Common sense and experimental research both suggest that figurative art and classical music are a good match, whilst jazz is a better fit for abstract art. However artistic avant-gardes often deliberately fused and confused the concepts ‘figurative’ and ‘abstract’. This research deals with such concepts by asking two questions: 1) how do people classify visual art that can fit in either category; 2) can those concepts be extended to classify also music? In a two-session experiment (P, M), 24 people were asked to classify 30 paintings (10 clearly figurative, 10 clearly abstract, and 10 ambiguous) as ‘abstract’ or ‘figurative’ and rate them for pleasantness; in M they were asked to apply the same tasks to 40 15sec excerpts of instrumental music (20 classical, 20 jazz). P-results: a gender effect for pleasantness ratings was found: females rated higher ambiguous and abstract paintings than males. Abstract and figurative paintings were correctly classified; only two ambiguous paintings were classified as figurative, all the others as abstract. M-results: no main effects or interactions determined significant effects in pleasantness ratings; 4 classical excerpts were clearly classified (all figurative), and 5 jazz excerpts were clearly classified (1 as figurative, 4 as abstract).

ACTIS GROSSO, R., Daneyko, O., Cattaneo, Z., Zavagno, D. (2016). What shall we listen to, abstract or figurative music?. Intervento presentato a: Visual Science of Art Conference 26-28th of August, Barcellona, Spain.

What shall we listen to, abstract or figurative music?

ACTIS GROSSO, ROSSANA
Primo
;
CATTANEO, ZAIRA
Secondo
;
ZAVAGNO, DANIELE
Ultimo
2016

Abstract

Common sense and experimental research both suggest that figurative art and classical music are a good match, whilst jazz is a better fit for abstract art. However artistic avant-gardes often deliberately fused and confused the concepts ‘figurative’ and ‘abstract’. This research deals with such concepts by asking two questions: 1) how do people classify visual art that can fit in either category; 2) can those concepts be extended to classify also music? In a two-session experiment (P, M), 24 people were asked to classify 30 paintings (10 clearly figurative, 10 clearly abstract, and 10 ambiguous) as ‘abstract’ or ‘figurative’ and rate them for pleasantness; in M they were asked to apply the same tasks to 40 15sec excerpts of instrumental music (20 classical, 20 jazz). P-results: a gender effect for pleasantness ratings was found: females rated higher ambiguous and abstract paintings than males. Abstract and figurative paintings were correctly classified; only two ambiguous paintings were classified as figurative, all the others as abstract. M-results: no main effects or interactions determined significant effects in pleasantness ratings; 4 classical excerpts were clearly classified (all figurative), and 5 jazz excerpts were clearly classified (1 as figurative, 4 as abstract).
relazione (orale)
aesthetics, paintings, music, abstract art, figurative art
English
Visual Science of Art Conference 26-28th of August
2016
2016
none
ACTIS GROSSO, R., Daneyko, O., Cattaneo, Z., Zavagno, D. (2016). What shall we listen to, abstract or figurative music?. Intervento presentato a: Visual Science of Art Conference 26-28th of August, Barcellona, Spain.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/140111
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