This paper considers several types of imagination relevant to art historical enquiry. These are exemplified in artistic expressions ranging from palaeolithic paintings in the Chauvet Cave, to drawings, sculptures and buildings designed by Michelangelo and drawings and paintings by Leonardo, and are related to recent neuroscientific discoveries. From this it emerges that important types of imagination cannot be understood without an appreciation of the neural processes that underlie them and especially without an acknowledgement of the importance of neurochemistry
The world is a complex reality where everything exists in relation to something else. Each object, a...
From at least 30,000 years ago, humans pictured animals, such as rhinoceroses, horses, and lions, on...
The discovery of cave paintings made by our Upper Paleolithic ancestors in Western Europe was an ast...
This paper, which is limited to the art of painting, aims to support the idea that a substantial in...
Biologists regard humans as an exceptional and unusual species: we perform and engage in a range of ...
In this article we wish to discuss recent work on neurobiology and visual arts, with impact on human...
In 1972, Michael Baxandal characterizes the processes responsible for the cultural relativism of art...
Could we understand, in biological terms, the unique and fantastic capabilities of the human brain t...
The aim of this thesis is to explore the intricate relationship between art and neuroscience, sheddi...
Art is a system of human communication arising from symbolic cognition, conveying ideas, experiences...
The vision of an art masterpiece is associated with brain arousal by neural processes occurring quit...
The field of Neuroaesthetics has an overwhelming potential for helping us to understand the world an...
Neuroscience has recently contributed a lot to the understanding of aesthetic experience features. S...
The aim with this master thesis is to prove that prehistoric art is worth the Westerners attention, ...
The present paper analyses the neuroanatomical and neuropsychological backgrounds of art reception a...
The world is a complex reality where everything exists in relation to something else. Each object, a...
From at least 30,000 years ago, humans pictured animals, such as rhinoceroses, horses, and lions, on...
The discovery of cave paintings made by our Upper Paleolithic ancestors in Western Europe was an ast...
This paper, which is limited to the art of painting, aims to support the idea that a substantial in...
Biologists regard humans as an exceptional and unusual species: we perform and engage in a range of ...
In this article we wish to discuss recent work on neurobiology and visual arts, with impact on human...
In 1972, Michael Baxandal characterizes the processes responsible for the cultural relativism of art...
Could we understand, in biological terms, the unique and fantastic capabilities of the human brain t...
The aim of this thesis is to explore the intricate relationship between art and neuroscience, sheddi...
Art is a system of human communication arising from symbolic cognition, conveying ideas, experiences...
The vision of an art masterpiece is associated with brain arousal by neural processes occurring quit...
The field of Neuroaesthetics has an overwhelming potential for helping us to understand the world an...
Neuroscience has recently contributed a lot to the understanding of aesthetic experience features. S...
The aim with this master thesis is to prove that prehistoric art is worth the Westerners attention, ...
The present paper analyses the neuroanatomical and neuropsychological backgrounds of art reception a...
The world is a complex reality where everything exists in relation to something else. Each object, a...
From at least 30,000 years ago, humans pictured animals, such as rhinoceroses, horses, and lions, on...
The discovery of cave paintings made by our Upper Paleolithic ancestors in Western Europe was an ast...