The document provides an introduction to reading visual arts. It discusses key terms related to visual reading like reading, visual culture, semiotics, signs, text, and context. It explains that reading visual arts involves actively engaging with images through techniques like selection, omission, framing, signification, evaluation, arrangement, differentiation, connection, and attention to context. The document also discusses how intertextuality and genres influence visual analysis by providing structures and associations.
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Week 1-2. Reading Visual Introduction
The document provides an introduction to reading visual arts. It discusses key terms related to visual reading like reading, visual culture, semiotics, signs, text, and context. It explains that reading visual arts involves actively engaging with images through techniques like selection, omission, framing, signification, evaluation, arrangement, differentiation, connection, and attention to context. The document also discusses how intertextuality and genres influence visual analysis by providing structures and associations.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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GE 20: Reading Visual Arts
An Introduction
Weeks 1-2 BIG PICTURE IN FOCUS
At the end of the unit, you are expected to
demonstrate in-depth knowledge on the definition, importance, and elements of reading visual art. Essential Terms: Reading. A particular form of visual practice; is both an active and a creative process. Reading the Visual. We draw on our general and specific knowledge, tastes, habits, and personal context. Visual Culture. Its concentration is on the interface between images and viewers rather than on artists and works. Cont’d… Spectatorship. Is the production of social media, especially digital media. Visual Matter. It is considered beautiful or appealing. Semiotics. It is an analytical approach and a research methodology that examines the use of what we called signs in society. Cont’d… Sign. It is a basic unit of communication; it is just something that has some meaning for someone; means something, and not one thing. Text. The name of a group of signs- a collection of signs organized in a particular way to make meaning. Context. This means the environment in which a text occurs, and communication takes place. The Activity of Seeing The Activity of Seeing
• Planning and taking a photograph is like many
human activities, an intensely visual experience, so is driving a car, where we are constantly visualizing and making sense of the space through which we are moving. Cont’d…
• Driving a car is a relatively unreflective activity
and even below the level of consciousness, while taking a photograph is usually conscious, deliberate and self-reflective. What is Reading Visual Arts?
• The visual arts embody physical, cultural and
spiritual aspects of life. They function as an important communication system through which meanings are construed in ways that are different from other language systems. Seeing as Reading
3 Main Points in Seeing as Reading:
We see things we are actively engaging with our
environment rather than merely reproducing everything within our line of sight. Cont’d…
Every act of looking and seeing is also an act of not seeing-
some things that must remain invisible if we are to pay attention to other things in view. The extent to which we see, focus on and pay attention to the world around us. (Three actions are inextricably linked, depends upon the specific context in which we find ourselves). Cont’d…
• If a subject does not construct a rich mental
model or scene in her mind, then reading, thinking, or problem-solving cannot occur. Without a visual model, there will be nothing to think with, and nothing to think about. Seeing in Context
• Seeing's context exhibits focus on how the
environment affects the way we see everything - even things as fundamental as color and brightness. How do you really tell whether something is dark or bright? Cont’d…
• What role does the light falling on an object play
in your perception of it? At Bright Black, you'll be presented with a simple card and asked to describe it. But your perception of the card changes spectacularly as more of its surroundings are revealed. Techniques of Seeing as Reading
• Up to this point we have concentrated on
explaining how and why people see in particular ways, and we have referred to habitus, cultural trajectory and cultural literacy as the most important factors in determining what we see. Seeing as Conscious or Unconscious
• The techniques we will consider include
selection, omission and frame, signification and evaluation, arrangement, differentiation and connection, focus, and context. Cont’d…
• It is important to keep in mind that there is no
necessary temporal distinction among these techniques; they are part of the same process of making the visual, and one cannot be conceived without regard to the others. 1. Selection and Omission
• The first and most important techniques of
reading the visual as we pointed out that every act of looking and seeing is also an act of not seeing. A photograph of a woman sitting on the steps of a house with a dog. Cont’d…
• The photograph only shows us a selection of
these: it includes a woman, a dog, the steps, some flowers or bushes, the lower part of the door and a shuttered window. Cont’d…
• The selection of these details (and the omission of
the others) helps to constitute and make the visual. Cont’d…
• This is productive in two ways. Firstly, it suggests
a set of relationships between, and stories about, the various parts—perhaps the woman is playing with her dog at her house; perhaps she is simply relaxing on her steps. Cont’d…
• Secondly, it establishes a (usually temporary)
hierarchy regarding the potentially visible; that is to say, whoever took this photograph or observed this scene decided (at a conscious or unconscious level) that this content within this space at this time was interesting or worthy of attention. Cont’d…
• In other words, they made an evaluative decision.
