The eminent Chinese artist LaoZhu has created a homogeneous set of abstract pictures that are referred to as the "third abstraction." By definition, these pictures are meant to be representations of the artist's personal involvement and as such to create an internal point of view in the observer on an implicit level of processing. Aiming at investigating whether the artist's choice of a specific color is experienced in a specific way in the recipient, we assessed both explicit and implicit (i.e. neurocognitive) correlates in naive viewers of LaoZhu's pieces. The behavioral results reveal a preference of the original red paintings over color-changed counterparts in green or black. Paradoxically and inconsistent with predictions, we found higher levels of neural activation in several brain regions (predominantly in the frontal and parietal cortices) for the color-changed compared to the original red conditions. These observations add empirically to the complementarity of early visual pathways and higher-order cognition as well as of explicit and implicit information processing during aesthetic appreciation. We discuss our findings in light of processing effort and top-down control of the color-changed paintings. With regard to the third abstraction as defined by LaoZhu, in particular to the distinction between an external and internal point of view when viewing abstract art, our results contribute to an understanding of "abstraction and empathy" as a fundamental part of aesthetic appreciations.
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When we look at an image/picture, and make it impossible to recognize anything specific from it, which means that this image/picture itself has no associations with any existing thing either in the real world or in the imaginary one, and if this image/picture can still generate under these circumstances meanings and effects, then this is what I mean by the Third Type of Abstraction. The method I use is actually to keep removing all the elements of the image/picture that may lead to fantasies or associations with concrete things and make it stay in a suspended, uncertain and free status. In this way, the freedom of everyone who looks at an image/picture can be provoked out of an uncontrolled state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsych J
June 2017
Institute for Medical Psychology and Human Science Center, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Germany.
The eminent Chinese artist LaoZhu has created a homogeneous set of abstract pictures that are referred to as the "third abstraction." By definition, these pictures are meant to be representations of the artist's personal involvement and as such to create an internal point of view in the observer on an implicit level of processing. Aiming at investigating whether the artist's choice of a specific color is experienced in a specific way in the recipient, we assessed both explicit and implicit (i.
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