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Jun 2003
ISBN 0262083108
435 pp.
131 illus.
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Looking into Pictures
Heiko Hecht , Robert Schwartz and Margaret Atherton
The last half of the twentieth century witnessed dramatic changes in the theory of vision. In particular, the "eye-as-camera" metaphor that had long dominated the field no longer seemed tenable. Somewhat surprisingly, however, the metaphor has maintained its appeal in the study of pictures. In Looking into Pictures, philosophers, psychologists, and art historians explore the implications of recent theories of vision for our understanding of the nature of pictorial representation and picture perception. They examine the dual nature of picture perception, the fact that viewers must separate the visual properties of the picture itself from those of what the picture represents. Discussing the status of perspective, they ask whether perspective renderings of space are special or more accurate than those found in other types of pictures, and if so why. Finally, they consider the possible need to reconceive pictorial space and the implications of such a reconception for the study of picture perception.
Table of Contents
 Acknowledgements
 Introduction
I THE DUAL NATURE OF PICTURE PERCEPTION
1 In Defense of Seeing-In
by Richard Wollheim
2 Conjoint Representations and the Mental Capacity for Multiple Simultaneous
by Rainer Mausfeld
3 Relating Direct and Indirect Perception of Spatial Layout
by H. A. Sedgwick
4 The Dual Nature of Picture Perception: A Challenge to Current General Accounts of Visual Perception
by Reinhard Niederée and Dieter Heyer
4 Perceptual Strategies and Pictorial Content
by Mark Rollins
II THE STATUS OF PERSPECTIVE
6 Optical Laws of Symbolic Rules? The Dual Nature of Pictorial Systems
by John Willats
7 Perspective, Convention, and Compromise
by Robert Hopkins
8 Reseblance Reconceived
by Klaus Sachs-Hombach
9 What you See Is What You Get: The Problems of Linear Perspective
by Klaus Rehkämper
10 Pictures of Perspective: Theory or Therapy?
by Patrick Maynard
III THE NATURE AND STRUCTURE OF RECONCEIVED PICTORIAL SPACE
11 Reconceiving Perceptual Space
by James E. Cutting
12 Pictorial Space
by Jan J. Koenderink and Andrea J. van Doorn
13 Thurth and Meaning in Pictorial Space
by Sheena Rogers
14 Line and Borders of Surfaces: Grouping and Foreshortening
by John M. Kennedy, Igor Juricevic, and Juan Bai
15 Irreconcilable Views
by Hermann Kalkofen
 References
 Contributors
 Index
 
 


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