Art and the Meaning Response

May 5th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Most non-conscious physical responses have a relatively simple relationship to stimulus in which the stimulus produces predictable responses under most, if not all circumstances. The term ‘meaning response’, on the other hand, refers to a class of psychophysiological actions (responses) which vary according to the semiotic context in which a stimulus is applied. This class of actions are found most commonly in the area of health and well-being, and include; the placebo effect, the Hawthorne effect, experimenter effects etc. In all cases where meaning responses operate, a stimulus, e.g. an inert substance in tablet form, has a variable response, e.g. reported feelings of improved health, according to the circumstances of its delivery and the meaning attached to that stimulus by the recipient. It is often argued that these effects are ‘merely’ psychosomatic, but this does not deny the reality of the effects but simply relocates them within the brain chemistry of meaning and the interaction between this chemistry and the wider physiology of the body.

A parallel shift in response can be found in relation to the aesthetic appreciation of an artefact or event. The simple re-labelling of an entity as ‘art’ can be sufficient to trigger measurable changes in the neurochemistry of the brain, an effect which is particularly marked when the attribution is associated with the name of a prestigious artist.

This presentation will report on preliminary trials using fMRI to track changes in brain functioning at the moments when artefacts acquire the label ‘art’. Suggestions will also be made about the possible existence of an ‘art module’ in the brain located by this process.

Keywords: consciousness, art, aesthetics, neuroscience, brain chemistry, placebo.

Posted in Art, Conference Abstract, Placebo | No Comments »

The Folk Science of Performance Theory

May 20th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The term ‘theory’ as it is used in the arts, and particularly in performance, is markedly different from the use of the term in the hard sciences (1). In art, theory has no predictive value, its claims are not subject to falsification by empirical testing, it makes no hypotheses, and relates to no empirically established, objectively verifiable physical laws. Theory in performance is a kind of ‘organised seeing’ (reflecting its origins in theoria) and constitutes an attempt to order the experience by the imposition of structures of meaning onto performed events. The explanations which emerge from much performance theory therefore constitute a kind of ‘folk science’, an explanatory system which exists in the absence of, or prior to, empirical testing, and which orders common (or uncommon) sense.

1. The scientific definition of the terms theory has been usefully aired and clarified in the recent Intelligent Design debates. c.f. Claudia Wallis. Evolution Wars. Time Magazine, 15 August,2005,page 32.

Posted in Art, Naive Physics, Performance, Seeing, Theory | No Comments »

Disgusting Girls (and Ron Athey)

June 29th, 2006 Fred McVittie

One of the presentations today included some footage of a Ron Athey piece, which some people in the audience were clearly having problems with. It is interesting to note what people do when they are disgusted by something. There was a lot of squirming. According to the conceptual metaphor theory of Lakoff and Johnson and others, a possible reason why they/we were doing this is because of a process of cognitive metaphor creation. The mind effectively maps the structure of the physical and emotional response from the concrete concept of something pathogenically disgusting like a toxic substance onto the abstact concept of ‘deviant’ sexuality, such that we get ‘DEVIANT’ SEXUALITY IS A TOXIC SUBSTANCE. The details of the behavior which follows, lip curling (as if at a bitter taste), nose wrinkling (as if at a bad smell), and mouth gape (in preparation for vomiting) are metaphorical projections from the concrete concept onto the abstract concept enacted as a physical schema or performance.

Another revealing feature of the disgust reflex is that, once learnt through embodied experience with real TOXIC SUBSTANCES, the behaviour is then available not only for unconscious metaphorical mapping onto abstract concepts (as in the case of the Ron Athey video) but as an intentional gestalt performance which can be consciously activated to indicate moral or ethical disgust. An interesting example of this from my own experience is observing my children, both boys, metaphorically mapping GIRLS ARE A TOXIC SUBSTANCE. Before the age of around 6 this mapping did not exist, but from 6 onward the presence of a girl stimulated all aspects of the disgust reflex indicated above. From the age of around 12 however, this physical schema has become more of a conscious performance which is activated only in certain contexts (when they are with their friends), and which is clearly in competition with other physical schema presumably appropriate to metaphors such as GIRLS ARE RARE AND UNUSUAL OBJECTS, and even GIRLS ARE PEOPLE.

Posted in Art, Gesture, Johnson, Mark, Lakoff, George, Metaphor, Performance, Schema, Story | No Comments »

Research, Art, and the Performance of Creativity

July 1st, 2006 Fred McVittie

One of the ways in which performance is routinely talked about is in terms of its distinctions and divisions. Theatrical performance, particularly, is distinguished from ‘cultural performance’, those aspects of interpersonal behaviour which can be spoken of using the theatrical metaphors of role, scene, and script. Also, the use of the term ‘performance’ within a range of other activities, including business, technology, and sport, is strongly distinguished from the theatrical use of the term, the implication being that the shared terminology is only coincidental and does not indicate a shared ontology, (but see Mackenzie 2001). And of course, a conventional distinction that is made when discussing art and theatre, is their oppositional relationship to the sciences.

