Research identifies three core dimensions of how art regulates emotion. Source: Dan Cristian Pădureț / Pexels. Art helps us deal with our emotions. Expressing yourself, exploring your inner world, and ...
Children want to make and consume art naturally. They scribble with crayons and paper, play different roles in their pretend, sing, and dance to music. Children have their own version of aesthetic ...
Feeling that you understand an artist’s intention, even if your perception is inaccurate, and feeling more emotion, influences how viewers positively rate the art, a recent study has found. A group of ...
In a recently published study on the effects of visual art on emotions, interest and social media engagement, assistant professor in the University of Wisconsin’s Life Science Communications ...
Roy Lichtenstein 'Crying Girl (C. II.1)' signed and dated 1963 offset lithograph on paper sheet: 18 by 23 ⅞ in. 45.8 by 60.5 cm. framed: 21 ¼ by 27 ⅜ in. 53.8 by 62.5 cm. Executed in 1963, this work ...
How are we able to empathize with and feel the pain of someone across the world simply through visual imagery? If we can decipher the answer to this question, we possess the potential to communicate ...
Heidi Manfred works on an untitled piece in her Hollidaysburg basement studio. Mirror photo by Patrick Waksmunski Many people don’t examine their feelings, but artist and behaviorist Heidi Manfred of ...
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