csidney Posted August 7, 2009 Posted August 7, 2009 I am interested in the psychology of art creation and appreciation with special emphasis on photography. My photographic colleagues are not much interested in this line of thought, but I hope some of you are. I wonder what science can tell us about the hardwiring of our brains for judging composition, etc. I have found Gazzaniga's ideas in his book "Human" very helpful. I need more references and links. Excerpts from my writings on this subject have been posted by Michael Reichmann at http://luminous-landscape.com/essays/art2.shtml Also, I BLOG about science in photography at photophys.com. Please visit.
StringJunky Posted August 8, 2009 Posted August 8, 2009 You might find this link useful: http://scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?hl=en&q=author:%22Gombrich%22+intitle:%22Art+and+illusion:+A+study+in+the+psychology+of+pictorial+...%22+&um=1&ie=UTF-8&oi=scholarr It's a list from the National Library Board which you download as a .pdf . It seems to have titles for books that you may be interested in. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedThe branch of science that may give you some answers regarding the way the physiology of our brains governs the way we think and perceive the world is Biopsychology.
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