Philosopher of science Robert Crease in ‘The Play of Nature’ proposes an interesting model which subverts this division. In this model he uses the concept of ‘performance’ to talk about both art and science. Rather than make a distinction between performances which take place in theatres, auditoria etc, and those which happen elsewhere, so-called ‘cultural performance’, or distinguishing between the term performance as it is used in the different domains, he divides the various acts which have been named ‘performance’ into four types; failed, mechanical, standardised, and artistic, and applies these terms to the activities of the studio, the theatre, and the laboratory. The first three terms; failed, mechanical, and standardised, as the words imply, either repeat performances that have gone before or do not ‘perform’ at all. In all of these contexts it is the latter term he regards as the most significant. Artistic performance;

“coaxes into being something which has not previously appeared. It is beyond the standardized program; it is action at the limit of the already controlled and understood; it is risk. The artistry of experimentation involves bringing a phenomenon into material presence in a way which requires more than passive forms of preparation, yet in a way so that one nevertheless has confidence that one recognizes the phenomenon for what it is. Artistic objects ‘impose’ themselves–they announce their presence as being completely or incompletely realized–but this imposition is not independent of the judgments and actions of the artist.”

This identification of performances which are ‘at the limit of the already controlled’ corresponds with terms such as ‘innovation’ and particularly ‘research’, but it is significant that Crease identifies this moment with art. Here art is not (only) the set of cultural institutions and histories which provide certain specific contexts for specific types of looking, but is the performance of creativity.

Posted in Art, Crease, Robert, Creativity, Mackenzie, John, Performance, Science, Sport, Theatre | No Comments »

The Performance of Everyday Life

August 1st, 2006 Fred McVittie

Performance is understood as the inter-relational aspect of an event or entity, existing in and defined by the moment at which an entity becomes available for experience and evaluation. This definition covers all aspects of performance, from theatrical and art performance events, to the performance of a business model, an engine, or an athlete. (See Mackenzie 2001). The conventions of theatre and art, and the domains of practice these conventions prototypically exemplify, frame this moment of experience and evaluation, and separate it from ‘normal life’, (even though normal life contains an endless stream of performance instances).

One implication is that performance (and performance studies) does not take its cue from theatricality (as Schechner and others have claimed). It is rather the case that theatricality and art is the performativity of everyday life enhanced, isolated, restaged, reframed, and by brought to the centre of attention, rendered inconsequentially conscious.

Posted in Art, Attention, Mackenzie, John, Performance, Schechner, Richard, Theatre | No Comments »

The Natural History of Conceptual Art

September 3rd, 2006 Fred McVittie

We are neurologically and psychologically adapted to respond to certain features of the sensory environment in ways which have given us a survival or reproductive advantage in evolutionary history. The development of art, it has been argued (Ramachandran, Zeki), has been the organised identification of these responses and their servicing in what we refer to as ‘aesthetics’. (Pinker makes a parallel case for the development of refined foods). Much of the literature making the case for such a development has focussed on the visual arts, and to a lesser extent music (Mithen), and there has also been a tendency within these arguments to focus on traditional or classical art rather than modern or contemporary practice. One of the reasons given why contemporary work is ignored in this type of evolutionary psychological analysis is that whilst modern work (since, say, the end of the 19th century) undoubtedly still continues the aesthetic practices of its predecessors, its production and function is driven more by other determinants. These are; a restless innovation in which the desire for novelty is prioritised over aesthetics, (the ‘make it new’ of Modernism and the pressure of the marketplace); and an increasing move away from the immediately sensorial qualities of a work, its visual appearance, aural effects etc, toward an overt concern with its conceptual content. This is acknowledged in, for example, Ramachandran, who suggests that as little as 10% of the effects of an artwork can be attributed to (evolutionarily adaptive) aesthetics.

This is perhaps most clearly evident is some works of Conceptual Art which may have little or no obvious aesthetic value, and in some cases almost no existence at all. However, I will argue here that this rendering of certain arts practices as operating outside of the reach aesthetic response is inaccurate, and that those elements of artworks noted above, novelty and concept, are also available for these adaptively facilitated responses. the notion that a concept, theory, or idea might elicit an aesthetic response is not particular to the arts of course. Scientists and mathematicians for example commonly refer to their equations, formulae, and theories as ‘elegant’ or even ‘beautiful’, evidently indicating that these conceptual entities have the same evocative power as physical objects of beauty. This despite the fact that the visual or other sensory evidence of such ideas, the symbols on a page or the experimental equipment in a laboratory, rarely has any obvious aesthetic appeal at all.

Posted in Aesthetics, Art, Beauty, Conceptual, Mathematics, Mithen, S.J., Pinker, Stephen, Ramachandran, Vilayanur, Science, Zeki, Semir | No Comments »

A Natural History of Innovation

September 4th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The ability to innovate, to produce novel behaviour, is primarily a human faculty. For the most part this ability has a clear use function; when combined with good critical and evaluative faculties the ability to produce new behaviour is how we solve problems, identify more efficient ways of satisfying needs, and gain an edge on competitors. For these reasons it is likely that this ability confers upon those who possess it a distinct adaptive advantage. In terms of evolutionary history, those members of a population who are able to think ‘creatively’ are more likely to survive and reproduce than those whose behaviours are bound to habit and instinct. Adaptive traits which confer a reproductive advantage on those who have such a trait tend to be manifest in the individual as an emotional and physical response experienced as pleasure. So, for example, the adaptive trait which allowed our ancestors to identify nutritious food is experienced as the pleasurable sensation we call ‘taste’. Similarly, sexual congress, which is self-evidently adaptive in that those who engage in it are those most likely to reproduce, and those who do not are unlikely to, is also accompanied by pleasure. These pleasures are both the bait and the signal for adaptive behaviour. In terms of creativity and innovation, if such a trait is adaptive we would expect it to also be accompanied by feelings of pleasure, and this is indeed the case. Surveys of artists, scientists, inventors and all other innovators demonstrate that the act of creation has its own intrinsic satisfactions and pleasures over and above whatever functional products may result from such acts.

