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Simon Cropper
Academic neuroscientist at University of Melbourne
The Melbourne artist who created this, Ash Keating, flings, squirts, or otherwise projects
paint to a given surface from a distance. It’s a method reminiscent of American painter
Jackson Pollock, but bigger. Like Pollock, Keating relinquishes the final control of the
medium to the laws of physics and nature. The outcome – created by both artists – is a
complex texture that’s both abstract and representative at once.
The questions are, could textures like these be created as effectively without the help of the
laws of nature, and why, when nature is involved, are they so captivating?
There is growing scientific interest in the methodology of these artists. Their work offers great
insight into how the brain works and contributes to our understanding of the brain as much
as any other data.
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Nature makes abstract visual art more captivating https://theconversation.com/nature-makes-abstract-visual-art...
In the footsteps of the great painters of the last 500 years – Vermeer, Turner, Picasso,
Cezanne, Riley and Richter to name a very few – art and artists are with science and
scientists on the brink of what we know and what we do not.
The brain is a slave to sense: its job is to decide whether what comes in from its sensory
apparatus is useful or not, and combine that with its ongoing activity with a result that is
adaptive and functional. The eyes, ears, nose, mouth and skin act as translators from the
external world into the internal – all external stimuli (or energies) become one, an
electrochemical signal carried by neurones.
As far as vision is concerned, everything we see in daylight starts off as the output of three
cone types that vary over the two dimensions of space of each retina, and over time. That
powerful sense of depth we experience, the third dimension of space, is constructed from
many cues but never explicitly represented in the input. Renaissance artists understood this
well as they started to play with perspective, long before science had an answer.
At the level of the retina, the visual world you experience is in its most fragmented form; from
then on the process is one of (re)construction. Your reality is truly your own and no one else’s,
and this is where the artist holds sway on insight.
The kinds of textures created by Pollock and Keating have a great deal of similarity to those
textures we see in nature; clouds, waves and forests. These are the stimuli the brain has
evolved to deal with, to make sense of. So when presented with such a texture the extraction
of some meaning seems to be so much easier.
How often do you see something in the clouds despite there being nothing there; or hear
your name in the babble of a crowd? The slave to sense will create it.
The 20th-century German artist Gerhard Richter approaches this slightly differently but the
outcome is much the same; he blurs much of his work:
to make everything equally important and equally unimportant – Richter, Text. Writings,
Interviews and Letters, 1961-2007.
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Nature makes abstract visual art more captivating https://theconversation.com/nature-makes-abstract-visual-art...
The effect of this is to make the texture not only come closer to that of nature but also to
overcome the (over)importance of edges and borders; to make everything equal and allow
the viewer’s brain to impose its own structure on the work.
It is not just in vision that we appreciate this device. English composer Brian Eno expressed
in the liner notes of his 1978 album Ambient 1: Music for Airports that while:
conventional background music is produced by stripping away all sense of doubt and
uncertainty (and thus all genuine interest) from the music, Ambient Music retains these
qualities. – Eno, 1978.
The doubt and uncertainty is exactly what the brain thrives on to create the richness in
meaning that is so captivating and so calming. “A space to think,“ in Eno’s terms, “as
ignorable as it is interesting”.
All of this suggests that we have, indeed we are, the product of a brain that is exquisitely
sensitive to its inputs and finely tuned to extract meaning from the natural world.
Since it is, itself, part of that natural world both in its structure and its action, it even makes
sense of its own pseudo-random activity which results in a dream; convincing and powerful,
a reality until the moment we wake.
This dream is the hallucination we all have regularly and only a small step away from an
hallucination some involuntarily have when awake. One of the side-effects of a slave to sense
is that it will make sense when there is nothing there, and that for some can be very
distressing.
So next time you experience something in the clouds, or a painting, or a dream, or a crowd,
even when you’re sure it’s not there, know that it is just part of the experience that is you, a
natural system responding to another natural system.
It is, as the late English author Douglas Adams put it in Dirk Gently’s Holisitic Detective
Agency (1991):
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