Decorative textiles were once ubiquitous and important, occupying a significant social and cultural space in the early modern interior, yet their impact upon how individuals engaged with domestic spaces is largely unknown. One way of approaching their impact is through an exploration of how present-day individuals engage visually with them in relation to other objects as they walk around an historic space. This article reports on one such investigation, an eye-tracking study which explored responses to the narrative hangings in Queen Margaret’s Chamber at Owlpen Manor in Gloucestershire. Using eye-tracking equipment, we compared the viewing behaviour of two groups of participants, to whom we gave key information before they entered the room...
Historical clothes are more than just examples of how past societies dressed—they are imbued with sm...
Killerton House National Trust houses over 20,000 garments in its rich dress collection, many of the...
The spatial arrangement of artworks is recognized as one of the key elements of exhibition design. T...
Acknowledgements We are extremely grateful to Nicholas Mander, the owner of Owlpen Manor, for suppor...
This collaborative paper co-authored by researchers in visual perception at the University of Dundee...
This article reviews and analyses the activities and findings of an AHRC research network, Ways of S...
This article explores the physical, cultural and aesthetic conditions for perceiving textiles in ear...
Eye-tracking—the process of capturing and measuring human eye movement—is becoming an increasingly p...
Decorative textiles were the most ubiquitous form of domestic furnishing in early modern England. Fr...
Although the understanding of cognitive disciplines has progressed, we know relatively little about ...
Eye tracking research in art viewership is often conducted in a laboratory setting where reproductio...
Textiles occupy a paradoxical position in historic house interiors. Once one of the most significant...
This article recreates a deteriorating archive, bringing life, opportunity and growth to a collectio...
For many in seventeenth-century England, curiosity became an intellectual and physical means of expl...
There is increasing awareness that the perception of art is affected by the way it is presented. In ...
Historical clothes are more than just examples of how past societies dressed—they are imbued with sm...
Killerton House National Trust houses over 20,000 garments in its rich dress collection, many of the...
The spatial arrangement of artworks is recognized as one of the key elements of exhibition design. T...
Acknowledgements We are extremely grateful to Nicholas Mander, the owner of Owlpen Manor, for suppor...
This collaborative paper co-authored by researchers in visual perception at the University of Dundee...
This article reviews and analyses the activities and findings of an AHRC research network, Ways of S...
This article explores the physical, cultural and aesthetic conditions for perceiving textiles in ear...
Eye-tracking—the process of capturing and measuring human eye movement—is becoming an increasingly p...
Decorative textiles were the most ubiquitous form of domestic furnishing in early modern England. Fr...
Although the understanding of cognitive disciplines has progressed, we know relatively little about ...
Eye tracking research in art viewership is often conducted in a laboratory setting where reproductio...
Textiles occupy a paradoxical position in historic house interiors. Once one of the most significant...
This article recreates a deteriorating archive, bringing life, opportunity and growth to a collectio...
For many in seventeenth-century England, curiosity became an intellectual and physical means of expl...
There is increasing awareness that the perception of art is affected by the way it is presented. In ...
Historical clothes are more than just examples of how past societies dressed—they are imbued with sm...
Killerton House National Trust houses over 20,000 garments in its rich dress collection, many of the...
The spatial arrangement of artworks is recognized as one of the key elements of exhibition design. T...