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Depiction is reference conveyed through pictures. A picture refers to its object through a non-linguistic[citation needed] two-dimensional scheme, and is distinct from writing or notation. A depictive two-dimensional scheme is called a picture plane and may be constructed according to descriptive geometry, where they are usually divided between projections (orthogonal and various oblique angles) and perspectives (according to number of vanishing points).
Pictures are made with various materials and techniques, such as painting, drawing, or prints (including photography and movies) mosaics, tapestries, stained glass, and collages of unusual and disparate elements. Occasionally, picture-like features may be recognised in simple inkblots, accidental stains, peculiar clouds or a glimpse of the moon, but these are special cases, and it is controversial whether they count as genuine instances of depiction. Similarly, sculpture and theatrical performances are sometimes said to depict, but this requires a broad understanding of 'depict', as simply designating a form of representation that is not linguistic or notational. The bulk of studies of depiction however deal only with pictures. While sculpture and performance clearly represent or refer, they do not strictly picture their objects.
Objects pictured may be factual or fictional, literal or metaphorical, realistic or idealised and in various combination. Idealised depiction is also termed schematic or stylised and extends to icons, diagrams and maps. Classes or styles of picture may abstract their objects by degrees, conversely, establish degrees of the concrete (usually called, a little confusingly, figuration or figurative, since the 'figurative' is then often quite literal). Stylisation can lead to the fully abstract picture, where reference is only to conditions for a picture plane – a severe exercise in self-reference and ultimately a sub-set of pattern.
But just how pictures function remains controversial. Philosophers, art historians and critics, perceptual psychologists and other researchers in the arts and social sciences have contributed to the debate and many of the most influential contributions have been interdisciplinary. Some key positions are briefly surveyed below.
Resemblance
Traditionally, depiction is distinguished from denotative meaning by the presence of a mimetic element or resemblance. A picture resembles its object in a way a word or sound does not. Resemblance is no guarantee of depiction, obviously. Two pens may resemble one another but do not therefore depict each other. To say a picture resembles its object especially is only to say that its object is that which it especially resembles; which strictly begins with the picture itself. Indeed, since everything resembles something in some way, mere resemblance as a distinguishing trait is trivial. Moreover, depiction is no guarantee of resemblance to an object. A picture of a dragon does not resemble an actual dragon. So resemblance is not enough.
Theories have tried either to set further conditions to the kind of resemblance necessary, or sought ways in which a notational system might allow such resemblance. It is widely believed that the problem with a resemblance theory of depiction is that resemblance is a symmetrical relation between terms (necessarily, if x resembles y, then y resembles x) while in contrast depiction is at best a non-symmetrical relation (it is not necessary that, if x depicts y, y depicts x). If this is right, then depiction and resemblance cannot be identified, and a resemblance theory of depiction is forced to offer a more complicated explanation, for example by relying on experienced resemblance instead, which clearly is an asymmetrical notion (that you experience x as resembling y does not mean you also experience y as resembling x). Others have argued, however, that the concept of resemblance is not exclusively a relational notion, and so that the initial problem is merely apparent.
In art history, the history of actual attempts to achieve resemblance in depictions is usually covered under the terms "realism", naturalism", or "illusionism".
Illusion
The most famous and elaborate case for resemblance modified by reference, is made by art historian Ernst Gombrich. Resemblance in pictures is taken to involve illusion. Instincts in visual perception are said to be triggered or alerted by pictures, even when we are rarely deceived. The eye supposedly cannot resist finding resemblances that accord with illusion. Resemblance is thus narrowed to something like the seeds of illusion. Against the one-way relation of reference Gombrich argues for a weaker or labile relation, inherited from substitution. Pictures are thus both more primitive and powerful than stricter reference.
But whether a picture can deceive a little while it represents as much seems gravely compromised. Claims for innate dispositions in sight are also contested. Gombrich appeals to an array of psychological research from James J. Gibson, R. L. Gregory, John M. Kennedy, Konrad Lorenz, Ulric Neisser and others in arguing for an 'optical' basis to perspective, in particular (see also perspective (graphical). Subsequent cross-cultural studies in depictive competence and related studies in child-development and vision impairment are inconclusive at best.
Gombrich's convictions have important implications for his popular history of art, for treatment and priorities there. In a later study by John Willats (1997) on the variety and development of picture planes, Gombrich's views on the greater realism of perspective underpin many crucial findings.
Dual invariants
A more frankly behaviouristic view is taken by the perceptual psychologist James J. Gibson, partly in response to Gombrich. Gibson treats visual perception as the eye registering necessary information for behaviour in a given environment. The information is filtered from light rays that meet the retina. The light is called the stimulus energy or sensation. The information consists of underlying patterns or 'invariants' for vital features to the environment.
Gibson's view of depiction concerns the re-presentation of these invariants. In the case of illusions or trompe l'oeil, the picture also conveys the stimulus energy, but generally the experience is of perceiving two sets of invariants, one for the picture surface, another for the object pictured. He pointedly rejects any seeds of illusion or substitution and allows that a picture represents when two sets of invariants are displayed. But invariants tell us little more than that the resemblance is visible, dual invariants only that the terms of reference are the same as those for resemblance
Seeing-in
A similar duality is proposed by the philosopher of art Richard Wollheim. He calls it 'twofoldness'. Our experience of the picture surface is called the 'configurational' aspect, and our experience of the object depicted the 'recognitional'. Wollheim's main claim is that we are simultaneously aware of both the surface and the depicted object. The concept of twofoldness has been very influential in contemporary analytic aesthetics, especially in the writings of and of Bence Nanay. Again, illusion is forestalled by the prominence of the picture surface where an object is depicted. Yet the object depicted quite simply is the picture surface under one reading, the surface indifferent to picture, another. The two are hardly compatible or simultaneous. Nor do they ensure a reference relation.
Wollheim introduces the concept of 'seeing-in' to qualify depictive resemblance. Seeing-in is a psychological disposition to detect a resemblance between certain surfaces, such as inkblots or accidental stains, etc. and three-dimensional objects. The eye is not deceived, but finds or projects some resemblance to the surface. This is not quite depiction, since the resemblance is only incidental to the surface. The surface does not strictly refer to such objects. Seeing-in is a necessary condition to depiction, and sufficient when in accordance with the maker's intentions, where these are clear from certain features to a picture. But seeing-in cannot really say in what way such surfaces resemble objects either, only specify where they perhaps first occur.
Wollheim's account of how a resemblance is agreed or modified, whereby maker and user anticipate each other's roles, does not really explain how a resemblance refers, but rather when an agreed resemblance obtains.
Other psychological resources
The appeal to broader psychological factors in qualifying depictive resemblance is echoed in the theories of philosophers such as Robert Hopkins, Flint Schier and Kendall Walton. They enlist 'experience', 'recognition' and 'imagination' respectively. Each provides additional factors to an understanding or interpretation of pictorial reference, although none can explain how a picture resembles an object (if indeed it does), nor how this resemblance is then also a reference.
For example, Schier returns to the contrast with language to try to identify a crucial difference in depictive competence. Understanding a pictorial style does not depend upon learning a vocabulary and syntax. Once grasped, a style allows the recognition of any object known to the user. Of course recognition allows a great deal more than that – books teaching children to read often introduce them to many exotic creatures such as a kangaroo or armadillo through illustrations. Many fictions and caricatures are promptly recognised without prior acquaintance of either a particular style or the object in question. So competence cannot rely on a simple index or synonymy for objects and styles.
