The Light Show at the Hayward Gallery,
London, is a delight and, quite rightly, oversubscribed. The number entering at
any one time is strictly controlled, allowing viewers the space to appreciate
the exhibits – quite unlike the disgraceful “cram them in” policy at the
Leonardo exhibition at the National Gallery last year. Some of the exhibits,
like the Chromosaturation of Carlos
Cruz-Diez, or the Model for a Timeless
Garden of Olafur Eliasson or Conrad Shawcross’ Show Arc Inside a Cube IV (a bit of an unnecessary mouthful this one) are ones
to enjoy sensorially and to reflect about as much as one would about any work
of art.
The weakness of the Hayward exhibition is
that it pretends to combine science with art, or rather give a scientific
explanation of the artistic exhibits, when it should really be seen as an art
show and a delight to the senses, or should have appended to the exhibits
something that is scientifically valid. As it is, the show was spoiled
somewhat for me by the explanations appended. At the entrance, the viewer reads
that “Vision is the least reliable of the
senses”. What is the basis for this? Many, probably most, neurobiologists
would argue exactly the opposite; it is the most reliable of the senses,
perhaps reflected in the fact that so much of our brain is devoted to vision.
We are then told that “What we see, or think we see, is not always how things are”. This
is a profound misunderstanding of the workings of the brain – for what we see
and experience is dictated by the organization of our brains, and is precisely
how things are in perceptual reality, however that reality may depart from the
“objective” reality. That is why, at my own exhibition at the Pecci Museum of
Contemporary Art in Milan (Bianco su
bianco: oltre Malevich), the visitor was welcomed with the following
statement: “The only reality we experience is brain reality”.
When one looks at the Hering Illusion, the
two straight lines, which are parallel, appear perceptually to be somewhat curved.
The perceptual reality dominates even when one knows that the two lines are straight
and strictly parallel. Or consider the rapid motion in the rings in Isia
Leviant’s Enigma; to those who see
the movement, there is no doubting its reality, even if there is no actual
movement in the rings.
It never ceases to surprise me that we downgrade our true
perceptual reality in favour of the “objective reality”; the former is always
what it does not seem, while the latter is always true. This gives to the
reality we experience a subservient place when in fact the only truths that we
are able to experience are brain truths.
I am not saying anything particularly new
here. Immanuel Kant said it long ago – that our knowledge of this world is a compound of
the objective reality and the operations of the mind; we can therefore never
know the thing as it is (Das ding an sich)
because our only knowledge of the world is through the operations of the mind
(brain). In discussing the philosophical importance of colour vision, Arthur
Schopenhauer wrote of its importance for
understanding the “Kantian doctrine of
the likewise subjective, intellectual forms of all knowledge” – in other
words that all knowledge is mediated through the operations of the brain.
This exhibition pretends to explain the
visual sensory process through art. Thus, the exciting Chromosaturation of Carlos Cruz-Diez has appended to it the
following: “since the retina perceives a
wide range of colours simultaneously, experiencing these monochromatic
situations causes visual disturbances”.
Almost everything in that statement is
incorrect. There are no monochromatic lights in the exhibit (all the lights are
broadband although there may be some dominance of one waveband over the others
in some), the retina does not “perceive” colours, and there is no “visual
disturbance” but only visual sensory excitement, leaving one wondering where
the “misty” environment induced comes from. The exhibit would have been better
without these incorrect explanations. Why not call it an unusual visual
experience instead?
Perhaps artists do not read about advances
in science – why should they after all? Perhaps we do not explain our findings
properly. Whatever the real reasons, here is a good example of artists and
curators trying to explain perceptual processes through artistic achievements
and doing so very badly and, worse, inaccurately. It is exactly the reverse of
what neuroesthetics has been falsely accused of doing, namely explain works of
art through neuroscience, even though that is not its aim (see this post and this post).
Hence, my advice is – go to this delightful
exhibition and enjoy the exhibits as creative works of art. Many might want to
do more than that; they might wonder what these exhibits tell us about the
brain’s perceptual mechanism. But, please ignore the explanations appended to
the exhibits – they say nothing about the visual process, or about the sensory
brain or about perception, which is not to say that viewing these works does
not raise questions about sensory processes.
Here, then, is an exhibition which inspires
thinking about the operations of the brain. It is not what it pretends to be,
namely an explanations of overall sensory processes. It is a good illustration
of how works of art can inspire neuroesthetic studies.
3 comments:
I've read your book, The Splendors and Miseries of the Brain, and I'm very interested in your work as well as most things pertaining to vision---and I'm also a painter. I would be very curious to hear any recommendations you may have for keeping up with neuroesthetics, as well as any other books, etc. that may interest visual artists.
Your work isn't just interesting, it's really thrilling. Thank you.
Thank you very much for your kind end encouraging words.
There are quite a few interesting articles which are important and interesting for neuroesthetics, but they are widely distributed in many different journals and often the label neuroesthetics is not attached to them. This is a pity since it means that interested people like yourself would have to search through many journals, a time-consuming affair even for specialists. I will try to put a collection on our website if I get some time. Otherwise, perhaps the simplest short-cut is to go to Entrez pub med and type in the key words, such as (for example) beauty and brain.
I am a visual art student and interested in your work as well!
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