Friday, February 22, 2019
Feeling the Picture
My husband still marvels over the fact that when Great Britain
voted for Brexit, I spontaneously exclaimed. “God, Maybe Trump can win.” He couldn’t
see how I could have related the two, he followed the newspapers more closely
while I surf over various, radio, TV and internet sources. The difference in
our thinking wasn’t between who had better information it was the focusing on
the information and not the overall picture. To use the word of the 1940’s and
1950’s psychologists who studied perception, the gestalt is the sense of the
whole that leads the organization of the information. Recent brain science says
that the difference between hemispheres is in how they process information, the
right dealing with the whole and the left more with the detail. Words are
seductive details. As Walker Percy once wrote, “We tame the world with
descriptions.” Words, labels and facts
give the illusion of knowing but are only islands in the big picture. Writers
are now questioning the usefulness of educational emphasis on accumulating
information and seeing the need for ways to build big picture thinking.
The big picture starts with the body’s adjustment. The word ‘feeling’
is not vague but represents specific sensations as the body anticipates what
the scene suggests will be necessary. Nervousness is felt in our gut,
excitement or apprehension, whatever the situation requires, stimulating
hormones to coax the necessary parts into action. Even subtle recognitions are
physical, an adaptation to the requirements of what we’ve noticed. The mirror
neuron system understands other humans, resonating with body language and
facial expression to know from our own feelings what is felt by another.
When my students are drawing only scraps of white paper
there is still the wide variety of feelings created by the composition, how
active or organized any relationship between scraps can suggest protectiveness
or aggression. Perception is perception, the same systems processing art or the
surrounding world. Simply how forms are arrayed in relation to gravity creates
an expectation that has a feeling attached. This first level perception is
often ignored. The cultural stress on language steamrolls non-verbal truth and
stifles the development of wisdom.
The stress level created by denying what the body knows
contributes to the psychological pathology of our time. The excess of cognitive
dissonance, outright double-think requires a mental gymnastics made possible by
the detail/symbol oriented part of the brain controlling most thought. Because the actual picture creates one kind
of feeling and the verbal arguments another, persuasion needs the emotional
element aimed at forcing agreement. Accepting the explanations and verbal
flourishes, the dissonance is between a physical reality felt in the tension of
distrusting a person or circumstance, and a layer of words that repeatedly says
trust.
Looking at art is a powerful tool for strengthening the
early stages of perception that recognize the large relationships unfolding in
the gestalt. Artists pull out the essence of the whole and sensitize viewers to
overall structure. It’s an area of education that’s been neglected for too long.
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