Schier's conclusion that lack of syntax and semantics in reference then qualifies as depiction, leaves dance, architecture, animation, sculpture and music all sharing the same mode of reference. This perhaps points as much to limitations in a linguistic model.
Notation
Reversing orthodoxy, the philosopher Nelson Goodman starts from reference and attempts to assimilate resemblance. He denies resemblance as either necessary or sufficient condition for depiction but surprisingly, allows that it arises and fluctuates as a matter of usage or familiarity.
For Goodman, a picture denotes. Denotation is divided between description, covering writing and extending to more discursive notation including music and dance scores, to depiction at greatest remove. However, a word does not grow to resemble its object, no matter how familiar or preferred. To explain how a pictorial notation does, Goodman proposes an analogue system, consisting of undifferentiated characters, a density of syntax and semantics and relative repleteness of syntax. These requirements taken in combination mean that a one-way reference running from picture to object encounters a problem. If its semantics is undifferentiated, then the relation flows back from object to picture. Depiction can acquire resemblance but must surrender reference. This is a point tacitly acknowledged by Goodman, conceding firstly that density is the antithesis of notation and later that lack of differentiation may actually permit resemblance. A denotation without notation lacks sense.
Nevertheless, Goodman's framework is revisited by philosopher John Kulvicki and applied by art historian James Elkins to an array of hybrid artefacts, combining picture, pattern and notation.
Pictorial semiotics
Pictorial semiotics aims for just the kind of integration of depiction with notation undertaken by Goodman, but fails to identify his requirements for syntax and semantics. It seeks to apply the model of structural linguistics, to reveal core meanings and permutations for pictures of all kinds, but stalls in identifying constituent elements of reference, or as semioticians prefer, 'signification'. Similarly, they accept resemblance although call it 'iconicity' (after Charles Sanders Peirce, 1931–58) and are uncomfortable in qualifying its role. Older practitioners, such as Roland Barthes and Umberto Eco variously shift analysis to underlying 'connotations' for an object depicted or concentrate on description of purported content at the expense of more medium-specific meaning. Essentially they establish a more general iconography.
A later adherent, Göran Sonesson, rejects Goodman's terms for syntax and semantics as alien to linguistics, no more than an ideal and turns instead to the findings of perceptual psychologists, such as J. M. Kennedy, N. H. Freeman and David Marr in order to detect underlying structure. Sonesson accepts 'seeing-in', although prefers Edmund Husserl's version. Resemblance is again grounded in optics or the visible, although this does not exclude writing nor reconcile resemblance with reference. Discussion tends to be restricted to the function of outlines in schemes for depth.
Deixis
The art historian Norman Bryson persists with a linguistic model and advances a detail of parsing and tense, 'deixis'. He rejects resemblance and illusion as incompatible with the ambiguities and interpretation available to pictures and is also critical of the inflexible nature of structuralist analysis. Deixis is taken as the rhetoric of the narrator, indicating the presence of the speaker in a discourse, a bodily or physical aspect as well as an explicit temporal dimension. In depiction this translates as a difference between 'The Gaze' where deixis is absent and 'The Glance' where it is present. Where present, details to materials indicate how long and in what way the depiction was made, where absent, a telling suppression or prolonging of the act. The distinction attempts to account for the 'plastic' or medium-specific qualities absent from earlier semiotic analyses and somewhat approximates the 'indexic' aspect to signs introduced by Peirce.
Deixis offers a more elaborate account of the picture surface and broad differences to expression and application but cannot qualify resemblance.
Iconography
Lastly, iconography is the study of pictorial content, mainly in art, and would seem to ignore the question of how to concentrate upon what. But iconography's findings take a rather recondite view of content, are often based on subtle literary, historical and cultural allusion and highlight a sharp difference in terms of resemblance, optical accuracy or intuitive illusion. Resemblance is hardly direct or spontaneous for the iconographer, reference rarely to the literal or singular. Visual perception here is subject to reflection and research, the object as much reference as referent.
The distinguished art historian Erwin Panofsky allowed three levels to iconography. The first is 'natural' content, the object recognised or resembling without context, on a second level, a modifying historical and cultural context and at a third, deeper level, a fundamental structure or ideology (called iconology). He even ascribed the use of perspective a deep social meaning (1927). However more recently, a natural or neutral level tends to be abandoned as mythical. The cultural scholar W. J. T. Mitchell looks to ideology to determine resemblance and depiction as acknowledgement of shifts in relations there, albeit by an unspecified scheme or notation.
Iconography points to differences in scope for a theory of depiction. Where stylistics and a basic object is nominated, resemblance is prominent, but where more elaborate objects are encountered, or terms for nature denied, simple perception or notation flounder. The difference corresponds somewhat to the division in philosophy between the analytic and continental.
Other issues
Dozens of factors influence depictions and how they are represented. These include the equipment used to create the depiction, the creator's intent, vantage point, mobility, proximity, publication format, among others, and, when dealing with human subjects, their potential desire for impression management.
Other debates about the nature of depiction include the relationship between seeing something in a picture and seeing face to face, whether depictive representation is conventional, how understanding novel depictions is possible, the aesthetic and ethical value of depiction and the nature of realism in pictorial art.
See also
- Figurative art
- Representationalism
- Symbol
Further reading
Books
- Alloa, Emmanuel (2021) Looking Through Images. A Phenomenology of Visual Media (New York: Columbia University Press)
- Barthes Roland (1969), Elements of semiology (Paris, 1967) translated by Annette Lavers and Colin Smith, (London: Cape).
- Bryson Norman (1983) Vision and Painting: The Logic of The Gaze, (New Haven and London: Yale University Press).
- Eco Umberto (1980), A Theory of Semiotics (Milan 1976) (Bloomington: Indiana University Press).
- Elkins James (1999), The Domain of Images (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press).
- Freeman N. H. and Cox M. V. (eds.) (1985), Visual Order: The Nature and Development of Pictorial Representation (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).
- Gombrich E. H. (1989–95), The Story Of Art (15th ed. London: Phaidon Press).
- Gombrich E. H. (1960), Art and Illusion (Oxford: Phaidon Press).
- Gombrich E. H. (1963), Meditations on a Hobbyhorse (Oxford: Phaidon Press).
- Gombrich E. H. (1982), The Image and the Eye (Oxford and New York: Phaidon Press).
- Goodman, Nelson (1968), Languages of Art: An Approach to a Theory of Symbols (Indianapolis and New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc.).
- Goodman Nelson and Elgin Catherine Z. (1988), Reconceptions in Philosophy (London and New York, Routledge)
- Gregory R. L. (1970) The Intelligent Eye (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson).
- Hopkins, Robert (1998), Picture, Image, and Experience (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).
- Husserl, Edmund (1928), Zur Phänomenologie des inneren Zeitbewusstseins. Halle. (Republished in Husserliana X, The Hague: Nijhoff, 1966).
- Husserl, Edmund (1980), Phantasie, Bildbewusstsein, Erinnerung, Husserliana XXIII. (The Hague: Nijhoff).
- Hyman, John (2006), The Objective Eye: Colour, Form and Reality in the Theory of Art (Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press).
- Kozak, Piotr (2023), Thinking in Images. Imagistic Cognition and Non-propositional Content (London: Bloomsbury).
- Kulvicki, John (2006), On Images: Their structure and content (Oxford: Oxford University Press).
- Lopes, Dominic (1996), Understanding Pictures (Oxford: Clarendon Press).
- Lopes, Dominic (2005), Sight and Sensibility: Evaluating Pictures (Oxford: Clarendon Press).
- Maynard, Patrick (1997), The Engine of Visualization: Thinking Through Photography (Ithaca: Cornell University Press).
