GG_sm Lorna Mills and Sally McKay

Digital Media Tree
this blog's archive


OVVLvverk

Lorna Mills: Artworks / Persona Volare / contact

Sally McKay: GIFS / cv and contact

View current page
...more recent posts


Giacomo Rizzolatti, a neurophysiologist, and Laila Craighero, a neuroscientist, say this:
A category of stimuli of great importance for primates, humans in particular, is that formed by actions done by other individuals. If we want to survive, we must understand the actions of others. Furthermore, without action understanding, social organization is impossible. In the case of humans, there is another faculty that depends on the observation of others’ actions: imitation learning. Unlike most species, we are able to learn by imitation, and this faculty is at the basis of human culture. In this review we present data on a neurophysiological mechanism—the mirror-neuron mechanism—that appears to play a fundamental role in both action understanding and imitation. We describe first the functional properties of mirror neurons in monkeys. We review next the characteristics of the mirror-neuron system in humans. We stress, in particular, those properties specific to the human mirror-neuron system that might explain the human capacity to learn by imitation. We conclude by discussing the relationship between the mirror-neuron system and language.
Rizzolatti G, Craighero L, “The mirror-neuron system,” in Annual Review of Neuroscience, issue 27 (2004) p. 1

- sally mckay 3-01-2008 9:24 pm [link] [add a comment]


Michael Taussig, an anthropologist, says this:
The wonder of mimesis lies in the copy drawing on the character and power of the original, to the point whereby the representation may even assume that character and that power. I an older language, this is "sympathetic magic," and I believe it is as necessary to the very process of knowing as it is to the construction and subsequent naturalization of identities. But if it is a faculty, it is also a history, and just as histories enter into the functioning of the mimetic faculty, so the mimetic faculty enters into those histories. No understanding of mimesis is worthwhile if it lacks the mobility to traverse this two-way street, especially pertinent to which is Euro-AMerican colonialism, the felt relation of the civilizing process to savagery, to aping.
Michael Taussig, Mimesis and Alterity: A Particular History of the Senses (New York; London: Routledge, 1993) p.xiv
Jimmie Durham, a Cherokee artist and activist, says this:
Europe, or the Western World, or Civilization, has been going around watching everyone for some time now. The good part of this is a kind of self-observation, so that we have complicated novels to read, and art that attempts self-exploration and intervention in the given narrative and, at the same time, a little distance. The bad part is that the Western World has not observed itself observing. It has not seen how active, how transforming, its watching has been for itself. The West (I can't keep writing the "Western World," though "the West" is even more ambiguous) has not imagined itself as defined by its colonial enterprises and engagements. Instead, it has continuously imagined barriers and borders between itself and constantly reenforced Others.

But listen to this: "The border has dissolved and expanded to cover the lands it once separated such that all the land is borderland, wherein the imagesphere of alterities, no less than the physiognomic aspects of visual worlds, disrupt the speaking body of the northern scribe into words hanging in grotesque automutilation over a post-modern landscape where Self and Other paw at the ghostly imaginings of each other's powers." It's Michael Taussig, in his book Mimesis and Alterity. When I first saw the title I thought it was awkward and academic, but that's because I didn't know the word "alterity." (I'm afraid I suffer from the American disease that causes anger at things, especially fancy words, one doesn't know.) After reading the book, though, I wrote to Taussig to tell him he had written things I'd always intended to think but had been unable to.
Jimmie Durham, "Mimesis and Alterity" (book review) in Artforum, (December 1993) full text online

- sally mckay 3-01-2008 9:01 pm [link] [add a comment]


Merlin Donald, a cognitive neuroscientist with a background in philosophy, says:
"A mimetic act is basically a motor performance that reflects the perceived event structure of the world, and its motoric aspect makes its content a public, that is, a potentially cultural, expression."
Merlin Donald, “Imitation and Mimesis,” in Perspectives on Imitation, From Neuroscience to Social Science, Vol 2, Hurley, Susan and Chater, Nick eds. (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2005) p. 281

"Mimesis is the reduplication of an event for communicative purposes. Mimesis requires that the audience can be taken into account. It also demands taking a third-person perspective on the actor's own behaviour."
Merlin Donald, ibid., p. 286

"Mimesis is an analogue or holistic style of thought that is more basic to our uniquely human way of thinking than language or logic. Indeed, on present evidence language and logic evolved much later, from a mimetic platform. Mimesis is a foundation skill that arrived early in evolution, and defined the human style. The components of mimetic cognition are present to some degree in primates, but are vastly more developed in humans. this makes mimetic culture a logical, but radical, extension of the primate mind. It remains an important force in human affairs, and produces such typically human cognitive patterns as ritual, skill, gesture, tribal identification, personal style, and public spectacle. It explains our irresistable tendency to imitate one another and conform to patterns of group behaviour, especially group emotional expression. It sets the tone of human social life, and it is the ultimate driving force behind art, which might be viewed as the ultimate refinement of the mimetic mode."
Merlin Donald, "Art and Congitive Evolution," in The Artful Mind, Mark Turner, ed., (New York: Oxford University Press, 2006) p.15

- sally mckay 2-29-2008 5:48 pm [link] [11 comments]



Kristan Horton

horton_1
Drawing of A History of the First World War (Disc 01) 2008 graphite on paper (detail)

Horton_2
Drawing of A History of the First World War (Disc 01) 2008 graphite on paper (detail)

Horton_3
Drawing of A History of the First World War (Disc 01) 2008 graphite on paper, 3' x 3'

Horton_4
Drawing of A History of the First World War (Disc 01), (Disc 02), (Disc 03) 2008 graphite on paper, 3' x 3' each

Currently being exhibited as part of Signals in the Dark: Art in the Shadow of War . Curated by Séamus Kealy at Blackwood Gallery until March 2, 2008.

Globe & Mail review by Andrea Carson

Kristan Horton's blog

- L.M. 2-29-2008 2:29 am [link] [3 comments]



Robert Fones

Fones_1
Walruses on Meteorit 2000 acrylic on canvas 40 x 40 in

Fones_2
Rebel Angels 2000 acrylic on canvas 40 x 40 in

- L.M. 2-27-2008 8:11 am [link] [22 comments]



Persona Volare has updated it's web site to include last fall's Granite Club exhibition at The Tree Museum and The Road North at Harbourfront. You can click on the individual artists' pages to see those new works (our site is beautifully designed and maintained by Gordon Hicks)

Dickson_terra_1
John Dickson - Terra Incognito 2007 plaster, talc, compressed air and electronics, 90 x 90 x 38 cm

Dickson_terra_2
John Dickson - Terra Incognito 2007 Over the course of the exhibition the miniature landscape gradually disappears beneath a layer of white talc

- L.M. 2-25-2008 9:18 pm [link] [2 comments]