Given that human beings are a pack animal, the innovations produced by one individual may benefit not only that individual but also other members of the community or group (other than direct competitors). Individuals in the group who were able to recognise and exploit the creativity of others could also profit from this creativity, gaining the same adaptive advantage and increasing the likelihood of their own survival and reproductive success. This suggests that in addition to the pleasures of creation itself, it is possible that evolutionary history may have conferred upon us an ability to recognise innovation and to experience pleasure from that recognition, again over and above whatever product may result from such creativity. Not only does being creative feel good, but watching the creativity of others feels good too.

The development of the arts since the end of the 19th century has been partly characterised by an almost obsessive demand for the new. And whilst this has undoubtedly been driven partly by a rampant consumerism and an increasingly profitably art industry, it is nevertheless likely that the appeal of innovative art lies not only in the ultimate market value of that art, or the status it confers, or in the traditional sensory channels of the aesthetic response. A significant appeal lies in what might be called the ‘aesthetics of innovation’.

Posted in Aesthetics, Art, Creativity, Evolution, History | No Comments »

Safe Art

December 5th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The phenomenon of ‘art’, as a recognisable experience of human beings, has a number of overlapping and related psychic features. These include aspects of aesthetics, social production, function etc. but a significant feature is the primary categorisation of a particular object or event as ‘art’. This categorisation is what allows the various other processes to become operative. Without the initial allocation of an experience to the category of ‘art’ other processes either do not come into play at all, or do so in a variant form. An analogy may be drawn with the experience of being hurled violently back and forth in a moving vehicle, narrowly missing other vehicles and travelling at high speed down perilously steep descents. In a car this would be a terrifying and possibly immobilising experience, whereas on a fairground ride this would be classified as ‘fun’. The basic physical action is the same but the categorisation of the experience allows other responses to come into play. Many of the original responses may still be in place; we may still experience fear, but these responses are located in a category of experience which recontextualises them and allows them to be interpreted in other ways. When we categorise an experience as belonging to the domain of ‘art’ (by prompts such as frames, galleries, etc) we are orienting ourselves such that a particular set of responses become available, and possibly that other responses are suppressed. And just as the context of a fairground ride produces its variant responses by ensuring the experience is actually safe, so the context of ‘art’ allows its responses to be made by making similar assurances. The exhibition in the gallery my be terrifying, or perplexing, or minimally stimulating, or seductive, but it is also, ultimately, safe, providing us with an opportunity to contemplate, feel, absorb, or process in other ways the events and objects in front of us.

Posted in Art, Fear, Rollercoaster | No Comments »

Art and Gist

December 15th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Brainerd and Reyna propose a process for the relationship between knowledge and memory which they refer to as the ‘fuzzy trace’. This concept identifies a cognitive structure in the brain which is formed by repeated exposure to, and education about, specific experiences. So, for example, the experience of learning to drive a car, and of repeated driving behaviours, will create a mental schema or ‘trace’ of this behaviour. Similarly, repeated exposure to art, and education about art, will create a ‘trace’ of this art. This fuzzy trace is a kind of abstraction of all of the experiences, and represents the core, crystallised knowledge about the subject, and all of the individual experiences can be seen as ‘instances’ of this trace, (and I realise I am mixing metaphors wildly here). Significantly, this trace, or ‘gist’ as Brainerd and Reyna more colloquially call it, is then mobilised when new, related, experiences are encountered. So when driving a car, our moment by moment experience is referred to the existing ‘gist’, and this referring affects our actions and behaviour. Similarly, when we experience a new work of art, this experience is evaluated and understood in reference to our existing ‘gist’, and this referring produces the (critical) action and behaviour we have with regard to this artwork. This process works entirely subconsciously, and we do not think rationally prior to making a response or producing an action. Instead we get a feeling of ‘rightness’ or ‘wrongness’; an intuition about the experience which guides our behaviour.

Posted in Art, Brainerd, C. J. & Reyna, V. F., Fuzzy trace, Gist, Schema | No Comments »

Paradigmatic Performance

December 18th, 2006 Fred McVittie

There is a stage in all (creative) processes, including the processes of both art and science, where the practice moves from the preparatory to the actual; from the potential to the the real. In science this is the moment of the experiment (which, as Robert Crease points out, may, if carried out correctly, constitute the performance). In the visual and plastic (and some of the digital) arts, this moment is distributed across a number of moments in the making, and in the performing arts, unsurprisingly, it takes the paradigmatic form of the performance itself. In terms of the processes, whilst there may be differences in form, tradition, histories, and practice, all have this moment. What distinguishes ‘performing’ as a particular artform is not in the fact of its having this evanescent moment, but rather in the access that it gives to this moment. Whereas other creative practices prioritise and give access to the traces of this event, performing arts dramatises the event and includes it as part of the experience. We not only see the event, we see it as an event illuminated by the light of its own (apparent) appearance. A secondary effect is the coincidental placing of this moment with a parallel moment in the mind of the audience, the moment in which the performance is received and realised.

