could not figure out who was fighting whom. | |
| (29) A battle was depicted, that should be captured. | |
| (31) The presentation of various battles (historical moments), perhaps as achievements | |
| (33) It illustrates diverse battles of the 18th century. | |
| (34) Sundry presentations of battles. | |
| (36) I saw pictures of battles, these types of artworks have no meaning to me. | |
| (38) historical meaning (demonstration of power on one side) – uplifting-floating lightness on the other one | |
| (39) Depictions of several battles/wars, demonstration of power/efficacy of war –>Dead people, winnings, losses, changes etc. | |
| (40) battle fields, wars of the past | |
| (44) Depiction of historical battles. | |
| (46) Depiction of battles. Soldiers back then (in contrast to these days) were hailed as heroes, though, and thus their fall was dramatic. It looks rather heroic than war pictures nowadays, which meant to act as a deterrent. | |
| (47) painted war scenarios on several pictures, were imposing, but they all showed the same The artwork with the mirror (did not affect) me. | |
| (49) The paintings in the room depicted battles. | |
| (50) Battle, raid into a village, war | |
| (51) Showing several war-/battle strategies and depictions of “a whole” | |
| (3.9%) No Meaning | (4) No idea |
| (45) No idea | |
What was the artwork meaning? Eye see you.
| Meaning type | Answer (participant number) |
|---|---|
| (35.3%) Experiential/emotion-based | (3) double meaning of life |
| (5) To learn and understand other perspectives | |
| (6) magnificent ambience | |
| (7) The sort of “sun” bathes the room in an orange, very bright but pleasant light. Through the mirror one can see oneself everywhere a 100 fold. The meaning is very abstract and can certainly be interpreted in different ways. Maybe it wants to increase the self-confidence or just show that creating a pleasant and free feeling in such a small room is possible | |
| (8) I think it is supposed to show the limits of our visual perception and that we can still win by means of these new impressions. By playing with the complications and perceiving unfamiliar things, which are hard to interpret at first sight (like the other color perception) | |
| (11) Creating a world without color | |
| (14) seeing eye. Sees itself through all the mirrors. Insight question and recurring/continual. To understand oneself? | |
| (16) It resembles a sun and makes one feel more cheerful and more alert. | |
| (17) The angels on the ceiling look like they are going to put the flower wreath on one’s head. Impressive wall ornaments and one can see how impressive optical illusions have always been to people – the mirrors seem to reach ad infinitum. They carry one into a different world. | |
| (21) Humor. The artwork was very funny to me. | |
| (29) The warm light with the beautiful room composition made one happy | |
| (30) calming effect | |
| (34) Very garish light, it was hard to concentrate on the room, strongly distracted from the mirror image. | |
| (35) An extreme representation of width and infinity of spaces. Every apparent barrier (walls etc.) can bear additional space. | |
| (40) The influence of the yellow light on the experience of a joyful room. | |
| (42) strong light effect, oneself as “sinking” (head in the middle of the lamp with royal surroundings | |
| (46) One sees herself in a mirror with (awesome) light reflections that makes you look fancy. Congenial to the fancy room with the mirror. And in general congenial to the whole Winterpalais – apparently Mr Prince Eugen went for fancy things – and because it is still cool, a mirror was positioned. In this way we are all a bit prince/princess when we sparkle so nicely in our reflection. | |
| (47) Gorgeous ceiling painting with angels, it conveyed calmness, yellow light, that illuminated the room, that I found unpleasant, very beautiful ornament on doors and walls | |
| (33.3%) Descriptive meaning | (1) reflection |
| (2) dubious meaning of the positioned installation, rest of the room with very conspicuous beautiful adornments | |
| (13) Highlighting the room through light. Highlighting certain aspects of the room | |
| (18) splendid, historical | |
| (19) It is some Christian motive, but I do not know enough about this subject matter, to construe it in a right way. | |
| (20) It looks like one big eye, which can see everything because it lights the whole room. Perhaps a depiction of an “all-seeing eye” | |
| (23) golden room with angel | |
| (25) splendor, depiction of wealth, affluence | |
| (27) Abstract rebuilding of a sun | |
| (28) I felt watched by the angels with their dark eyes. Besides, in my opinion it shows that nobles in the past spent far too much money on art, just to boast. Apart from that I cannot say much about it. | |
| (31) I think it was just a well-lighted embellishment, that should demonstrate liking and pompous wealth, especially the flowers and tea cups/tankards cause wellbeing | |
| (38) a “beautified” picture of oneself (in the mirror) | |
| (39) Representation of sun, reflection in the mirrors | |
| (41) To me it looked like a living room with chimney and pleasant pictures of angels and flowers. The light had no meaning to me in this context and was incongruous. | |
| (43) Plenty of gold and the big lamp that spends “warmth”. The mirrors were very cool (similar to the hall of mirrors) | |
| (50) round reflecting sun | |
| (51) I associate the following with the artwork: warmth, sun, gold, beauty. | |
| (31.4%) No Meaning | (4) no idea |
| (9) ? | |
| (10) I cannot answer this question, to me it was not obvious. At least the light was pleasant. | |
| (12) No particular meaning, ornaments on wall and ceiling, bathed in yellow light | |
| (15) no big (meaning) | |
| (22) I don’t know. Maybe it was about highlighting something, drawing attention to something, to gain center stage? | |
| (24) the meaning is unknown | |
| (26) no idea | |
| (32) I don’t know | |
| (33) Unfortunately, I am not aware of the intention of the (art). | |
| (36) I looked at the room, to me it had no special meaning and I did not feel aroused/stimulated by the room | |
| (37) I don’t know | |
| (44) no idea | |
| (45) no idea | |
| (48) I heard how other visitors were talking about an “eye”. But I may not have noticed. | |
| (49) Unfortunately, I am not absolutely sure about the meaning. There was a big lamp positioned that dominated the room. | |
Eye-tracking results.
