Image-making and contemporary social myth
Loading...
Authors
Sacks, Glenda
Issue Date
1992-11
Type
Dissertation
Language
en
Keywords
Alternative Title
Abstract
In our Post-Modern milieu there has been a renewed attempt in art to communicate with the viewer. My hypothesis is that particular images provoke empathic responses in the viewer. Iconographical and formal characteristics in images which provoke empathy are discussed and Lipps' ( 1905) and Worringer's (1908) theories of empathy are examined. The psychological profile of a viewer is considered in the light of Freud's familial model of the human psyche with its emphasis on sexual instincts. The theoretical framework within which my hypothesis
operates is based upon Bryson, Holly and Moxey's ( 1991) interventionist response to visual interpretation. They foreground the viewer's historicity in the viewing of an image and their approach is contrasted with that of the perceptualists (Wollheim, Gombrich and others) who maintain that the historicity of the viewer is unimportant. Finally it is argued that art can have a transforming potential if the artist provokes empathy in the viewer.
Description
Citation
Sacks, Glenda (1992) Image-making and contemporary social myth, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17652>