Posted in Art, Crease, Robert, Creativity, Illumination, Performance | No Comments »

Adaptive Thinking

March 14th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The evolutionary process contrives to ensure that what is good for us (or at least was good for our ancestors) produces feelings of pleasure, and what is not good for us produces feelings of displeasure. The feelings of pleasure experienced by humans when carrying out such activities as eating nourishing food, having sex, drinking potable water, coming inside to a warm house/cave on a cold day, is nature’s way of reinforcing activities which maximise our chances of survival and the survival of our genetic material. The fact that modern humans live under very different cultural conditions to our ancestors, and yet have largely the same cognitive apparatus, means that some of the pleasures and pains administered by these adaptive systems are now misapplied. The same mechanisms which rewarded our eating of healthy food continue to reward us for overeating, and for eating highly processed unhealthy (but still tasty) food. Ramachandran and others have suggested that this catalogue of pleasures and there misapplication might be extended into areas of cognition which ultimately lead to the aesthetic pleasures we experience through contemplating artworks. So, for example, the adaptively advantageous ability to recognise the shape of a tiger half-concealed in the undergrowth, a skill which would definately contribute to our chances of survival and should therefore be felt as pleasurable, becomes the aesthetic pleasure felt when looking at some abstract or semi-abstract artworks; the broken and indistinct patterns of colour and form are comprehended and made whole, and this cognitive action is rewarded with the pleasure of an aesthetic experience.

It is possible that the highly developed cognitive abilities which we seem to have are themselves the result of a self-reinforcing adaptive trait in which thinking itself is rewarded. Certainly, it would have been a distinct adaptive advantage for some of our ancestors to be able to take independent pieces of data, the location of game for example, and put them together into a coherent pattern, a migration path. A proto-human which was able to make this kind of cognitive leap would have an evolutionary advantage over those that did not, and therefore it is quite likely that such behaviour would become self-reinforcing through the association of pleasure with this type of pattern recognition. To put it crudely, thinking should feel nice, and the more complex the thought, the more extensive the pattern, the more pleasant it should feel. Evidence of this mechanism, as well as its misapplication in modern humans is found in the crossword puzzles and game shows which are in every newspaper and every TV channel. It may also be revealed in the AHA moment at the illumination stage of some creative processes, as well as the HA HA moment at the punch line of a joke, when a new formulation of ideas, a new thought pattern, is taken up by the listener. It may also underpin some of the pleasures associated with some artworks, particularly works of Conceptual Art in which there is conventional aesthetic stimulus, no direct appeal to the senses.

Posted in Aesthetics, Art, Cognition, Evolution | No Comments »

Proximity, Sense, and Knowledge

May 14th, 2007 Fred McVittie

According to embodied theories of cognition the dominant strategy for the apprehension of abstract concepts is through the widespread and largely unconscious application of metaphor, such that we understand abstract concepts in terms of more concrete concepts.

(W)e tend to structure the less concrete and inherently vaguer concepts (like those for emotions) in terms of more concrete concepts, which are more clearly delineated in our experience. {Lakoff, 1981. p. 112}

Lakoff and Johnson go on to argue that three natural kinds of experience, of the body, of the physical environment, and of the culture, are the basic source domains upon which metaphors draw. All of these source domains are apprehensible directly through the senses.

The concrete sensorial experience that we have of the world is therefore used metaphorically in the formation of concepts. However, the type of information we receive through the various sensory channels, eyes, ears, the surface of the skin, is not equal, and the use we make of this different information depends upon the sensory mode through which it is mediated.

The sensation of seeing is very different to that of hearing, and differs again from that of touching. It is inevitable then, that knowledge understood through the use of metaphors which derive from these different sensory origins will tend to exhibit differences, and also that these differences will be consistent. All concepts which derive from sight-based metaphors should have features in common which distinguish them from concepts formed from touch-based metaphors. I will show here that these consistent differences reveal themselves in language, in gesture, and in their status within interpersonal discourse.

In order to examine the ontology of the metaphors that we use to form abstract concepts, we need to clearly identify the nature of the sensory mode from which they originate. This means reminding ourselves of some obvious facts about the nature of experience as it is mediated by sight as opposed to its mediation by touch for example. Events which stimulate the visual sense, i.e. things that we see, are obviously outside of our body, possibly even a considerable distance from our body, and therefore do not have a direct ‘impact’ on our wellbeing. Visualised objects are also usually also visible to other people, existing in interpersonal shared space, which means that objects apprehended visually are likely to have similar significance for all viewers (seeing a tiger is likely to cause anyone in visible range to run away).

Objects and events which are apprehended through the sense of touch, on the other hand (sic) do, by definition, have a direct impact on the body doing the touching, they are in extreme proximity to that body, and are likely to have a much greater significance for the person touched than for someone else who is not in contact with the object, (touching a flame causes a significantly different response than seeing one).

These completely embodied ontological differences suggests that there is a structured and organised variation in experience depending upon which sense is primarily used to access that experience. The difference in sensory mode maps onto corresponding differences in the proximity of the stimulus to the body, and to the degree to which an experience is shared amongst a number of experiencers. Vision identifies objects which are at a remove from the body, and which are accessible to a number of viewers. Touch identifies phenomena which are up-close and personal.