- Maynard, Patrick (2005), Drawing Distinctions: The Varieties of Graphic Expression (Ithaca: Cornell University Press).
- Mitchell, W. J. T. (1980), The Language of Images (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press).
- Mitchell, W. J. T. (1986), Iconology: Image, Text, Ideology, (Chicago and London: University Of Chicago Press).
- Mitchell, W. J. T. (1994), Picture Theory (Chicago and London: University Of Chicago Press).
- Novitz, David (1977), Pictures and their Use in Communication (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff).
- Panofsky, Erwin (1955) Meaning in the Visual Arts (New York: Doubleday).
- Peirce, Charles Sanders - (1931–58), Collected Papers I-VIII. Hartshorne, C, Weiss, P, & Burks, A, (eds.). (Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press).
- Podro, Michael (1998), Depiction, (New Haven and London: Yale University Press).
- Schier, Flint (1986), Deeper Into Pictures (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).
- Sonesson, Göran (1989), Pictorial Concepts: Inquiries into the semiotic heritage and its relevance for the analysis of the visual world. (Lund: Aris/Lund University Press).
- Walton, Kendall (1990), Mimesis as Make-believe (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press).
- Willats, John (1997), Art and Representation: New Principles In The Analysis Of Pictures (Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press).
- Wollheim, Richard (1987), Painting as an Art (London: Thames and Hudson).
Articles
- Alloa, Emmanuel (2010) 'Seeing-as, seeing-in, seeing-with. Looking Through Pictures' Image and imaging in philosophy, science and the arts : proceedings of the 33rd International Ludwig Wittgenstein-Symposium in Kirchberg, Frankfurt:ontos 2010, 179–190.
- Abell, Catharine (2005a), 'Pictorial Implicature', The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 63(1): 55–66.
- Abell, Catharine (2005b), 'Against Depictive Conventionalism', The American Philosophical Quarterly, 42(3): 185–197.
- Abell, Catharine (2005), 'On Outlining the Shape of Depiction', Ratio, 18(1): 27–38.
- Abell, Catharine (2005), 'McIntosh's Unrealistic Picture of Peacocke and Hopkins on Realistic Pictures', British Journal of Aesthetics, 45(1): 64–68.
- Bennett, John (1971), 'Depiction and Convention?', The Monist 58: 255–68.
- Budd, Malcolm (1992), 'On Looking at a Picture', in Robert Hopkins and Anthony Savile (eds.), Psychoanalysis, Mind, and Art (Oxford: Blackwell).
- Budd, Malcolm (1993), 'How Pictures Look' in Dudley Knowles and John Skorupski (eds.), Virtue and Taste (Oxford: Blackwell).
- Bach, Kent (1970), 'Part of What a Picture Is', British Journal of Aesthetics, 10: 119–137.
- Black, M. (1972), 'How Do Pictures Represent', in Black, Gombrich and Hochburg, Art, Perception, and Reality (Baltimore, Md.).
- Carrier, David (1971), 'A Reading of Goodman on Representation?', The Monist 58: 269–84.
- Carrol, Noel (1994), 'Visual Metaphor' in Jaakko Hintikka (ed.), Aspects of Metaphor (Kluwer Publishers), 189–218; reprinted in Noel Carrol (2001), Beyond Aesthetics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).
- Dilworth, John (2002), 'Three Depictive Views Defended', The British Journal of Aesthetics, 42(3): 259–278.
- Dilworth, John (2002), 'Varieties of Visual Representation', Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 32(2): 183–205.
- Dilworth, John (2003), 'Medium, Subject Matter and Representation', The Southern Journal of Philosophy, 41(1): 45–62.
- Dilworth, John (2003), 'Pictorial Orientation Matters', The British Journal of Aesthetics 43(1): 39–56.
- Dilworth, John (2005), 'Resemblance, Restriction and Content-Bearing Features', The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 63(1): 67–70.
- Dilworth, John (2005), 'The Perception of Representational Content', British Journal of Aesthetics, 45(4): 388–411.
- Freeman, N. H., (1986) How should a cube be drawn? British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 4, 317–322.
- Freeman, N. H. Evans, D., and Willats, J. (1988) Symposium overview: the computational approach to projection drawing-systems. (Budapest, Paper given at Third European Conference on Developmental Psychology,
- Gibson, James J. – (1978), 'The Ecological approach To Visual Perception In Pictures', Leonardo, 11, p. 231.
- Hopkins, Robert (1994), 'Resemblance and Misrepresentation', Mind, 103(412): 421–238.
- Hopkins, Robert (1995), 'Explaining Depiction', Philosophical Review, 104(3):
- Hopkins, Robert (1997), 'Pictures and Beauty', Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, XCVII: 177–194.
- Hopkins, Robert (1997), 'El Greco's Eyesight: Interpreting Pictures and the Psychology of Vision', Philosophical Quarterly, 47(189): 441–458.
- Hopkins, Robert (2000), 'Touching Pictures' British Journal of Aesthetics 40: 149–67.
- Hopkins, Robert (2003), 'What Makes Representational Painting Truly Visual? Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society Supplementary, LXXVII: 149–167.
- Hopkins, Robert (2003), 'Pictures, Phenomenology and Cognitive Science', The Monist, 86.
- Hopkins, Robert (2005), 'What Is Pictorial Representation', in Mathew Kieran (ed.), Contemporary Debates in the Philosophy of Art (Oxford: Blackwell).
- Howell, R. (1974), 'The Logical Structure of Pictorial Representation', Theoria 2: 76–109.
- Hyman, John (2000), 'Pictorial Art and Visual Experience', British Journal of Aesthetics 40:2 1-45.
- Kennedy, J. M. and Ross, A. S. (1975), 'Outline picture perception by the Songe of Papua', Perception, 4, 391–406.
- Kjorup, Soren (1971), 'George Inness and the Battle at Hastings or Doing Things With Pictures', The Monist 58: 217–36.
- Kulvicki, John (2003), 'Image Structure', The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 61(4): 323–39.
- Lehrer, Keith (2004), 'Representation in Painting and Consciousness', Philosophical Studies, 117(1); 1–14.
- Lewis, H. P. (1963) 'Spatial representation in drawing as a correlate of development and a basis for picture preference'. Journal of Genetic Psychology, 102, 95–107.
- Lopes, Dominic (1997), 'Art Media and the Sense Modalities: Tactile Pictures', Philosophical Quarterly, 47(189): 425–440.
- Lopes, Dominic (2004), 'Directive Pictures', The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 62(2): 189–96.
- Lopes, Dominic (2005), Sight and Sensibility: Evaluating Pictures (Oxford: Clarendon Press).
- Lowe, D. G. (1987), 'Three-dimensional object recognition from single two-dimensional images', Artificial Intelligence, 31, 355 – 395.
- Malinas, Gary (1991), 'A Semantics for Pictures', Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 21(3): 275–298.
- Manns, James W. (1971), 'Representation, Relativism and Resemblance', British Journal of Aesthetics 11: 281–7).
- Marr, David (1977), 'Analysis of occluding outline', Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B 197 441–475.
- Marr, David (1978), 'Representing visual information: a computational approach.' in Computer Vision, A. R. Hanson and E. M. Riseman (eds.) Academic Press, New York and London, pp. 61–80.
- Maynard, Patrick (1972), 'Depiction, Vision and Convention', American Philosophical Quarterly, 9: 243–50.
- McIntosh, Gavin (2003), 'Depiction Unexplained: Peacocke and Hopkins on Pictorial Representation', The British Journal of Aesthetics, 43(3):279-288.
