A Sense of Meaning: Applications of Embodied Cognition to Art Models
About
How is meaning generated – how does meaning make sense? Through a critical and cross-‐disciplinary approach, this project investigates an account of how meaning is constructed. Using as a starting point Didi-‐Huberman’s inquiry into what it actually means to have knowledge of an artwork, this project explores a combination of theoretical research and empirical study to investigate meaning as derived from the physical nature of our brains, bodies, and physical experiences. Analytic philosophy emphasizes the logical analysis of concepts through the study of language. This is contrasted with continental phenomenology’s approach to meaning as arising from the representation of appearances. Embodied cognition builds on this perspective, engaging a number of fields including linguistics, neuroscience, psychology, art, biology, and robotics, to explore how abstract concepts are derived from the body. By examining the structural components of embodied cognition, including metaphor, mapping, and integration, and how they bear on intentionality, this project aims to lead to a provocative point where the disembodied voice of analytic philosophy interacts with more embodied aesthetic approaches to knowledge, to form a clearer picture of how meaning is constructed within the wider context of art history. This practice-‐lead investigation is conducted through a body of artwork created specifically to explore the haptic qualities present in the relationship between handmade and digital as a means to explore the point where distinctions between natural and artificial cannot be drawn. Foundational material will create a base upon which to conduct associated experiments in collaboration with the above parallel fields, exploring how meaning is generated in the visual domain. Though the subject of meaning is broad, this project is specific in that it seeks to map and explore meaning through feeling/sensation (aesthesis) – brought to bear through the study of embodied cognition, and manifestly brought to light by its application in a practice-‐based art platform.