Given that, as noted above, we draw substantially on embodied experience to organise and structure our knowledge of those aspects of the world which are abstract through the use of conceptual metaphor it is likely that abstract concepts will also be organised according to the various sensory modes. Even a cursory inspection reveals that we do indeed find this distinction, with concepts which we regard as ‘objective’ being referred to using visual metaphor, thus placing them in a shared conceptual space where they appear similar to all (metaphorical) viewers, much as we might place a physical object on public display. Conversely, those entities we regard as ’subjective’ are often referred to using tactile metaphors. These subjective entities are held metaphorically against the body where they are ‘felt’, an individual experience with an acknowledged difference in impact for the ‘feeler’ than for the objective ‘viewer’. Held at such close proximity, tactile concepts are not separated and distanced from the body of the person, they are almost part of that subjectivity, part of the subject.

Visual knowledge contains within its logic the binary opposition of self and other, subject and object, observer and observed. Tactile knowledge elides this distinction into a point of contact in which the space between these supposed binaries is collapsed. Indeed, with some constructions of knowledge, the metaphorical sensory impression that the concept makes on the body penetrates beneath the level of the skin and into the interior, where it engages not only sensorially, but sensually and sexually. This approach to knowledge is found in the ecriture feminine of Cixous and others, the goal of which is to create a language with an interior “to get inside of,” a place of feminine jouissance.

In making art we are constantly traversing the space between the objective and the subjective; stepping back from it so that we might get an ‘overview’ of it, then embracing it and letting ourselves feel it and feel with it. It is both outside us and inside us and the language we use reflect this oscillation, this switching of sensory channels.

Posted in Art, Embodiment, Feeling, Metaphor, Perception, Sense, thesis | No Comments »

Good Science Approaches the Condition of Art

July 1st, 2007 Fred McVittie

The drive to create new knowledge is, presumably, rooted in the human universal desire to acquire that knowledge. Ultimately this is a cognitive imperative reinforced by the sense of pleasure accompanying discovery/creation, and the sense of stress accompanying not knowing. We try to know things because knowing feels good and not knowing feels bad. This equation of knowing and feeling is easily placed within an evolutionary narrative in which such a cognitive imperative would emerge as an adaptive trait. In fact it may be the most significant adaptive trait in the emergence of human being as we understand it. The implication of this relationship between knowing and feeling is that the acquisition of knowledge through research is, at heart, an aesthetic activity in which a satisfactory conclusion, outcome, or insight is arrived at because of the very satisfaction that accompanies it. The individual feelings which accompany research, in the context of scientific discovery for example, are reported by those involved to be a prime motivator in the continuance of that research, and the high points of these research processes in which significant breakthroughs or insights are made are spoken of in glowing experiential terms. This experience, the feeling of what happens during the research process, is indistinguishable from certain experiences in artmaking and other activity considered ‘expressive’, or as Suzanne Langer refers to it, as having ‘vital import’. At its best, research in all fields approaches the condition of art.

This idea is reminiscent of Robert Crease’s observation that scientific discovery and experimentation can be considered a ‘performance’, with the most profound and elegant research in the sciences achieving a standard he refers to as ‘artistic’.

Posted in Art, Crease, Robert, Creativity, Langer, Suzanne, Performance, Science | No Comments »

The Condition of Music

July 1st, 2007 Fred McVittie


All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music. For while in all other works of art it is possible to distinguish the matter from the form, and the understanding can always make this distinction, yet it is the constant effort of art to obliterate it. - Pater

Pater, Walter. “The Dialectic of Art: The School of Giorgione.” 1877. Essays on Literature and Art. Ed. Jennifer Uglow. London: Dent, 1973. 43-47.

Posted in Art | No Comments »

95% of Contemporary Art is Crap

July 9th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The science fiction writer Theodore Sturgeon, when asked at a cocktail party how he could stand his work being published in magazines in which the contents were ‘95% crap’, is reputed to have replied that ‘95% of everything is crap’. This remark has been enshrined in some quarters as ‘Sturgeon’s Law’ and has been applied not only to literature but also to people and to ‘Web 2.0′.

An area that this aphorism most clearly applies to is that of Contemporary Art, a fact evidenced by the most cursory glance around our galleries, trawl through our theatres, or listening experience in auditoria. Disappointment and a sense of anticlimax are the dominant emotions one has on exiting these experiences, possibly coupled with an irritation at the money wasted and the hours mis-spent. The bathos associated with Contemporary Art is worsened by the apparent upward spiral of hyperbole which accompanies its promotion, advertising, and dissemination. Every new exhibition, performance, choreography, composition, or literary work is inevitably ‘ground-breaking’ and a work of huge personal and social significance.

The irony of this is that it is exactly as it should be. If all is going well then most of what we see should be disappointing, deflating, underwhelming, and an appropriate target for mockery, insult, and violence.

