Baren Digest Tuesday, 27 May 2003 Volume 23 : Number 2236 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: "Shpend Bengu" Date: Tue, 27 May 2003 08:11:35 +0200 (ora legale Europa occ.) Subject: [Baren 21596] Art History. 110.000 images Archivist's note: Message did not come through ------------------------------ From: "Shpend Bengu" Date: Tue, 27 May 2003 08:14:38 +0200 (ora legale Europa occ.) Subject: [Baren 21597] about print http://www.artline.com/associations/ifpda/text/whatisprint.html Shpend Bengu E-mail: shpend#interalb.net ------------------------------ From: "Shpend Bengu" Date: Tue, 27 May 2003 08:26:03 +0200 (ora legale Europa occ.) Subject: [Baren 21598] Sorry for the first message with the same title http://art.okstate.edu/vrl/courses.htm Shpend Bengu ------------------------- E-mail: shpend#interalb.net ------------------------------ From: "Shpend Bengu" Date: Tue, 27 May 2003 08:34:45 +0200 (ora legale Europa occ.) Subject: [Baren 21599] Printmakers Council http://www.printmaker.co.uk/pmc/ Shpend Bengu E-mail: shpend#interalb.net ------------------------------ From: "Shpend Bengu" Date: Tue, 27 May 2003 08:37:02 +0200 (ora legale Europa occ.) Subject: [Baren 21600] Another printmakers site http://www.printforum.com/welcome.htm Shpend Bengu E-mail: shpend#interalb.net ------------------------------ From: "Shpend Bengu" Date: Tue, 27 May 2003 08:49:38 +0200 (ora legale Europa occ.) Subject: [Baren 21601] Science Illuminates Art >Science Illuminates Art > >Dual Nature of Seeing Accounts for Brain's Double Take on Visual >World > >Screaming headlines grab your attention using some of the same >techniques as great works of art. Both can skillfully manipulate >the biology of your visual system, playing form against feature, >contrast against color, and primitive against sublime. > > > >Computer programs now can generate images by matching the local >luminance and color of low-resolution features of many small >images, says Marge Livingstone, whose picture is the basis of >this photomosaic. As the eye moves over the image, different >parts of it flip between global and local perspectives. (Photo by >Clinton M. Lipsey) Monet and other painters exploited the >parallel visual processing of color and brightness. A sunset >seems to shimmer, a field of poppies seems to wave, and a river >seems to flow when there is a disconnect between the color and >luminance pathways, according to the new book, Vision and Art: >The Biology of Seeing, by Margaret Livingstone, HMS professor of >neurobiology. > >Art implies a personal, unanalyzable creative power, but >Livingstone finds plenty to analyze about how various works of >art--and Impressionist paintings in particular--reflect different >properties of the visual system. > >"Art depends ultimately on our brains," says colleague David >Hubel, who has worked with Livingstone for 27 years and wrote the >foreword for her book. "By understanding what goes on in our >brains when we look at a work of art, we can hope to deepen our >appreciation of both the art and science." (Hubel shared the 1981 >Nobel Prize in medicine or physiology, in part, for revealing the >functional organization of the visual system and the importance >of early visual stimulation as the system develops after birth.) >Vision Basics It is tempting to imagine that an eyeball projects >a Renoir from the museum wall onto the retina, disassembles the >pieces, and sends them to the back of the brain to process color, >contrast, shape, position, and motion through the cortical >layers. At each stage neurons become more selective for more >precise features in the image. Finally, the image reassembles in >the front of the brain. But the visual system does not work like >that. > >"This misperception is so common that it has a name: the >homunculus fallacy," Livingstone writes. "The fallacy is the idea >that when we see something, a small representation of it is >transmitted to the brain to be looked at by a little man. The >fact is, of course, that there is not a little man in the brain >to look at that or any other image. The function of the visual >system is really to process light patterns into information >useful to the organism." > >Biologically useful information reaches the brain through two >massively parallel processing systems, Livingstone said. The >subdivision begins in the retina, with two major classes of >ganglion cells that send signals to two different areas of the >thalamus. The two sets of signals travel ultimately to areas of >the cortex so distinct they are separated by several inches. > >The more primitive half of the visual system begins with large >ganglions having big, bushy, dendritic arbors. This part >perceives motion, depth, and spatial organization. Known as the >Where system, it is colorblind but keenly sensitive to small >differences in brightness. We share the Where system with other >mammals, but only primates have evolved the more refined What >system. The What system starts with smaller ganglion cells. It >sees color well but not contrast. It has vision that is three >times sharper than the Where system. Both systems cover the >entire visual field. The Where system sees a person moving toward >us; the What system tells us it is Aunt Emily. The Where system >sees the forest; the What system sees the trees. Playful Patterns >of Light In the case of works by Monet and other Impressionist >painters, the shimmering comes from colors that appear distinct >to the dazzled What system but become shades of gray to the >black-and-white Where system. In Paris, after some haggling with >a dubious curator, Livingstone measured the brightness of the >pulsating orange-red sun in Monet's Impression: Sunrise and found >it to be the same as the gray background. In the more modern >Broadway Boogie Woogie by Piet Mondrian, the What system sees the >bright yellow and gray squares against an off-white background, >but the Where system cannot see them. Consequently, the squares >seem to move, or jitter, Livingstone said. > >Conversely, the different messages conveyed by color and contrast >also explain why expressive, unrealistic colors of shadows still >can impart normal depth in paintings such as AndrŽ Derain's >Portrait of Henri Matisse and Matisse's Femme au Chapeau. > >Photomosaic art exploits another aspect of our visual system. In >1995, Robert Silver, then a student at the MIT Media Lab, >invented the technique of generating large pictures composed of >tiny images. The assembled composite mosaic looks dynamic in part >because our acute center of vision focuses on the small >individual images while our peripheral vision picks up the global >view. The Mona Lisa's elusive smile toys with the same difference >in acuity across the visual system, Livingstone said. > >"Instead of concluding that there was something mystical and >magical about this painting, I filtered images of Mona Lisa's >face so that you could see what the peripheral and central vision >could see," Livingstone said. "It turns out that most of the >smile is in the blurry components best seen by peripheral vision. >In some sense, she's coy. She smiles until you look directly at >her, then she stops." > >"Our knowledge of visual science is rudimentary," Hubel writes. >"It goes as far as three or four stages of visual cortex, whereas >we know that there are at least several dozen further stages in >the occipital lobes alone, none of which are yet explored. We >know about some of the early building blocks of vision, much more >than we did 50 years ago, but we still have no idea of what >happens in the brain when we recognize a hat, a safety pin, or a >boat or when we look at a painting that has intense emotional >content. But we are beginning to understand some elementary >things fairly well: why yellow plus blue light makes white, why >equiluminant colors shimmer, why a black object remains black >whether seen in dim light or on the beach." > >In other words, scientists cannot even begin exploring the more >soul-searching questions raised by art, even if they have made a >good start in explaining the Where and the What. > >--Carol Cruzan Morton > > Shpend Bengu ------------------------------ End of Baren Digest V23 #2236 *****************************