Plural Imagination: Diversity in Mind and Making
Matthew MacKisack, Susan Aldworth, Fiona Macpherson, John Onians, Crawford Winlove, Adam Zeman
Abstract
The experience of visual mental imagery—seeing in the mind’s eye—varies widely between individuals, but perhaps because we tend to assume our own way of thinking to be everyone’s, how this crucial variation impacts art practice, and indeed art history, has barely been addressed. We seek to correct this omission by pursuing the implications of how artists with aphantasia (the absence of mental imagery) and hyperphantasia (imagery of extreme vividness) describe their working processes. The findings remind us of the need to challenge normative, universalizing models of art making and art maker.
Topics & Concepts
PluralNormativeDiversity (politics)PsychologyMental imageVariation (astronomy)AestheticsCognitive psychologyVisual artsArtSociologyEpistemologyCognitionLinguisticsAnthropologyPhilosophyNeurosciencePhysicsAstrophysicsAesthetic Perception and AnalysisVisual Culture and Art TheoryArt History and Market Analysis