Creativity in the arts, as elsewhere, is only partly an individual process. It is, to a large extent contingent on the social and cultural processes through which the wheat is separated from the chaff, through which the elegant solution to the mission-critical problem is separated from the impractical solution to the non-existent problem. History is the great curator of all creative endeavour and ‘contemporary’ is the name we give to all those artworks submitted to history’s sword. When we look at or study Contemporary Art we are not looking at a fully conceived body of practice, and we are certainly not looking at a particular genre of that practice. Studying Contemporary Art is studying the falling blade of history. The body of Contemporary Art is bloated, malformed, and full of crap. Let the sword fall, for it is only through this beheading that we will know what deserves to put raised on the pike and paraded through the city. We should sit in the theatres gleefully knitting while the tumbrell cart brings the next piece of ‘art’ before us. Our visits to galleries should be made with the sole purpose of mocking the afflicted, pointing to the inelegant and bastard mooncalves that line the walls, and relishing their demise.

Posted in Art, Creativity | No Comments »

Rollercoaster Zen

August 29th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The experience of riding a rollercoaster, or more generally of visiting a theme park, is a useful parallel to an experiencing of existence which is idealised within Zen and related practices. A trip to 6 Flags, Universal Studios, or Alton Towers, for those of us who are keen riders, involves preliminary research into the types of rides that are available and where they are located. Then one might put together a rough ‘running order’ of the rides so that they provide a good overall experience; one should not start with the fastest, most thrilling ride, or the most idiosyncratic, and one should definitely aim to finish on a high note. This plan might include and take into account such indirect factors as: distance one might need to walk between rides, opportunities for eating and drinking, availability of bathroom etc. Also, proper planning should identify external features which may affect the rides; if your script for the day includes the biggest fastest rides, it is not a good idea, for example, to plan your visit on a day near the end of a school term when school parties may be visiting and clogging up the queues for these.

When you actually arrive on the day, the plan you have changes status. A lot of unforeseen circumstances can arise which might force you to change your ideas, and new opportunities might arise which you would be stupid to pass up, so stay flexible and improvise. Stay with the plan where it proves useful, but feel free to deviate wildly from it if the need arises. In many ways the success of your day depends not on either the plan or what you actually do, but on a dynamic and healthy relationship between the two.

The most significant time during your visit is, of course, the actual rides themselves, and it is worth paying special attention to what is happening at every stage of these special moments. The chances are that, even if you have bought an express pass to let you have priority access, you will still have to stand in a queue. This is not a problem. Do not see this as a problem. I repeat, there is no problem here. Standing in the queue for the fastest, more terrifying ride, particularly as you edge toward the front, is probably the most fully conscious you will feel all day, maybe all week. At any time you could turn around and walk out; you are sweating and nervous, everyone around you is nervous, the hype of the ride itself, if it is designed properly, is making you even more nervous, and almost every self-protective instinct in your body is telling you to get the hell out of there. And yet you stay. You don’t heed the hailing of your intuition and refuse to go with the flow of your instincts. You can feel the pressure to do what comes naturally (run) building up inside you but you stand your ground, and the longer you stand the more conscious you become. You can feel your self, fully and completely here, now, and under threat.

The moment has arrived and you move from the queue across the threshold and are being strapped into the ride. This transition is carried out in an almost blissful state of self-consciousness in which you seem to witness yourself from outside your body. Part of you cannot quite believe that you are going to go through with it, whilst another part of you is moving mindlessly from the easily escapable position in the queue to the inescapable inevitability of the ride itself.

And then there is the ride itself. Now the time for choosing is over and whatever happens is out of your hands. Of course you know that rides are safety checked and that nothing can really go wrong, but that knowledge is no good to you now. That was just something you read when you were doing your preliminary research. What is important now is way beyond the rational evaluation of risk factors as laid down is health and safety standards, what matters is that you have committed yourself incontroverably to a course of events in which choice is absolutely and totally absent. There is no possibility of escape and every move, shock, twist, turn, and gyration is mapped onto your future as surely as the events of yesterday are mapped onto your past. For these seconds there is nothing to think about, nothing to do, nothing to be. There is just you, and the ride.

Posted in Art, Buddhism, Flow, Rollercoaster | No Comments »

Langer on Feelings

September 17th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Feeling and Feeling

a work of art is an expressive form created for our perception through sense or imagination, and what it expresses is human feeling. The word “feeling” must be taken here in its broadest sense, meaning everything that can be felt, from physical sensation, pain and comfort, excitement and repose, to the most complex emotions, intellectual tensions, or the steady feeling-tones of a conscious human life (Langer, 1947, p. 15).

Posted in Art, Feeling, Langer, Suzanne | No Comments »

Paradoxical Object

October 4th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Here is a paradoxical object. We can stand at the centre of this object, such that its centre is our centre, and when looked at from within it has a solid, resilient, immovable core, and an increasing evanescent exterior. From this viewpoint it has something of the quality of a Gas Giant, the core of which is frozen with the dazzling weight of compressed energy. There is no surface to such a planet, but rather its substance becomes more and more rarified as we move away from the core into the reaches of space.

Let us imagine that by an act of imaginative will we can move ourselves away from the centre of this object and take a place at some remove, in the immensity of outer space. Here where we now stand, weightless and vacuous, the substantiality of this object is reversed. When seen from the outside it appears solid, its outermost regions forming a solid carapace around contents which constantly threaten to boil off into the vacuum. From this view point its core is invisible, transcendent, eldritch, the subject of speculation and disbelief. Its outer skin, on the other hand, is comfortingly visible, presenting itself to the touch of the eye like the knee of a lover, or the cheek of one’s own face.

