Occlusion Issues in Early Renaissance Art

Early Renaissance painters innovatively attempted to depict realistic three-dimensional scenes. A major problem was to produce the impression of overlap for surfaces that occlude one another in the scene but are adjoined in the picture plane. Much has been written about perspective in art but little...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Barbara Gillam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2011-12-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1068/i0468aap
_version_ 1828758357165473792
author Barbara Gillam
author_facet Barbara Gillam
author_sort Barbara Gillam
collection DOAJ
description Early Renaissance painters innovatively attempted to depict realistic three-dimensional scenes. A major problem was to produce the impression of overlap for surfaces that occlude one another in the scene but are adjoined in the picture plane. Much has been written about perspective in art but little about occlusion. Here I examine some of the strategies for depicting occlusion used by early Renaissance painters in relation to ecological considerations and perceptual research. Perceived surface overlap is often achieved by implementing the principle that an occluding surface occludes anything behind it, so that occlusion perception is enhanced by a lack of relationship of occluding contour to occluded contours. Some well-known figure-ground principles are also commonly used to stratify adjoined figures. Global factors that assist this stratification include the placement of figures on a ground plane, a high viewpoint, and figure grouping. Artists of this period seem to have differed on whether to occlude faces and heads, often carefully avoiding doing so. Halos were either eliminated selectively or placed oddly to avoid such occlusions. Finally, I argue that the marked intransitivity in occlusion by architecture in the paintings of Duccio can be related to the issue of perceptual versus cognitive influences on the visual impact of paintings.
first_indexed 2024-12-11T00:40:35Z
format Article
id doaj.art-baf7e715033e468eacd4849f87d9f563
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2041-6695
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-11T00:40:35Z
publishDate 2011-12-01
publisher SAGE Publishing
record_format Article
series i-Perception
spelling doaj.art-baf7e715033e468eacd4849f87d9f5632022-12-22T01:26:56ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952011-12-01210.1068/i0468aap10.1068_i0468aapOcclusion Issues in Early Renaissance ArtBarbara GillamEarly Renaissance painters innovatively attempted to depict realistic three-dimensional scenes. A major problem was to produce the impression of overlap for surfaces that occlude one another in the scene but are adjoined in the picture plane. Much has been written about perspective in art but little about occlusion. Here I examine some of the strategies for depicting occlusion used by early Renaissance painters in relation to ecological considerations and perceptual research. Perceived surface overlap is often achieved by implementing the principle that an occluding surface occludes anything behind it, so that occlusion perception is enhanced by a lack of relationship of occluding contour to occluded contours. Some well-known figure-ground principles are also commonly used to stratify adjoined figures. Global factors that assist this stratification include the placement of figures on a ground plane, a high viewpoint, and figure grouping. Artists of this period seem to have differed on whether to occlude faces and heads, often carefully avoiding doing so. Halos were either eliminated selectively or placed oddly to avoid such occlusions. Finally, I argue that the marked intransitivity in occlusion by architecture in the paintings of Duccio can be related to the issue of perceptual versus cognitive influences on the visual impact of paintings.https://doi.org/10.1068/i0468aap
spellingShingle Barbara Gillam
Occlusion Issues in Early Renaissance Art
i-Perception
title Occlusion Issues in Early Renaissance Art
title_full Occlusion Issues in Early Renaissance Art
title_fullStr Occlusion Issues in Early Renaissance Art
title_full_unstemmed Occlusion Issues in Early Renaissance Art
title_short Occlusion Issues in Early Renaissance Art
title_sort occlusion issues in early renaissance art
url https://doi.org/10.1068/i0468aap
work_keys_str_mv AT barbaragillam occlusionissuesinearlyrenaissanceart