- Nanay, Bence (2004), 'Taking Twofoldness Seriously: Walton on Imagination and Depiction', Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 62(3): 285–9.
- Nanay, Bence (2005), 'Is Twofoldness Necessary for Representational Seeing?', British Journal of Aesthetics 45(3): 263–272.
- Neander, Karen (1987), 'Pictorial Representation: A Matter of Resemblance', British Journal of Aesthetics, 27(3): 213–26.
- Newall, Michael (2003), 'A Restriction for Pictures and Some Consequences for a Theory of Depiction', Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 61: 381–94.
- Nicholas, A. L. and Kennedy, J. M. (1992), 'Drawing development from similarity of features to direction', Child Development, 63, 227–241.
- Novitz, David (1975), 'Picturing', Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 34: 144–55.
- Panofsky, Erwin (1924-5), 'Die Perspective als Symbolische Form' in Vortrage der Bibliotek Warburg.
- Pateman, Trevor (1980), 'How to do Things with Images: An Essay on the Pragmatics of Advertising', Theory and Society, 9(4): 603–622.
- Pateman, Trevor (1983), 'How is Understanding an Advertisement Possible?' in Howard Davis and Paul Walton (eds.), Language, Image, Media (London: Blackwell).
- Pateman, Trevor (1986), 'Translucent and Transparent Icons', British Journal of Aesthetics, 26: 380–2.
- Peacocke, Christopher (1987), Depiction, The Philosophical Review, 96: 383–410.
- Ross, Stephanie (1971), 'Caricature', The Monist 58: 285–93.
- Savile, Anthony (1986) 'Imagination and Pictorial Understanding', Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 60: 19–44.
- Sartwell, Crispin (1991), 'Natural Generativity and Imitation', British Journal of Aesthetics, 31: 58–67.
- Schier, Flint (1993) 'Van Gogh's Boots: The Claims of Representation' in Dudley Knowles and John Skorupski (eds.) Virtue and Taste (Oxford: Blackwell).
- Scholz, Oliver (2000), 'A Solid Sense of Syntax', Erkenntnis, 52: 199–212.
- Sonesson, Göran (2001), 'Iconicity strikes back: the third generation – or why Eco is still wrong'. VISIO 9: 3–4.
- Sonesson, Göran (Revised August 2006), 'Current issues in pictorial semiotics. Lecture three: From the Critique of the Iconicity Critique to Pictorality' . Third conference of a series published online at the Semiotics Institute Online. January 2006.
- Sorenson, Roy (2002), 'The Art of the Impossible' in Tamar Szabo Gendler and John Hawthorne (eds.), Conceivability and Possibility (Oxford: Clarendon Press).
- Soszynski, Marek (2006), 'How Do Pictures Represent?', Philosophy Now, 57: 20–21.
- Walton, Kendall (1971), 'Are Representations Symbols?', The Monist 58: 236–254.
- Walton, Kendall (1974), 'Transparent Pictures: On the Nature of Photographic Realism', Critical Inquiry, 11(2): 246–277.
- Walton, Kendall (1992), 'Seeing-In and Seeing Fictionally', in James Hopkins and Anthony Savile (eds.), Mind, Psychoanalysis, and Art: Essays for Richard Wollheim, (Oxford: Blackwell), 281–291.
- Walton, Kendall (1993), 'Make-Believe, and its Role in Pictorial Representation and the Acquisition of Knowledge', Philosophic Exchange 23: 81–95.
- Walton, Kendall (1997), 'On Pictures and Photographs: Objections Answered', in Richard Allen and Murray Smith (eds.), Film Theory and Philosophy (Oxford: Oxford University Press) 60–75.
- Walton, Kendall (2002), 'Depiction, Perception, and Imagination: Responses to Richard Wollheim', Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 60(1): 27–35.
- Wilkerson, T. E. (1991), 'Pictorial Representation: A defense of the Aspect Theory', Midwest Studies in Philosophy, 16: 152–166.
- Wilson, B. and Wilson, M. (1977) 'An iconoclastic view of the imagery sources in the drawings of young people', Art Education, 30(1), 4–6.
- Wollheim, Richard (1990), 'A Note on Mimesis as Make-Believe', Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 51(2): 401–6.
- Wollheim, Richard (1998), 'Pictorial Representation', Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 56: 217–26.
- Wolsterstorff, Nicholas (1991a), 'Two Approaches to Representation – And Then a Third', Midwest Studies in Philosophy, 16: 167–199.
References
- e.g. Robert David Hopkins (1998), "Picture, Image, Experience" (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press) p. 71.
- see e.g. Hopkins (1998), Christopher Peacocke (1987) 'Depiction', in Philosophical Review 96(3):383-410.
- John Hyman (2012), 'Depiction', in Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 71:129-150.
- Gombrich, E. H. (1960) Art and Illusion (Oxford: Phaidon Press).
- Gombrich, E. H. (1963) Meditations on a Hobbyhorse (Oxford, Phaidon Press).
- Gombrich, E. H. The Image and the Eye (Oxford and New York: Phaidon Press).
- Gombrich, E. H. (1960): pp 80-98, (1982): pp 278–297.
- Gombrich, E. H. (1995), The Story Of Art 16th ed. (London: Phaidon Press).
- Willats, John, (1997), Art and Representation: New Principles In The Analysis Of Pictures (Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press.)
- Gombrich (1995), pp. 133, 228.
- Gibson, James J., 'The Ecological approach to Visual Perception in Pictures' Leonardo, 1978, 11, p.231.
- Wollheim, Richard (1987), Painting as an Art (London: Thames and Hudson) pp 46-7, 72-5.
- Lopes, Dominic (2005), Sight and Sensibility: Evaluating Pictures (Oxford: Clarendon Press).
- Nanay, Bence (2005), 'Is Twofoldness Necessary for Representational Seeing?', British Journal of Aesthetics 45(3): 263-272.
- Wollheim (1987), pp. 59-61.
- Hopkins, Robert (1998), Picture, Image, and Experience (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).
- Schier, Flint (1986), Deeper Into Pictures (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).
- Walton, Kendall (1990), Mimesis as Make-believe (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press).
- Ross, Stephanie (1971), 'Caricature', The Monist 58: pp 285-93.
- Goodman, Nelson (1968), Languages of Art: An Approach to a Theory of Symbols (Indianapolis and New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc.).
- Goodman (1968), pp. 16-19.
- Goodman (1968), p. 160.
- Goodman, Nelson and Elgin, Catherine Z, (1988) Reconceptions in Philosophy (London and New York: Routledge) p. 131.
- Kulvicki, John (2006), On Images: Their structure and content (Oxford: Oxford University Press).
- Elkins, James (1999), The Domain of Images (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press).
- Peirce, Charles Sanders - (1931-58), Collected Papers I-VIII. Hartshorne, C, Weiss, P, & Burks, A, (eds.) (Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press).
- Barthes, Roland (1969), Elements of semiology (Paris, 1967) translated by Annette Lavers and Colin Smith, (London: Cape).
- Eco, Umberto (1980), A Theory of Semiotics (Milan 1976) (Bloomington: Indiana University Press).
- Sonesson, Göran (1989), Pictorial Concepts: Inquiries into the semiotic heritage and its relevance for the analysis of the visual world. (Lund: Aris/Lund University Press).
- Sonesson, Göran (2001), 'Iconicity strikes back: the third generation – or why Eco is still wrong'. VISIO 9: 3-4.
- Kennedy, John M. (1974) The Psychology of Picture Perception (San Francisco, Jossey-Bass).
- Freeman, N. H. and Cox, M. V. (eds.) (1985), Visual Order: The Nature and Development of Pictorial Representation (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).