Posted in Art, Boundary, Centre, Object | No Comments »

Existential Zugzwang

October 5th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Borges writes about the infinite library of Babel, in which all possible volumes are contained All combinations of characters are combined in the books of this library, so all arguments are made, all thoughts expressed, all narratives told and retold. This universal library, which seems at first fist to be pregnant with promise, is a dystopian vision however. The sheer number of books is so vast and the overwhelming preponderance of books which contain only gibberish, or untranslatable cryptographs, or which are written in dead languages, means that the chances of locating a text which is even readable, let alone useful, approaches zero. The librarians of this hellish repository have long since lost faith in ever finding meaning in their universe of books; they are a dying breed, prone to suicide and existential angst.

There is no evidence that such conditions afflict artists in this world, at least notyet. And this is despite the fact that creative practices have been compared to the wanderings one might make within a space similar to the library of Babel, as indeed has the natural creative processes of evolution and adaptation. Dawkins notes that ’searching for something within a sufficiently large conceptual space is indistinguishable from creation’. By inference, artistic creation is a kind of searching through the conceptual space of all possible artworks, with the work of the artist being akin to that of an explorer or colonist; each innovation a beachhead, each artwork a landmark, each genre a new found land.

A significant difference between the aimless wanderings of the librarians of Babel and the evolutionary perigrinations of the natural world is that whilst the former are cursed to go without map and compass, the evolutionary journey of exploration is significantly guided. Every step that life has taken has been accompanied by the ‘warmer, warmer’ whispering of the environment, such that these steps never lead to random and meaningless places, which is the curse of Babel. Evolution never lets any creature evolve to a location in conceptual space where it makes no sense; there are no existential zugzwangs in the natural library of possibilities. This is not to say, of course, that individual beings are not doomed to die, possibly alone and unloved. Not is it suggested that evolution has any kind of ultimate goal, there is no equivalent in evolution of the divine book at the centre of the library of Babel that Borges describes as ‘a great circular book, whose spine is continuous and which follows the complete circle of the walls.’ Each step in evolutionary history falls on the spot which is appropriate at that moment. The journey is always at an end, each point is the centre and the end of creation as it exists at that moment.

The travels of the artist through conceptual space does not fall neatly into either of these schema. The individual artist is neither doomed to a lifetime of unguided search, which would entail the relentless production of random artifacts. nor is there an environmental voice calling forth these artifacts by winnowing each step and thought.

‘From a computational point of view, evolution is simply a special kind of search algorithm. Some argue that for evolution to be considered creative, it must traverse its search spaces in a creative manner, i.e. it must be innovative or efficient in its search. Exhaustive search and random search are examples of noncreative techniques. Evolutionary algorithms are good examples of creative search.’
http://www.cs.ucl.ac.uk/staff/P.Bentley/BEC6.pdf

Posted in Art, Borges, Jorge Louis, Centre, Creativity, Evolution, Space, Writing | No Comments »

Now I Am Really Awake

November 15th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Posted in Art, Consciousness, Time | No Comments »

Before and After Physics

November 21st, 2007 Fred McVittie

Some of the ideas behind (and in front of, and to the side of, and pervading the space between and inside) this work concern consciousness, evolution, and the interplay of feeling and knowing and being. These are big ideas, and are worthy of the attention of brains bigger than the ones possessed by we humans; we ‘medium sized mammals moving at medium speed’, to paraphrase Richard Dawkins. Since these stone-age hunter-gatherer brains are all we have, and since we are bound by the Cognitive Imperative hard-coded into our DNA to restlessly pursue the thought fox, however elusive and imaginary it might be, so the lure of the big idea draws us impossibly beyond the physics of our embodiment. There before us is the light of the moon, and our studies points like a finger in its direction, and if we must mix metaphors to approach that light, then so be it. Here are some shadows; a tree, a rock, words fading on a wall. Some are almost realisable as objects and can be easily seen and touched, some seem objective but are really only collections of words. Other collections of words make no pretense of objectivity but flow between the fingers uncontained, and all around is the white space, glowing and vibrant and eyeless.

Posted in Art, Consciousness, Evolution, Knowledge, Rock, Sense | No Comments »

CFP - The Conference without Powerpoint

November 28th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Usually, when one goes to conferences which have some relationship to arts practice there is a mix of academic and art-based practice. So one may attend panels in which papers are delivered and discussed, and one might also stroll around an exhibition, or watch a performance event of some kind. Despite the best intentions of organisers and attendees however, the balance between these different presentations is rarely even and the status of these is weighted heavily in favour of paper and powerpoint rather than art and aesthetics. Also, whilst there may be attempts at a dialogue between the forms, or possibly some forays into a kind of hybrid practice in which academic and aesthetic knowledge combine, these are rarely successful and often point more to what each form lacks rather than to their fruitful union. There is nothing like academically-informed art to reveal, by its absence, the unique quality of real art. There is also nothing like an overly arty paper presentation to make you cry out for the rigour of real academicism.

Here is a conference with a difference. No papers will be presented in their entirety, although the abstracts will be available. There will also be no actual artwork shown, only documentation and description.