This may have been careful and deliberate (they set the scene, posed the woman, took the shot) or spontaneous (they were wandering by, the scene appealed to them, they took a photograph). Cont’d…
• Either way, these acts of selection, omission,
framing and evaluation produce a visual text. What do we mean by the term ‘visual text’?
A 'visual text' is usually just a fancy way of saying 'an
image' when it's related to English and analyzing texts. Basically, it means that whatever you’re analyzing is a visual medium – think book covers, picture books, posters or still frames from movies! Cont’d…
• Visual texts are images or pictures that don't move.
They may or may not have words that add to the meaning. You can analyze images, meaning you can look closely at images to figure out information. 2. Attention and Focus
• These are the two important factors if we are
attending closely or carefully to an event, person, thing or scene, we will create a text that is made up of what we can call contiguous elements. Cont’d…
• So, if we were staring out of a window, we might see tree
branches waving in the wind directly in front of us and a cloudy sky above, but we would also be likely to include the window and curtains or blinds, the computer that is partly between us and the window, a section of the desk on which the computer is sitting, the telephone and the pile of books slightly to the side. Cont’d…
• We might be more peripherally aware of other
objects within our purview, such as the walls of the room, bookshelves, papers, carpet or the ceiling. Cont’d…
• Our eyes may be caught by the color or movement
of things—the deep purple of the walls, the brightly colored, whirling images of the screen saver on the computer. But the decision about what is included within the main frame and what is left to the periphery is very much of the moment. Cont’d…
• In other words, if I watch the computer screen or
look out the window, the function or context of my looking and seeing (whether to do something specific like check email, or just to look dreamily away from my work) will determine what is included in the visual texts I produce. Seeing in Time and Motion
A few elements contribute to or facilitate the process of
suturing the world to make a text: Colors help us to differentiate elements within our purview. Shape and movement Other elements (such as texture, distance and light) Text and Intertext Cont’d… 5 photographs were shown at the former
• They were not originally taken as a series,
intended to be placed together, or considered for public consumption; rather, they were private family photographs which we have put together, not entirely arbitrarily, to make a text. Cont’d…
• We might take this text as being about the family
and its history, which would involve identifying the different generations and their relationship to one another, through reference to features such as clothes and physical characteristics. Cont’d… • A sign, we have suggested, is anything that is treated as a meaningful part of the unit that is the text. We identify signs and group them together as if they were a unit by a process of relating available material to the other texts and text-types with which we are familiar from our memories and cultural histories. Cont’d…
• The use of other texts to create new texts is
called intertextuality, and the term for text-types is genre. In order to consider these two concepts and how they inform or influence visual activity, let’s look again at the series of photographs in Figure 1.4. Cont’d…
• We made the point that every photograph in the
collection is made up of potential signs (the people, their clothes, their facial expressions and poses, the space between them, the setting) that could be treated as individual texts—without needing to refer to any of the other photographs. Texts and Genres
• Genres—which we discuss in more detail can be
defined as ‘text types which structure meanings in certain ways, through their association with a particular social purpose and social context’ (Schirato and Yell 2000: 189). Cont’d… • We normally think of genres in terms of cultural fields and mediums such as fiction or film—for instance, detective, science fiction or romance novels; and action, horror or erotic films. Each of these genres is identifiable in terms of its content, narrative, characterization, discourses, values and worldviews. Cont’d…
• Genres then, like intertexts, do not provide us
with special access to visual reality; rather, they are frames and references that we use to negotiate, edit, evaluate and in a sense read the visual as a series of texts. Conclusion
• What is important, in any consideration of how
we read the visual, is that as ‘readers’ we are also ‘writers’, selecting, editing and framing all that we see. Cont’d… • Most of the time this work is unconscious, but even when our seeing is conscious and attentive, we will still make what we see by using the same kinds of techniques (such as selection and omission) and be limited in what we see by factors such as context, habitus and cultural literacy. Thank you for listening!