Reymond Claire, Pelowski Matthew, Opwis Klaus, Takala Tapio, Mekler Elisa D
Department of Psychology, Center for General Psychology and Methodology, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
FHNW Academy of Art and Design, Institute of Visual Communication, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland, Basel, Switzerland.
Front Psychol. 2020 Dec 11;11:615575. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.615575. eCollection 2020.
Most people encounter art images as digital reproductions on a computer screen instead of as originals in a museum or gallery. With the development of digital technologies, high-resolution artworks can be accessed anywhere and anytime by a large number of viewers. Since these digital images depict the same content and are attributed to the same artist as the original, it is often implicitly assumed that their aesthetic evaluation will be similar. When it comes to the digital reproductions of art, however, it is also obvious that reproductions do differ from the originals in various aspects. Besides image quality, resolution, and format, the most obvious change is in the representation of color. The effects of subjectively varying surface-level image features on art evaluation have not been clearly assessed. To address this gap, we compare the evaluation of digital reproductions of 16 expressionist and impressionist paintings manipulated to have a high color saturation vs. a saturation similar to the original. We also investigate the impact of viewing time (100 ms vs. unrestricted viewing time) and expertise (art experts vs. laypersons), two other aspects that may impact the perception of art in online contexts. Moreover, we link these dimensions to a recent model of aesthetic experience [the Vienna Integrated Model of Top-Down and Bottom-Up Processes in Art Perception (VIMAP)]. Results suggest that color saturation does not exert a major influence on liking. Cognitive and emotional aspects (interest, confusion, surprise, and boredom), however, are affected - to different extents for experts and laypersons. For laypersons, the increase in color saturation led to more positive assessments of an artwork, whereas it resulted in increased confusion for art experts. This insight is particularly important when it comes to reproducing artworks digitally. Depending on the intended use, increasing or decreasing the color saturation of the digitally reproduced image might be most appropriate. We conclude with a discussion of these findings and address the question of why empirical aesthetics requires more precise dimensions to better understand the subtle processes that take place in the perception of today's digitally reproduced art environment.
大多数人接触艺术图像是在电脑屏幕上看到的数字复制品,而非博物馆或画廊里的原作。随着数字技术的发展,高分辨率的艺术作品能被大量观众随时随地获取。由于这些数字图像描绘的内容与原作相同,且归属于同一位艺术家,人们常常默认它们的审美评价会相似。然而,说到艺术的数字复制品,很明显复制品在各个方面确实与原作有所不同。除了图像质量、分辨率和格式,最明显的变化在于色彩呈现。主观变化的表面图像特征对艺术评价的影响尚未得到明确评估。为填补这一空白,我们比较了16幅表现主义和印象派画作的数字复制品的评价,这些复制品被处理成具有高色彩饱和度与类似于原作的饱和度。我们还研究了观看时间(100毫秒与无限制观看时间)和专业知识(艺术专家与外行人)这两个可能影响在线环境中艺术感知的其他方面。此外,我们将这些维度与一个最近的审美体验模型[艺术感知中自上而下和自下而上过程的维也纳综合模型(VIMAP)]联系起来。结果表明,色彩饱和度对喜好程度没有重大影响。然而,认知和情感方面(兴趣、困惑、惊讶和厌烦)受到了影响——专家和外行人受到的影响程度不同。对外行人来说,色彩饱和度的增加导致对一件艺术品的评价更积极,而对艺术专家来说,这却导致困惑增加。当涉及到数字复制艺术品时,这一见解尤为重要。根据预期用途,增加或降低数字复制图像的色彩饱和度可能最为合适。我们最后讨论了这些发现,并探讨了为什么实证美学需要更精确的维度来更好地理解在当今数字复制艺术环境的感知中发生的微妙过程这一问题。