- Freeman, N. H., Evans, D., and Willats, J. (1988) Symposium overview: the computational approach to projection drawing-systems. (Budapest, Paper given at Third European Conference on Developmental Psychology).
- Marr, David (1977), 'Analysis of occluding outline', Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B 197 441-475.
- Marr, David (1978), 'Representing visual information: a computational approach.' in Computer Vision, A. R. Hanson and E. M. Riseman (eds.) Academic Press, New York and London, pp. 61-80.
- Sonesson, Göran (Revised August 2006), 'Current issues in pictorial semiotics. Lecture three: From the Critique of the Iconicity Critique to Pictorality' . Third conference of a series published online at the Semiotics Institute Online. January 2006.
- Husserl, Edmund (1928), Zur Phänomenologie des inneren Zeitbewusstseins. Halle. (Republished in Husserliana X, The Hague: Nijhoff, 1966).
- Husserl, Edmund (1980), Phantasie, Bildbewusstsein, Erinnerung, Husserliana XXIII. (The Hague: Nijhoff).
- Bryson, Norman (1983) Vision and Painting: The Logic of The Gaz, (New Haven and London: Yale University Press).
- Panofsky, Erwin (1955) Meaning in the Visual Arts (New York: Doubleday).
- Mitchell, W. J. T. (1980), The Language of Images (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press).
- Mitchell, W. J. T. (1986), Iconology: Image, Text, Ideology, (Chicago and London: University Of Chicago Press).
- Mitchell, W. J. T. (1994), Picture Theory (Chicago and London: University Of Chicago Press).
- Thomson, T. J.; Greenwood, Keith (2016-03-08). "Beyond Framing" (PDF). Journalism Practice. 11 (5): 625–644. doi:10.1080/17512786.2016.1152908. ISSN 1751-2786. S2CID 147475471.
External links
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- Depiction & Painting Archived 2009-08-13 at the Wayback Machine
This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Depiction is reference conveyed through pictures A picture refers to its object through a non linguistic citation needed two dimensional scheme and is distinct from writing or notation A depictive two dimensional scheme is called a picture plane and may be constructed according to descriptive geometry where they are usually divided between projections orthogonal and various oblique angles and perspectives according to number of vanishing points Pictures are made with various materials and techniques such as painting drawing or prints including photography and movies mosaics tapestries stained glass and collages of unusual and disparate elements Occasionally picture like features may be recognised in simple inkblots accidental stains peculiar clouds or a glimpse of the moon but these are special cases and it is controversial whether they count as genuine instances of depiction Similarly sculpture and theatrical performances are sometimes said to depict but this requires a broad understanding of depict as simply designating a form of representation that is not linguistic or notational The bulk of studies of depiction however deal only with pictures While sculpture and performance clearly represent or refer they do not strictly picture their objects Objects pictured may be factual or fictional literal or metaphorical realistic or idealised and in various combination Idealised depiction is also termed schematic or stylised and extends to icons diagrams and maps Classes or styles of picture may abstract their objects by degrees conversely establish degrees of the concrete usually called a little confusingly figuration or figurative since the figurative is then often quite literal Stylisation can lead to the fully abstract picture where reference is only to conditions for a picture plane a severe exercise in self reference and ultimately a sub set of pattern But just how pictures function remains controversial Philosophers art historians and critics perceptual psychologists and other researchers in the arts and social sciences have contributed to the debate and many of the most influential contributions have been interdisciplinary Some key positions are briefly surveyed below ResemblanceTraditionally depiction is distinguished from denotative meaning by the presence of a mimetic element or resemblance A picture resembles its object in a way a word or sound does not Resemblance is no guarantee of depiction obviously Two pens may resemble one another but do not therefore depict each other To say a picture resembles its object especially is only to say that its object is that which it especially resembles which strictly begins with the picture itself Indeed since everything resembles something in some way mere resemblance as a distinguishing trait is trivial Moreover depiction is no guarantee of resemblance to an object A picture of a dragon does not resemble an actual dragon So resemblance is not enough Theories have tried either to set further conditions to the kind of resemblance necessary or sought ways in which a notational system might allow such resemblance It is widely believed that the problem with a resemblance theory of depiction is that resemblance is a symmetrical relation between terms necessarily if x resembles y then y resembles x while in contrast depiction is at best a non symmetrical relation it is not necessary that if x depicts y y depicts x If this is right then depiction and resemblance cannot be identified and a resemblance theory of depiction is forced to offer a more complicated explanation for example by relying on experienced resemblance instead which clearly is an asymmetrical notion that you experience x as resembling y does not mean you also experience y as resembling x Others have argued however that the concept of resemblance is not exclusively a relational notion and so that the initial problem is merely apparent In art history the history of actual attempts to achieve resemblance in depictions is usually covered under the terms realism naturalism or illusionism IllusionThe most famous and elaborate case for resemblance modified by reference is made by art historian Ernst Gombrich Resemblance in pictures is taken to involve illusion Instincts in visual perception are said to be triggered or alerted by pictures even when we are rarely deceived The eye supposedly cannot resist finding resemblances that accord with illusion Resemblance is thus narrowed to something like the seeds of illusion Against the one way relation of reference Gombrich argues for a weaker or labile relation inherited from substitution Pictures are thus both more primitive and powerful than stricter reference But whether a picture can deceive a little while it represents as much seems gravely compromised Claims for innate dispositions in sight are also contested Gombrich appeals to an array of psychological research from James J Gibson R L Gregory John M Kennedy Konrad Lorenz Ulric Neisser and others in arguing for an optical basis to perspective in particular see also perspective graphical Subsequent cross cultural studies in depictive competence and related studies in child development and vision impairment are inconclusive at best Gombrich s convictions have important implications for his popular history of art for treatment and priorities there In a later study by John Willats 1997 on the variety and development of picture planes Gombrich s views on the greater realism of perspective underpin many crucial findings Dual invariantsA more frankly behaviouristic view is taken by the perceptual psychologist James J Gibson partly in response to Gombrich Gibson treats visual perception as the eye registering necessary information for behaviour in a given environment The information is filtered from light rays that meet the retina The light is called the stimulus energy or sensation The information consists of underlying patterns or invariants for vital features to the environment Gibson s view of depiction concerns the re presentation of these invariants In the case of illusions or trompe l oeil the picture also conveys the stimulus energy but generally the experience is of perceiving two sets of invariants one for the picture surface another for the object pictured He pointedly rejects any seeds of illusion or substitution and allows that a picture represents when two sets of invariants are displayed But invariants tell us little more than that the resemblance is visible dual invariants only that the terms of reference are the same as those for resemblanceSeeing inA similar duality is proposed by the philosopher of art Richard Wollheim He calls it twofoldness Our experience of the picture surface is called