| Fixation time (ms) | Fixation count | Fixation duration (ms) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | % Total | Mean (SD) | % total | ||
| Artwork | 27,299.6 (30,960.2) | 34.5% (36.0) | 104.8 (106.7) | 25.4% (29.1) | 221.5 |
| Walls/ceiling | 108,459.2 (115,086.3) | 66.3% (35.9) | 471.9 (464.5) | 73.1% (29.9) | 204.1 |
| Self | 3,071.6 (3,247.2) | 4.4% (5.8) | 10.7 (10.8) | 2.2% (1.9) | 295.6 |
| Total | 131,781.0 (108,643.9) | 583.8 (431.2) | 212.8 | ||
| Artwork | 8155.9 (15,003.7) | 11.6 (12.14) | 28.5 (42.2) | 11.5% (12.0) | 225.3 |
| Walls/ceiling | 48,869.5 (44,718.4) | 83.8% (13.4) | 208.0 (172.7) | 85.7% (12.9) | 225.0 |
| Self | 3,303.8 (2,946.8) | 7.0% (6.1) | 5.4 (6.8) | 2.8% (3.2) | 378.4 |
| Total | 59,227.9 (54,724.7) | 241.9 (189.2) | 235.5 | ||
Correlation of artwork ratings and percentage of fixation time on artworks.
| Fixation time | Percent of fixations | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Artwork | Wall | Self | Artwork | Wall | Self | |
| Beautiful: ugly | -0.271 | -0.264 | 0.212 | 0.225 | -0.176 | 0.407 |
| Active: passive | 0.129 | -0.377 | -0.289 | 0.136 | -0.106 | -0.072 |
| Pleasant: unpleasant | -0.226 | 0.258 | 0.368 | -0.202 | 0.178 | 0.167 |
| Happy: sad | -0.488∗ | 0.359 | 0.271 | -0.416 | 0.419 | 0.171 |
| Strong: weak | -0.119 | -0.242 | -0.487 | 0.170 | -0.094 | -0.056 |
| Intimate: distant | 0.153 | -0.012 | 0.717∗ | -0.131 | 0.080 | 0.309 |
| Meaningful: meaningless | 0.186 | -0.508∗ | -0.329 | 0.457 | -0.409 | 0.102 |
| Serious: humorous | 0.598∗ | -0.390 | -0.194 | 0.634∗ | -0.574∗ | 0.345 |
| Potent: impotent | 0.177 | -0.319 | -0.130 | 0.343 | -0.262 | 0.229 |
| Beautiful: ugly | 0.012 | 0.113 | 0.107 | 0.102 | -0.136 | -0.024 |
| Active: passive | -0.284 | 0.153 | 0.008 | -0.288 | 0.196 | 0.333 |
| Pleasant: unpleasant | -0.045 | 0.141 | 0.127 | -0.019 | 0.008 | 0.181 |
| Happy: sad | 0.133 | -0.158 | 0.265 | 0.144 | -0.272 | 0.309 |
| Strong: weak | -0.267 | 0.208 | -0.035 | -0.320 | 0.323 | 0.068 |
| Intimate: distant | 0.231 | -0.057 | -0.031 | 0.443* | -0.373 | -0.336 |
| meaningful: meaningless | -0.100 | 0.169 | -0.144 | 0.019 | -0.034 | -0.018 |
| Serious: humorous | 0.167 | 0.279 | 0.140 | 0.257 | -0.296 | 0.028 |
| Potent: impotent | -0.065 | 0.219 | 0.015 | -0.069 | 0.027 | 0.025 |
Correlation between “pleasing-displeasing” artwork assessment and other art ratings.
| Beautiful: ugly | 0.398 | 0.601∗ |
| Active: passive | -0.286 | 0.198 |
| Happy: sad | 0.602∗ | 0.629∗ |
| Strong: weak | -0.272 | 0.251 |
| Intimate: distant | -0.302 | -0.366 |
| Meaningful: meaningless | -0.049 | 0.283 |
| Serious: humorous | -0.328 | -0.241 |
| Potent: impotent | -0.077 | 0.149 |
Distribution of types of answers to “What did the artwork mean?” when viewers appraise art as generally good, neutral, or bad.
| % Meaning type usage for good, bad, neutral artwork appraisals | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Descriptive meaning (%) | No meaning (%) | Emotion-/experience-based meaning (%) | |
| “good” appraisal | 56.5 | 8.7 | 34.8 |
| Neutral appraisal | 75.0 | 0.0 | 25.0 |
| “bad” appraisal | 68.8 | 0.0 | 31.3 |
| “good” appraisal | 33.3 | 27.8 | 38.9 |
| Neutral appraisal | 50.0 | 25.0 | 25.0 |
| “bad” appraisal | 27.3 | 45.5 | 27.3 |