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  1. Sep 15, 2020 · The psychology of art is a field of psychology that studies creativity and artistic appreciation from a psychological standpoint. The goals of the psychology of art are similar to those pursued by other related disciplines of psychology. Here, we can include the disciplines that study basic processes such as perception, memory, and emotion, as ...

  2. How Art Works: A Conversation between Philosophy and Psychology1. ELLEN WINNER. chool of EducationEarly Psychological Approaches to AestheticsF. r centuries, aesthetics was effectively a branch of philosophy. The questions asked were philosophical ones that could be answered by reason and did n. t call for empi.

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  3. The psychology of art and aesthetics is the study of the perception and experience of the visual arts, music, film, performances, literature, design, and the environment. Art is a human phenomenon, and therefore aesthetics is fundamentally a psychological process. Psychological aesthetics evolved from the study of aesthetics by philosophers ...

  4. Nov 22, 2018 · Abstract. This book is an examination of what psychologists have discovered about how art works—what it does to us, how we experience art, how we react to it emotionally, how we judge it, and what we learn from it. The questions investigate include the following: What makes us call something art?

  5. Nov 22, 2018 · Art is a socially constructed, open concept that eludes formal definition. While art cannot be tightly defined, we can loosely define art by listing possible characteristics of works of art—recognizing that this list must remain an open one. We may not be able define art, but philosophers and psychologists together have revealed the ...

  6. Jan 30, 2014 · Art history and psychoanalysis are interdisciplinary subjects that rely on imagery for their very existence. Works of art are, by definition, images, whether these are two- or three-dimensional. Psychoanalytic interpretation, both clinical and as applied to other fields, deals with the observation and analysis of imagery: in dreams, symptom ...

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  8. Apr 2, 2019 · Harvard researcher’s latest book explores how and why we react to it. Ellen Winner ’69, Ph.D. ’78, BI ’99 concentrated in English at Radcliffe, but she’d always planned to be an artist. She attended the School of the Museum of Fine Arts after college to study painting but soon realized “it was not the life I wanted.”.

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