Vision and Art: The Biology of Seeing

by Margaret Livingstone

On This Page

Description

This Groundbreaking Yet Accessible study by a noted Harvard neurobiologist draws on history and her own cutting-edge discoveries to explain how the effects of various works of art can be understood by the way the eye and the brain of the viewer work.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

2 reviews
I'd love to take a class on this subject, but it's not the 'how to look at a painting' book that I imagine must exist somewhere. ?áAnd so I did not read every word of this and cannot honestly rate it.

This is an explanation of how the understanding of luminescence (as entirely distinct from color vision). of?áthe fact that we're colorblind at night, and of other biological aspects of our optical system and the 'tricks' that can be played on us, enable talented artists to create works that seem to have real depth, or to be jittery?áor to move,?áor to otherwise show a reality beyond the ordinary.

Unfortunately, seeing the pix reproduced in a book, even in this oversize volume, just does not give the experience necessary for the show more viewer to actually appreciate the effects created by the artist. ?áAnd there were some 'tricks' I couldn't see at all with my aging eyes. show less
Tough sledding at times, without a background in several sciences, but illustrations are of great assistance.
VISUALLY STUNNING

Members

Recently Added By

Lists

Author Information

6 Works 290 Members

Awards and Honors

Classifications

Genres
Art & Design, Nonfiction, Science & Nature, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
750.18Arts & recreationPaintingPainting and paintingsPhilosophy and theory
LCC
N7430.5 .L54Fine ArtsVisual artsGeneral works
BISAC

Statistics

Members
235
Popularity
137,812
Reviews
2
Rating
½ (4.58)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3