Art History, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Perceptual Intelligence Lab, Industrial Design Engineering, Delft University of Technology, Delft, the Netherlands.
J Vis. 2024 Apr 1;24(4):12. doi: 10.1167/jov.24.4.12.
In European painting, a transition took place where artists started to consciously introduce blurred or soft contours in their works. There may have been several reasons for this. One suggestion in art historical literature is that this may have been done to create a stronger sense of volume in the depicted figures or objects. Here we describe four experiments in which we tried to test whether soft or blurred contours do indeed enhance a sense volume or depth. In the first three experiments, we found that, for both paintings and abstract shapes, three dimensionality was actually decreased instead of increased for blurred (and line) contours, in comparison with sharp contours. In the last experiment, we controlled for the position of the blur (on the lit or dark side) and found that blur on the lit side evoked a stronger impression of three dimensionality. Overall, the experiments robustly show that an art historical conjecture that a blurred contour increases three dimensionality is not granted. Because the blurred contours can be found in many established art works such as from Leonardo and Vermeer, there must be other rationales behind this use than the creation of a stronger sense of volume or depth.
在欧洲绘画中,发生了一场转变,艺术家们开始在作品中有意引入模糊或柔和的轮廓。这可能有几个原因。艺术史文献中有一个观点认为,这样做可能是为了在描绘的人物或物体中创造更强烈的立体感。在这里,我们描述了四个实验,试图测试模糊或柔和的轮廓是否确实增强了立体感或深度感。在前三个实验中,我们发现,与清晰的轮廓相比,无论是绘画还是抽象形状,模糊(和线条)轮廓实际上都降低了而不是增加了三维度。在最后一个实验中,我们控制了模糊的位置(在亮面或暗面),发现亮面的模糊会唤起更强的立体感印象。总的来说,这些实验有力地表明,艺术史上关于模糊轮廓增加立体感的假设是没有根据的。因为模糊的轮廓可以在许多著名的艺术作品中找到,比如达芬奇和维米尔的作品,所以这种用法背后一定有比创造更强的立体感或深度感更合理的理由。