I went to see a fascinating art exhibit at the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art. I actually heard about this exhibit on the PBS Newshour earlier last month and I wanted to see it before it leaves on January 19th. The full title of the exhibit is "Brains & Beauty: At the Intersection of Art and Neuroscience".
The exhibit used a series of artworks to emphasize how different things about a piece activates the aesthetic triad referring to sensory-motor, emotion-valuation and knowledge-meaning neural systems. In the painting above our visual cortex takes in the color. Our eyes can detect more than 10 million colors. The color red is especially effective in stimulating our brains in different ways.
There were two places in the show where the viewer interacts with a piece that contains cameras. The one above is a camera that distorts what it is seeing into fragmented pieces but I could still make out me, taking a photo of me. The other piece used two cameras on each side of a person showing a split screen version of me from angles that I cannot see in a normal mirror.
It was a fascinating exhibit that gave me lots and lots to think about. I love viewing art and I think this exhibit might enhance the way I look at different pieces of art. I might end up staring at different pieces even longer than I do now.
8 comments:
Wow. Intriguing.
That sounds like an incredible experience! The exhibit title, "Brains & Beauty: At the Intersection of Art and Neuroscience," alone piques my curiosity. I imagine it must have been a thought-provoking blend of scientific insight and artistic expression, revealing the deep connections between our minds and the beauty we create and perceive
Art that makes you think, about how we think.
Intriguing was the word that came to my mind too, Sharon.
I so enjoy contemporary art museums and exhibits. They take the observer into a new realm of thinking.
Very fascinating.
Wow, fascinating experience.
It's great when we see art that affects how we perceive the world (and other artworks)!
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