the configurational aspect and our experience of the object depicted the recognitional Wollheim s main claim is that we are simultaneously aware of both the surface and the depicted object The concept of twofoldness has been very influential in contemporary analytic aesthetics especially in the writings of and of Bence Nanay Again illusion is forestalled by the prominence of the picture surface where an object is depicted Yet the object depicted quite simply is the picture surface under one reading the surface indifferent to picture another The two are hardly compatible or simultaneous Nor do they ensure a reference relation Wollheim introduces the concept of seeing in to qualify depictive resemblance Seeing in is a psychological disposition to detect a resemblance between certain surfaces such as inkblots or accidental stains etc and three dimensional objects The eye is not deceived but finds or projects some resemblance to the surface This is not quite depiction since the resemblance is only incidental to the surface The surface does not strictly refer to such objects Seeing in is a necessary condition to depiction and sufficient when in accordance with the maker s intentions where these are clear from certain features to a picture But seeing in cannot really say in what way such surfaces resemble objects either only specify where they perhaps first occur Wollheim s account of how a resemblance is agreed or modified whereby maker and user anticipate each other s roles does not really explain how a resemblance refers but rather when an agreed resemblance obtains Other psychological resourcesThe appeal to broader psychological factors in qualifying depictive resemblance is echoed in the theories of philosophers such as Robert Hopkins Flint Schier and Kendall Walton They enlist experience recognition and imagination respectively Each provides additional factors to an understanding or interpretation of pictorial reference although none can explain how a picture resembles an object if indeed it does nor how this resemblance is then also a reference For example Schier returns to the contrast with language to try to identify a crucial difference in depictive competence Understanding a pictorial style does not depend upon learning a vocabulary and syntax Once grasped a style allows the recognition of any object known to the user Of course recognition allows a great deal more than that books teaching children to read often introduce them to many exotic creatures such as a kangaroo or armadillo through illustrations Many fictions and caricatures are promptly recognised without prior acquaintance of either a particular style or the object in question So competence cannot rely on a simple index or synonymy for objects and styles Schier s conclusion that lack of syntax and semantics in reference then qualifies as depiction leaves dance architecture animation sculpture and music all sharing the same mode of reference This perhaps points as much to limitations in a linguistic model NotationReversing orthodoxy the philosopher Nelson Goodman starts from reference and attempts to assimilate resemblance He denies resemblance as either necessary or sufficient condition for depiction but surprisingly allows that it arises and fluctuates as a matter of usage or familiarity For Goodman a picture denotes Denotation is divided between description covering writing and extending to more discursive notation including music and dance scores to depiction at greatest remove However a word does not grow to resemble its object no matter how familiar or preferred To explain how a pictorial notation does Goodman proposes an analogue system consisting of undifferentiated characters a density of syntax and semantics and relative repleteness of syntax These requirements taken in combination mean that a one way reference running from picture to object encounters a problem If its semantics is undifferentiated then the relation flows back from object to picture Depiction can acquire resemblance but must surrender reference This is a point tacitly acknowledged by Goodman conceding firstly that density is the antithesis of notation and later that lack of differentiation may actually permit resemblance A denotation without notation lacks sense Nevertheless Goodman s framework is revisited by philosopher John Kulvicki and applied by art historian James Elkins to an array of hybrid artefacts combining picture pattern and notation Pictorial semioticsPictorial semiotics aims for just the kind of integration of depiction with notation undertaken by Goodman but fails to identify his requirements for syntax and semantics It seeks to apply the model of structural linguistics to reveal core meanings and permutations for pictures of all kinds but stalls in identifying constituent elements of reference or as semioticians prefer signification Similarly they accept resemblance although call it iconicity after Charles Sanders Peirce 1931 58 and are uncomfortable in qualifying its role Older practitioners such as Roland Barthes and Umberto Eco variously shift analysis to underlying connotations for an object depicted or concentrate on description of purported content at the expense of more medium specific meaning Essentially they establish a more general iconography A later adherent Goran Sonesson rejects Goodman s terms for syntax and semantics as alien to linguistics no more than an ideal and turns instead to the findings of perceptual psychologists such as J M Kennedy N H Freeman and David Marr in order to detect underlying structure Sonesson accepts seeing in although prefers Edmund Husserl s version Resemblance is again grounded in optics or the visible although this does not exclude writing nor reconcile resemblance with reference Discussion tends to be restricted to the function of outlines in schemes for depth DeixisThe art historian Norman Bryson persists with a linguistic model and advances a detail of parsing and tense deixis He rejects resemblance and illusion as incompatible with the ambiguities and interpretation available to pictures and is also critical of the inflexible nature of structuralist analysis Deixis is taken as the rhetoric of the narrator indicating the presence of the speaker in a discourse a bodily or physical aspect as well as an explicit temporal dimension In depiction this translates as a difference between The Gaze where deixis is absent and The Glance where it is present Where present details to materials indicate how long and in what way the depiction was made where absent a telling suppression or prolonging of the act The distinction attempts to account for the plastic or medium specific qualities absent from earlier semiotic analyses and somewhat approximates the indexic aspect to signs introduced by Peirce Deixis offers a more elaborate account of the picture surface and broad differences to expression and application but cannot qualify resemblance IconographyLastly iconography is the study of pictorial content mainly in art and would seem to ignore the question of how to concentrate upon what But iconography s findings take a rather recondite view of content are often based on subtle literary historical and cultural allusion and highlight a sharp difference in terms of resemblance optical accuracy or intuitive illusion Resemblance is hardly direct or spontaneous for the iconographer reference rarely to the literal or singular Visual perception here is subject to reflection and research the object as much reference as referent The distinguished art historian Erwin Panofsky allowed three levels to iconography The first is natural content the object recognised or resembling without context on a second level a modifying historical and cultural context and at a third deeper level a fundamental structure or ideology called iconology He even ascribed the use of perspective a deep social meaning 1927 However more recently a natural or neutral level tends to be abandoned as mythical The cultural scholar W J T Mitchell looks to ideology to determine resemblance and depiction as acknowledgement of shifts in relations there albeit by an unspecified scheme or notation Iconography points to differences in scope for a theory of depiction Where stylistics and a basic object is nominated resemblance is prominent but where more elaborate objects are encountered or terms for nature denied simple perception or notation flounder The difference corresponds somewhat to the division in philosophy between the analytic and continental Other issuesDozens of factors influence depictions and how they are represented