Golden Perception: Simulating Perceptual Habits of the Past

Medieval times were neither dark nor grey; natural light illuminated colourful scenes depicted in paintings through coloured windows and via artificial beeswax candlelight. When we enter, for example, a church to inspect its historic treasures ranging from mosaics to depictions of saints, we do this...

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Main Authors: Claus-Christian Carbon, Pia Deininger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2013-09-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1068/i0605
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spelling doaj-305872d14e4848f0878dda70fe4950ac2020-11-25T02:48:37ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952013-09-01410.1068/i060510.1068_i0605Golden Perception: Simulating Perceptual Habits of the PastClaus-Christian CarbonPia DeiningerMedieval times were neither dark nor grey; natural light illuminated colourful scenes depicted in paintings through coloured windows and via artificial beeswax candlelight. When we enter, for example, a church to inspect its historic treasures ranging from mosaics to depictions of saints, we do this under quite unfavourable conditions; particularly as we mainly depend on artificial halogen, LED or fluorescent light for illuminating the desired object. As these light spectrums are different from the natural light conditions under which the old masterpieces were previously developed and perceived, the perceptual effects may dramatically differ, leading to significantly altered affective and cognitive processing. Different qualities of processing might particularly be triggered when perceiving artworks which deal with specific material prone to strong interaction with idiosyncratic light conditions, for instance gold-leafed surfaces that literally start to glow when lit by candles. We tested the perceptual experiences of a figurative piece of art which we created in 3 (foreground) by 3 (background) versions, illuminated under three different light conditions (daylight, coloured light and beeswax candlelight). Results demonstrated very different perceptual experiences with stunning effects for the interaction of the specific painting depicted on a gold-leafed background lit by candlelight.https://doi.org/10.1068/i0605
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Claus-Christian Carbon
Pia Deininger
spellingShingle Claus-Christian Carbon
Pia Deininger
Golden Perception: Simulating Perceptual Habits of the Past
i-Perception
author_facet Claus-Christian Carbon
Pia Deininger
author_sort Claus-Christian Carbon
title Golden Perception: Simulating Perceptual Habits of the Past
title_short Golden Perception: Simulating Perceptual Habits of the Past
title_full Golden Perception: Simulating Perceptual Habits of the Past
title_fullStr Golden Perception: Simulating Perceptual Habits of the Past
title_full_unstemmed Golden Perception: Simulating Perceptual Habits of the Past
title_sort golden perception: simulating perceptual habits of the past
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2013-09-01
description Medieval times were neither dark nor grey; natural light illuminated colourful scenes depicted in paintings through coloured windows and via artificial beeswax candlelight. When we enter, for example, a church to inspect its historic treasures ranging from mosaics to depictions of saints, we do this under quite unfavourable conditions; particularly as we mainly depend on artificial halogen, LED or fluorescent light for illuminating the desired object. As these light spectrums are different from the natural light conditions under which the old masterpieces were previously developed and perceived, the perceptual effects may dramatically differ, leading to significantly altered affective and cognitive processing. Different qualities of processing might particularly be triggered when perceiving artworks which deal with specific material prone to strong interaction with idiosyncratic light conditions, for instance gold-leafed surfaces that literally start to glow when lit by candles. We tested the perceptual experiences of a figurative piece of art which we created in 3 (foreground) by 3 (background) versions, illuminated under three different light conditions (daylight, coloured light and beeswax candlelight). Results demonstrated very different perceptual experiences with stunning effects for the interaction of the specific painting depicted on a gold-leafed background lit by candlelight.
url https://doi.org/10.1068/i0605
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