ISBN : 9780190928216
Learning to Look is a wandering journey through the nature of art - and the ways it can transform us, if we let it. Author of Infinite Baseball, Alva Noe, presents a collection of short, stimulating essays that explore how we experience art and what it means to be an "observer." Experiencing art - letting it do its work on us - takes thought, attention, and focus. It requires creation, even from the beholder. And it is in this process of confrontation and reorganization that artworks can lead us to remake ourselves. Ranging far and wide, from Pina Bausch to Robocop, from Bob Dylan to Vermeer, Noe uses encounters with specific artworks to gain entry into a world of fascinating issues - like how philosophy and science are represented in film; what evolutionary biology says about art; or the role of relics, fakes, and copies in our experience of a work. The essays in Learning to Look are short, accessible, and personal. Each one arises out of an art encounter - in a museum, listening to records, or going to a concert. Each essay stands on its own, but taken together, they form an intimate picture of our relationship with art. Carefully articulating the experience of each of these encounters, Noe proposes that, like philosophy, art is a sort of technology for understanding ourselves. Put simply, art is an opportunity for us to enact ourselves anew.
Preface
Encounters
1 Soup is an anagram of opus
2 I am sitting in a room
3 40 speakers in a room
4 Two left hands
5 Rock art
6 The power of performance
7 Cheap thrills at the Whitney
8 Whaling with Turner
9 Take my breath away
10 Speak, draw, dance
11 Beach beasts on the move
11 Making the work work
13 Irrational man
14 RoboCop's philosophers
15 Pointing the way to liberation, in Star Trek: Voyager
16 An Awkward Synthesis
Pictures
17 The anatomy lesson
18 The importance of being dressed
19 The art of the brain
20 Faces and masks
21 The philosophical eye
22 The camera and the dance
23 Why are 3-D movies so bad?
24 The myth of 3-D immersion
25 Storying telling and the uncanny valley
26 Peering into Rembrandt's eyes
27 This is no zoo
Art's Nature
28 Coughing and the meaning of art
29 Is it okay if art is boring?
30 The opportunity of boredom
31 Art placebo
32 Are works of art relics?
33 Reproductions in the age of originality
34 Who is Vermeer?
35 How to love a fake
36 Monuments
37 Mind in the natural world: Can physics explain it?
Nature's art
38 Aesthetic evolution
39 Bowie, cheesecake, sex, and the meaning of music
40 Dylan's literature
41 What's new is old
42 The performance art of David Bowie, a remembrance
43 All Things Shining
44 You say 'tomato'
45 What is a fact?
46 Streams of memes
47 Adele in the goldilocks zone
48 Art at the limits of neuroscience
Acknowledgements