These include the equipment used to create the depiction the creator s intent vantage point mobility proximity publication format among others and when dealing with human subjects their potential desire for impression management Other debates about the nature of depiction include the relationship between seeing something in a picture and seeing face to face whether depictive representation is conventional how understanding novel depictions is possible the aesthetic and ethical value of depiction and the nature of realism in pictorial art See alsoFigurative art Representationalism SymbolFurther readingBooks Alloa Emmanuel 2021 Looking Through Images A Phenomenology of Visual Media New York Columbia University Press Barthes Roland 1969 Elements of semiology Paris 1967 translated by Annette Lavers and Colin Smith London Cape Bryson Norman 1983 Vision and Painting The Logic of The Gaze New Haven and London Yale University Press Eco Umberto 1980 A Theory of Semiotics Milan 1976 Bloomington Indiana University Press Elkins James 1999 The Domain of Images Ithaca and London Cornell University Press Freeman N H and Cox M V eds 1985 Visual Order The Nature and Development of Pictorial Representation Cambridge Cambridge University Press Gombrich E H 1989 95 The Story Of Art 15th ed London Phaidon Press Gombrich E H 1960 Art and Illusion Oxford Phaidon Press Gombrich E H 1963 Meditations on a Hobbyhorse Oxford Phaidon Press Gombrich E H 1982 The Image and the Eye Oxford and New York Phaidon Press Goodman Nelson 1968 Languages of Art An Approach to a Theory of Symbols Indianapolis and New York The Bobbs Merrill Company Inc Goodman Nelson and Elgin Catherine Z 1988 Reconceptions in Philosophy London and New York Routledge Gregory R L 1970 The Intelligent Eye London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson Hopkins Robert 1998 Picture Image and Experience Cambridge Cambridge University Press Husserl Edmund 1928 Zur Phanomenologie des inneren Zeitbewusstseins Halle Republished in Husserliana X The Hague Nijhoff 1966 Husserl Edmund 1980 Phantasie Bildbewusstsein Erinnerung Husserliana XXIII The Hague Nijhoff Hyman John 2006 The Objective Eye Colour Form and Reality in the Theory of Art Chicago and London The University of Chicago Press Kozak Piotr 2023 Thinking in Images Imagistic Cognition and Non propositional Content London Bloomsbury Kulvicki John 2006 On Images Their structure and content Oxford Oxford University Press Lopes Dominic 1996 Understanding Pictures Oxford Clarendon Press Lopes Dominic 2005 Sight and Sensibility Evaluating Pictures Oxford Clarendon Press Maynard Patrick 1997 The Engine of Visualization Thinking Through Photography Ithaca Cornell University Press Maynard Patrick 2005 Drawing Distinctions The Varieties of Graphic Expression Ithaca Cornell University Press Mitchell W J T 1980 The Language of Images Chicago and London University of Chicago Press Mitchell W J T 1986 Iconology Image Text Ideology Chicago and London University Of Chicago Press Mitchell W J T 1994 Picture Theory Chicago and London University Of Chicago Press Novitz David 1977 Pictures and their Use in Communication The Hague Martinus Nijhoff Panofsky Erwin 1955 Meaning in the Visual Arts New York Doubleday Peirce Charles Sanders 1931 58 Collected Papers I VIII Hartshorne C Weiss P amp Burks A eds Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Podro Michael 1998 Depiction New Haven and London Yale University Press Schier Flint 1986 Deeper Into Pictures Cambridge Cambridge University Press Sonesson Goran 1989 Pictorial Concepts Inquiries into the semiotic heritage and its relevance for the analysis of the visual world Lund Aris Lund University Press Walton Kendall 1990 Mimesis as Make believe Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press Willats John 1997 Art and Representation New Principles In The Analysis Of Pictures Princeton N J Princeton University Press Wollheim Richard 1987 Painting as an Art London Thames and Hudson Articles Alloa Emmanuel 2010 Seeing as seeing in seeing with Looking Through Pictures Image and imaging in philosophy science and the arts proceedings of the 33rd International Ludwig Wittgenstein Symposium in Kirchberg Frankfurt ontos 2010 179 190 Abell Catharine 2005a Pictorial Implicature The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 63 1 55 66 Abell Catharine 2005b Against Depictive Conventionalism The American Philosophical Quarterly 42 3 185 197 Abell Catharine 2005 On Outlining the Shape of Depiction Ratio 18 1 27 38 Abell Catharine 2005 McIntosh s Unrealistic Picture of Peacocke and Hopkins on Realistic Pictures British Journal of Aesthetics 45 1 64 68 Bennett John 1971 Depiction and Convention The Monist 58 255 68 Budd Malcolm 1992 On Looking at a Picture in Robert Hopkins and Anthony Savile eds Psychoanalysis Mind and Art Oxford Blackwell Budd Malcolm 1993 How Pictures Look in Dudley Knowles and John Skorupski eds Virtue and Taste Oxford Blackwell Bach Kent 1970 Part of What a Picture Is British Journal of Aesthetics 10 119 137 Black M 1972 How Do Pictures Represent in Black Gombrich and Hochburg Art Perception and Reality Baltimore Md Carrier David 1971 A Reading of Goodman on Representation The Monist 58 269 84 Carrol Noel 1994 Visual Metaphor in Jaakko Hintikka ed Aspects of Metaphor Kluwer Publishers 189 218 reprinted in Noel Carrol 2001 Beyond Aesthetics Cambridge Cambridge University Press Dilworth John 2002 Three Depictive Views Defended The British Journal of Aesthetics 42 3 259 278 Dilworth John 2002 Varieties of Visual Representation Canadian Journal of Philosophy 32 2 183 205 Dilworth John 2003 Medium Subject Matter and Representation The Southern Journal of Philosophy 41 1 45 62 Dilworth John 2003 Pictorial Orientation Matters The British Journal of Aesthetics 43 1 39 56 Dilworth John 2005 Resemblance Restriction and Content Bearing Features The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 63 1 67 70 Dilworth John 2005 The Perception of Representational Content British Journal of Aesthetics 45 4 388 411 Freeman N H 1986 How should a cube be drawn British Journal of Developmental Psychology 4 317 322 Freeman N H Evans D and Willats J 1988 Symposium overview the computational approach to projection drawing systems Budapest Paper given at Third European Conference on Developmental Psychology Gibson James J 1978 The Ecological approach To Visual Perception In Pictures Leonardo 11 p 231 Hopkins Robert 1994 Resemblance and Misrepresentation Mind 103 412 421 238 Hopkins Robert 1995 Explaining Depiction Philosophical Review 104 3 Hopkins Robert 1997 Pictures and Beauty Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society XCVII 177 194 Hopkins Robert 1997 El Greco s Eyesight Interpreting Pictures and the Psychology of Vision Philosophical Quarterly 47 189 441 458 Hopkins Robert 2000 Touching Pictures British Journal of Aesthetics 40 149 67 Hopkins Robert 2003 What Makes Representational Painting Truly Visual Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society Supplementary LXXVII 149 167 Hopkins Robert 2003 Pictures Phenomenology and Cognitive Science The Monist 86 Hopkins Robert 2005 What Is Pictorial Representation in Mathew Kieran ed Contemporary Debates in the Philosophy of Art Oxford Blackwell Howell R 1974 The Logical Structure of Pictorial Representation Theoria 2 76 109 Hyman John 2000 Pictorial Art and Visual Experience British Journal of Aesthetics 40 2 1 45 Kennedy J M and Ross A S 1975 Outline picture perception by the Songe of Papua Perception 4 391 406 Kjorup Soren 1971 George Inness and the Battle at Hastings or Doing Things With Pictures The Monist 58 217 36 Kulvicki John 2003 Image Structure The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 61 4 323 39 Lehrer Keith 2004 Representation in Painting and Consciousness Philosophical Studies 117 1 1 14 Lewis H P 1963 Spatial representation in drawing as a correlate of development and a basis for picture preference Journal of Genetic Psychology 102 95 107 Lopes Dominic 1997 Art Media and the Sense Modalities Tactile Pictures Philosophical Quarterly 47 189 425 440 Lopes Dominic 2004 Directive Pictures The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 62 2 189 96 Lopes Dominic 2005 Sight and Sensibility Evaluating Pictures Oxford Clarendon Press Lowe D G 1987 Three dimensional object recognition from single two dimensional images Artificial Intelligence 31 355 395 Malinas Gary 1991 A Semantics for Pictures Canadian Journal of Philosophy 21 3 275 298 Manns James W 1971 Representation Relativism and Resemblance British