Posted in Abstract, Art, Conference, Performance | No Comments »

Why Art Won’t Go Away

December 10th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Much has been written recently about the persistence of religious belief in cultures and societies which otherwise seem to operate on entirely rational principles. Edward Slingerland, Daniel Dennett, and others at the Beyond Belief 2007 Conference all remarked on the unwillingness of religious belief to politely relinquish its hold on the hearts and minds of millions of otherwise reasonable people across the world. It is odd that superstitions and practices which only make any sort of sense in a pre-scientific, pre-enlightenment world, nevertheless show no signs of disappearing. Something like religion and its associated rituals seems to have been around for as long as humans have walked the Earth, and it could be said that they represent reasonable responses to an uncertain world; good first guesses at understanding and controlling. In the modern world, when systems of producing, testing, and sharing knowledge are so much more effective and predictive it is nothing short of remarkable that so many are invested in a form of knowing which is untestable, incoherent, anachronistic, and in many cases actively toxic. A number of suggestions have been made why religious belief continues to outstay its welcome in the human psyche, most of which draw upon either the social functions that it serves outwith the specific metaphysical promises it might make (a point first made by Durkheim but reiterated many times since), or on the evolutionary history of human condition which may ‘hard-wire’ us for this tendency to believe in gods and spirits. An example of the latter is the work of Newberg and D’Aquili on what they refer to as ‘The Mystical Mind’ in the book of that name, and also in ‘Why God Won’t Go Away’ which posits a mechanism linking ‘brain science and the biology of belief’. Such theories suggest that religiosity is not something which can be wished away, but is something we will have to recognise as an innate human process. (This makes no claim for or against the existence of God of course, it simply demonstrates that there are other explanations for why we might believe in a deity regardless of the truth status of that belief). Also, the existence or non-existence of the fact of God or other tenets of religious faith does not necessarily render such faith useless. As Dennett points out in the presentation noted above, there may be very good adaptive reasons for belief in a deity. He makes the hypothetical case of a battle between two armies, the Gold Army and the Silver Army. The Gold Army firmly believe that they have God on their side and that if they are slain in battle then their soul will go to join the legion of heroes in an eternal afterlife. The Silver Army, on the other hand, are an army of economists, who are able to do highly effective cost benefit analyses of the various strategies available, and are expert at calculating the relative values of different combatants. Dennett poses the question, ‘Which army would you rather have fighting for you and your cause?’ Most of us, he claims, would intuitively choose the Gold Army, for the very good reason that in a life or death situation they would probably win. This provides an example of a plausible narrative of why religiosity and its accompanying worldview might enhance the survival prospects of those groups or communities who tend to hold those beliefs over those who do not.

A similar exposition may be possible for the persistence of art as a phenomenon in cultures for which it seems to have no obvious purpose. Whatever function art served in the past it is by no means clear what function is serves at this point in our history. We could, of course, talk about it in terms of the social and economic opportunities it provides, bringing together people in safe and pleasant situations where they can discuss and negotiate shared values etc, but these are secondary features which are not directly related to the experience of art itself, the ‘aesthetic response’ if you like. This special feature of art has a hold over us which, whilst distinctly different to religious faith, is similarly compelling and irrational. Despite the annual round of criticism at the Turner Prize short list; despite endless tabloid jeering and broadsheet hand-wringing about elitism in the arts; despite art’s obvious excesses and abcesses, most recently exemplified in Damian Hirst’s diamond encrusted skull (coincidentally titled ‘For the Love of God’), Art is clearly not going away. This requires explanation.

Posted in Art, Evolution, God, Religion | No Comments »

Artworks as the result of Epistemic Actions

January 24th, 2008 Fred McVittie

I propose here a novel way of considering a range of artworks that constitutes an analysis of their function which does not rely on art history, aesthetics, or market value. For this I will draw on the distinction between Pragmatic and Epistemic Actions, as identified by Kirsh and Maglio (1994)

David Kirsh and Paul Maglio distinguish between two types of action; what they refer to as ‘pragmatic actions’ which are goal-oriented and fulfil an immediate practical function, and ‘epistemic actions’ which, as they put it, ‘use the world to improve cognition’. In other words, these epistemic actions are those which represent a kind of ‘outsourcing’ of cognitive behaviour to the actions of the body. Simple examples of these include the use of the fingers in carrying out mental arithmetic such that numbers are remembered by the use of the fingers, relieving the resource use of the brain, or the physical rotation of a puzzle piece prior to its placement, which is the main example used by Kirsh and Maglio (the video game ‘Tetris’ is extensively covered). This use of action to assist thought can also be observed in chess players who, when considering possible moves, often temporarily move a piece to a number of different positions first as this seems to facilitate an easier imagining of what the consequences of each move might be. There is no obvious way to explain why this physically moving of the piece is more effective than simply going through it in one’s mind, but nevertheless this action does seem to serve the epistemic function of optimising the particular cognitive task of making a good move in chess.

All artworks are characterised by the fact that they serve no immediately useful purpose (at least to the extent that they are artworks; they may have an additional function beyond their status as art but this status is not dependent upon it and may indeed by compromised by it). To this extent therefore, artworks are not the result of pragmatic action and are not, one might say, ‘pragmatic objects’. Kirsh and Maglio provide an additional option for how these actions and objects might be considered, which is that they might result from ‘ epistemic actions’ and constitute ‘epistemic objects’. This paper will consider this way of interpreting the function of some art objects and the actions which lead to their creation.

Kirsh, D., & Maglio, P. (1994). On distinguishing epistemic from pragmatic action. Cognitive Science, 18, 513-549.

Posted in Art, Cognition, Conference Abstract, Embodiment | No Comments »