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Reading: Neuroscience Shows That Viewing Art in Museums Engages the Brain More Than Reproductions
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GenZStyle > Blog > Culture > Neuroscience Shows That Viewing Art in Museums Engages the Brain More Than Reproductions
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Neuroscience Shows That Viewing Art in Museums Engages the Brain More Than Reproductions

GenZStyle
Last updated: October 19, 2024 11:03 am
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Neuroscience Shows That Viewing Art in Museums Engages the Brain More Than Reproductions
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We may be grateful to live in a time where we don’t have to travel all over the world to find out what a particular work of art looks like. At the same time, we may instinctively understand that viewing a work of art in its original form, even the most faithful reproduction, feels different. This includes a 10 billion pixel scan of Johannes Vermeer that we previously featured on Open Culture. girl with a pearl earring — which, coincidentally, is the exact same picture used in. recent scientific research This is an investigation into exactly why we find art so much more interesting to see in a museum than on a screen or in print.

This study Mauritshuis Museumowns Vermeer’s most famous painting. “Researchers have used electroencephalography (EEG) to reveal the existence of authentic works of art, such as: girl with a pearl earringeliciting a much stronger positive response than the reproductive response.” Museum press release.

“The secret of the charm of “Girl” is also based on a unique neurological phenomenon.Unlike other paintings, she succeeded in “captivating” the viewer with a “sustained attention loop.” I am. This process most clearly stimulates a part of the brain called precuneuswhich is “involved in self-consciousness, introspection, and episodic memory.”

girl with a pearl earring Although it wasn’t the only painting used in the study, it made a much larger and measurable difference in the viewers’ neurological response. Other works including Rembrandt self portrait (1669) and Van Honhorst’s violinist“As with most faces, the visitor first focuses on the girl’s eyes and mouth, then the focus shifts to the pearls, then the focus returns to the eyes and mouth, then the focus shifts to the pearls.” For pearls, etc. ” A museum visitor wearing a brainwave reading headset may not be quite what Walter Benjamin had in mind when he set out to define the “aura” of an original work of art. But over the past 90 years or so, they have given scientific support to this idea. .

Via MyModernMet

Related content:

Why Vermeer? girl with a pearl earring Is it considered a masterpiece?: An animated introduction

10 billion pixels scan of Vermeer’s masterpiece girl with a pearl earring: Explore online

See Vermeer’s complete works in augmented reality: now available on your smartphone with Google

An ingenious improvised copy of Vermeer girl with a pearl earringusing materials you have at home

Guided tour of all of Vermeer’s famous paintings, narrated by Stephen Fry

Artists may have different brains (with more gray matter) than other people, according to a recent scientific study

Based in Seoul, Colin Mbemust write and broadcastIt’s about cities, languages ​​and cultures. His projects include the Substack newsletter books about cities and a book Stateless City: A Stroll Through Los Angeles in the 21st Century. Follow him on Twitter @Colinbemust or facebook.

Source: Open Culture – www.openculture.com

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TAGGED:ArtBrainEngagesMuseumsNeuroscienceReproductionsShowsViewing
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