Journal of Aesthetics 11 281 7 Marr David 1977 Analysis of occluding outline Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B 197 441 475 Marr David 1978 Representing visual information a computational approach in Computer Vision A R Hanson and E M Riseman eds Academic Press New York and London pp 61 80 Maynard Patrick 1972 Depiction Vision and Convention American Philosophical Quarterly 9 243 50 McIntosh Gavin 2003 Depiction Unexplained Peacocke and Hopkins on Pictorial Representation The British Journal of Aesthetics 43 3 279 288 Nanay Bence 2004 Taking Twofoldness Seriously Walton on Imagination and Depiction Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 62 3 285 9 Nanay Bence 2005 Is Twofoldness Necessary for Representational Seeing British Journal of Aesthetics 45 3 263 272 Neander Karen 1987 Pictorial Representation A Matter of Resemblance British Journal of Aesthetics 27 3 213 26 Newall Michael 2003 A Restriction for Pictures and Some Consequences for a Theory of Depiction Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 61 381 94 Nicholas A L and Kennedy J M 1992 Drawing development from similarity of features to direction Child Development 63 227 241 Novitz David 1975 Picturing Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 34 144 55 Panofsky Erwin 1924 5 Die Perspective als Symbolische Form in Vortrage der Bibliotek Warburg Pateman Trevor 1980 How to do Things with Images An Essay on the Pragmatics of Advertising Theory and Society 9 4 603 622 Pateman Trevor 1983 How is Understanding an Advertisement Possible in Howard Davis and Paul Walton eds Language Image Media London Blackwell Pateman Trevor 1986 Translucent and Transparent Icons British Journal of Aesthetics 26 380 2 Peacocke Christopher 1987 Depiction The Philosophical Review 96 383 410 Ross Stephanie 1971 Caricature The Monist 58 285 93 Savile Anthony 1986 Imagination and Pictorial Understanding Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 60 19 44 Sartwell Crispin 1991 Natural Generativity and Imitation British Journal of Aesthetics 31 58 67 Schier Flint 1993 Van Gogh s Boots The Claims of Representation in Dudley Knowles and John Skorupski eds Virtue and Taste Oxford Blackwell Scholz Oliver 2000 A Solid Sense of Syntax Erkenntnis 52 199 212 Sonesson Goran 2001 Iconicity strikes back the third generation or why Eco is still wrong VISIO 9 3 4 Sonesson Goran Revised August 2006 Current issues in pictorial semiotics Lecture three From the Critique of the Iconicity Critique to Pictorality Third conference of a series published online at the Semiotics Institute Online January 2006 Sorenson Roy 2002 The Art of the Impossible in Tamar Szabo Gendler and John Hawthorne eds Conceivability and Possibility Oxford Clarendon Press Soszynski Marek 2006 How Do Pictures Represent Philosophy Now 57 20 21 Walton Kendall 1971 Are Representations Symbols The Monist 58 236 254 Walton Kendall 1974 Transparent Pictures On the Nature of Photographic Realism Critical Inquiry 11 2 246 277 Walton Kendall 1992 Seeing In and Seeing Fictionally in James Hopkins and Anthony Savile eds Mind Psychoanalysis and Art Essays for Richard Wollheim Oxford Blackwell 281 291 Walton Kendall 1993 Make Believe and its Role in Pictorial Representation and the Acquisition of Knowledge Philosophic Exchange 23 81 95 Walton Kendall 1997 On Pictures and Photographs Objections Answered in Richard Allen and Murray Smith eds Film Theory and Philosophy Oxford Oxford University Press 60 75 Walton Kendall 2002 Depiction Perception and Imagination Responses to Richard Wollheim Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 60 1 27 35 Wilkerson T E 1991 Pictorial Representation A defense of the Aspect Theory Midwest Studies in Philosophy 16 152 166 Wilson B and Wilson M 1977 An iconoclastic view of the imagery sources in the drawings of young people Art Education 30 1 4 6 Wollheim Richard 1990 A Note on Mimesis as Make Believe Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 51 2 401 6 Wollheim Richard 1998 Pictorial Representation Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 56 217 26 Wolsterstorff Nicholas 1991a Two Approaches to Representation And Then a Third Midwest Studies in Philosophy 16 167 199 Referencese g Robert David Hopkins 1998 Picture Image Experience Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 71 see e g Hopkins 1998 Christopher Peacocke 1987 Depiction in Philosophical Review 96 3 383 410 John Hyman 2012 Depiction in Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 71 129 150 Gombrich E H 1960 Art and Illusion Oxford Phaidon Press Gombrich E H 1963 Meditations on a Hobbyhorse Oxford Phaidon Press Gombrich E H The Image and the Eye Oxford and New York Phaidon Press Gombrich E H 1960 pp 80 98 1982 pp 278 297 Gombrich E H 1995 The Story Of Art 16th ed London Phaidon Press Willats John 1997 Art and Representation New Principles In The Analysis Of Pictures Princeton N J Princeton University Press Gombrich 1995 pp 133 228 Gibson James J The Ecological approach to Visual Perception in Pictures Leonardo 1978 11 p 231 Wollheim Richard 1987 Painting as an Art London Thames and Hudson pp 46 7 72 5 Lopes Dominic 2005 Sight and Sensibility Evaluating Pictures Oxford Clarendon Press Nanay Bence 2005 Is Twofoldness Necessary for Representational Seeing British Journal of Aesthetics 45 3 263 272 Wollheim 1987 pp 59 61 Hopkins Robert 1998 Picture Image and Experience Cambridge Cambridge University Press Schier Flint 1986 Deeper Into Pictures Cambridge Cambridge University Press Walton Kendall 1990 Mimesis as Make believe Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press Ross Stephanie 1971 Caricature The Monist 58 pp 285 93 Goodman Nelson 1968 Languages of Art An Approach to a Theory of Symbols Indianapolis and New York The Bobbs Merrill Company Inc Goodman 1968 pp 16 19 Goodman 1968 p 160 Goodman Nelson and Elgin Catherine Z 1988 Reconceptions in Philosophy London and New York Routledge p 131 Kulvicki John 2006 On Images Their structure and content Oxford Oxford University Press Elkins James 1999 The Domain of Images Ithaca and London Cornell University Press Peirce Charles Sanders 1931 58 Collected Papers I VIII Hartshorne C Weiss P amp Burks A eds Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Barthes Roland 1969 Elements of semiology Paris 1967 translated by Annette Lavers and Colin Smith London Cape Eco Umberto 1980 A Theory of Semiotics Milan 1976 Bloomington Indiana University Press Sonesson Goran 1989 Pictorial Concepts Inquiries into the semiotic heritage and its relevance for the analysis of the visual world Lund Aris Lund University Press Sonesson Goran 2001 Iconicity strikes back the third generation or why Eco is still wrong VISIO 9 3 4 Kennedy John M 1974 The Psychology of Picture Perception San Francisco Jossey Bass Freeman N H and Cox M V eds 1985 Visual Order The Nature and Development of Pictorial Representation Cambridge Cambridge University Press Freeman N H Evans D and Willats J 1988 Symposium overview the computational approach to projection drawing systems Budapest Paper given at Third European Conference on Developmental Psychology Marr David 1977 Analysis of occluding outline Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B 197 441 475 Marr David 1978 Representing visual information a computational approach in Computer Vision A R Hanson and E M Riseman eds Academic Press New York and London pp 61 80 Sonesson Goran Revised August 2006 Current issues in pictorial semiotics Lecture three From the Critique of the Iconicity Critique to Pictorality Third conference of a series published online at the Semiotics Institute Online January 2006 Husserl Edmund 1928 Zur Phanomenologie des inneren Zeitbewusstseins Halle Republished in Husserliana X The Hague Nijhoff 1966 Husserl Edmund 1980 Phantasie Bildbewusstsein Erinnerung Husserliana XXIII The Hague Nijhoff Bryson Norman 1983 Vision and Painting The Logic of The Gaz New Haven and London Yale University Press Panofsky Erwin 1955 Meaning in the Visual Arts New York Doubleday Mitchell W J T 1980 The Language of Images Chicago and London University of Chicago Press Mitchell W J T 1986 Iconology Image Text Ideology Chicago and London University Of Chicago Press Mitchell W J T 1994 Picture Theory Chicago and London University Of Chicago Press Thomson T J Greenwood Keith 2016 03 08 Beyond Framing PDF Journalism Practice 11 5 625 644 doi 10 1080 17512786 2016 1152908 ISSN 1751 2786 S2CID 147475471 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Depictions Depiction amp Painting Archived 2009 08 13 at the Wayback Machine