Ernst Gombrich and the concept of “ill-defined area”: perception and filling-in

This essay analyses the concept of ‘ill-defined area’ that Ernst Gombrich (1909–2001) coined in Art & Illusion: A Study in the Psychology of Pictorial Representation (1960). Gombrich’s insights, seen in light of recent advances in the fields of experimental psychology and cognitive neuroscience,...

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Main Author: Fabio Tononi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Art History, University of Birmingham 2023-12-01
Series:Journal of Art Historiography
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2023/10/tononi.pdf
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author Fabio Tononi
author_facet Fabio Tononi
author_sort Fabio Tononi
collection DOAJ
description This essay analyses the concept of ‘ill-defined area’ that Ernst Gombrich (1909–2001) coined in Art & Illusion: A Study in the Psychology of Pictorial Representation (1960). Gombrich’s insights, seen in light of recent advances in the fields of experimental psychology and cognitive neuroscience, open up new perspectives in the study of images: the biological implications of image perception. Under examination are two specific types of images: partially visible figures and unfinished works of art, that is, open-ended images that distinguish themselves in their inclusion of a significant absence (hence, ‘ill-defined area’), suggested by incomplete forms. These images offer important indications about the role that the beholder’s imagination plays in aesthetic response. In addressing this issue, this study focuses on the representation of human figures that either have features covered or no faces. In the second case, Gombrich talks about the ‘egg shape formula’, and tackles the way beholders perceive it. Considering the neuroscientific research on face perception and filling-in, this paper explores the neural process through which beholders may complete in their minds the blank spaces present in incomplete figures. My argument is that it is possible to find the neural underpinning of imagination, which is at the base of the aesthetic experience of beholders when perceiving figures that are not entirely visible.
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spelling doaj.art-cd42c5dcb1b0459baa621fe2f249a2952024-02-04T14:13:53ZengDepartment of Art History, University of BirminghamJournal of Art Historiography2042-47522023-12-0129s229s2FT110.48352/uobxjah.00004358Ernst Gombrich and the concept of “ill-defined area”: perception and filling-inFabio Tononi0NOVA University of LisbonThis essay analyses the concept of ‘ill-defined area’ that Ernst Gombrich (1909–2001) coined in Art & Illusion: A Study in the Psychology of Pictorial Representation (1960). Gombrich’s insights, seen in light of recent advances in the fields of experimental psychology and cognitive neuroscience, open up new perspectives in the study of images: the biological implications of image perception. Under examination are two specific types of images: partially visible figures and unfinished works of art, that is, open-ended images that distinguish themselves in their inclusion of a significant absence (hence, ‘ill-defined area’), suggested by incomplete forms. These images offer important indications about the role that the beholder’s imagination plays in aesthetic response. In addressing this issue, this study focuses on the representation of human figures that either have features covered or no faces. In the second case, Gombrich talks about the ‘egg shape formula’, and tackles the way beholders perceive it. Considering the neuroscientific research on face perception and filling-in, this paper explores the neural process through which beholders may complete in their minds the blank spaces present in incomplete figures. My argument is that it is possible to find the neural underpinning of imagination, which is at the base of the aesthetic experience of beholders when perceiving figures that are not entirely visible.https://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2023/10/tononi.pdfaesthetic response‘egg shape formula’ernst gombrich‘ill-defined area’imaginationincompletenessmodal and amodal completionneural filling-in‘the beholder’s share’unfinished
spellingShingle Fabio Tononi
Ernst Gombrich and the concept of “ill-defined area”: perception and filling-in
Journal of Art Historiography
aesthetic response
‘egg shape formula’
ernst gombrich
‘ill-defined area’
imagination
incompleteness
modal and amodal completion
neural filling-in
‘the beholder’s share’
unfinished
title Ernst Gombrich and the concept of “ill-defined area”: perception and filling-in
title_full Ernst Gombrich and the concept of “ill-defined area”: perception and filling-in
title_fullStr Ernst Gombrich and the concept of “ill-defined area”: perception and filling-in
title_full_unstemmed Ernst Gombrich and the concept of “ill-defined area”: perception and filling-in
title_short Ernst Gombrich and the concept of “ill-defined area”: perception and filling-in
title_sort ernst gombrich and the concept of ill defined area perception and filling in
topic aesthetic response
‘egg shape formula’
ernst gombrich
‘ill-defined area’
imagination
incompleteness
modal and amodal completion
neural filling-in
‘the beholder’s share’
unfinished
url https://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2023/10/tononi.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT fabiotononi ernstgombrichandtheconceptofilldefinedareaperceptionandfillingin