[ View menu ]

new book – ‘Modern Art at the Border of Mind and Brain’ by Jonathan Fineberg

Written on August 8, 2015

Modern Art at the Border

Modern Art at the Border of Mind and Brain by Jonathan Fineberg (University of Nebraska Press, 2015)

(amazon.co.uk)

Book description from the publisher:

Human beings have made images continuously for more than thirty thousand years. The oldest known cave paintings are between six and ten times older than the first forms of written language. Images help us organize our thoughts and represent them in our memory. We make images, Jonathan Fineberg argues, because we need them to aid not only in structuring our social and psychological self-conceptions but also in developing the circuitry of our brains.

Modern Art at the Border of Mind and Brain is a broad investigation by one of the foremost scholars of modern art of the relationship between modern art and the structure of the mind and brain. Based on Fineberg’s Presidential Lectures at the University of Nebraska, his book examines the relationship between artistic production, neuroscience, and the way we make meaning in form. Drawing on the art of Robert Motherwell, Joan Miró, Alexander Calder, Christo, Jean Dubuffet, and others, Fineberg helps us understand the visual unconscious, the limits of language, and the political impact of art. Throughout, he works from the conviction that looking is a form of thinking that has a profound impact on the structure of the mind.

See also: Author’s website

No Comments

Write comment - TrackBack - RSS Comments

Write comment