Jacqueline Lichtenstein’s research while affiliated with Sorbonne University and other places

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Publications (1)


Hearing and Painting: Neuroaesthetic Theoretical Insights
  • Chapter

August 2018

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108 Reads

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2 Citations

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Jacqueline Lichtenstein

Painting is essentially a visual form of arts. Apparently, audition and the hearing system seem to be of no avail in the aesthetic experience felt by painters during the creative process of artistic visual patterns, and by beholders while painting viewing. But philosophers and modern neuroscience have challenged this kind of unimodal and classical framework of perception. Any perception, and more importantly the aesthetic one, is a complex multimodal process where all sensory inputs converge and interact along with cognition and behavior. Several of these multifaceted and intertwined interconnections between the visual and auditory sensory modalities are given in the neuroscientific literature. A striking and extensively studied example of such a relationship is auditory–visual synesthesia. On the other hand, the history of arts gives us to know many examples of painters that have been inspired by sounds or music or, conversely, of musicians that have used paintings to inspire their composition. Neuroaesthetics, an emerging field in the wider framework of neuroscience, is aimed at deciphering the neurobiological correlates of such aesthetic experiences. We argue that an in-depth neuroscientific study of these interactions between the auditory modality and the art of painting may help to better understand both the artistic processes and the neurobiology of multimodal perception.

Citations (1)


... The interaction between neuroscience and arts and humanities has become a prolific area of research that has increasingly gained attention. From the end of the century, when the necessity of a solid neurological science of art is claimed [41], throughout works using more technical devices to study creativity [18,19], there can be found nowadays many works that use directly the single word neuroaesthetics applied to specific humanistic areas, such as poetry (Jacobs, 2017, painting [33], sculpture [47], music [23], or dance [53]. ...

Reference:

One hundred years of neurosciences in the arts and humanities, a bibliometric review
Hearing and Painting: Neuroaesthetic Theoretical Insights
  • Citing Chapter
  • August 2018