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Seeing Visual Culture, inverse relation - Coggle Diagram
Seeing Visual Culture
Deception
Georgina Kleege
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Molyneux Redux
blind girl of survivalist cult, deprived of cultural awareness, unfazed by researchers' deceptions about her blindness #
Oliver Sacks' The Mind's Eye: What the Blind See #
blindness is an individual experience, characterized by sensory responses to the loss of sight and the delve into a world of deception #
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Dawoud Bey's “Night Coming Tenderly, Black”
explores the contrast between beauty of American landscape and the harsh reality of suffering and generational trauma facing African Americans
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Three Colors: Blue (Krzysztov Kieslowski, 1993)
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Truth
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Hans Blumenburg's Light as Metaphor for Truth: At the Preliminary Stage of Philosophical Concept Formation,
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light as "an indefinite, omnipresent brightness containing all: the 'letting-appear' that does not itself appear"
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Robert Rauschenberg's White Paintings #
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Hilaria Loyo's “Blinding Blondes: Whiteness, Femininity, and Stardom” in Questions of Colour in Cinema
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Carrie Mae Weems' Colored People, Slow Fade to Black
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Lorraine Daston's and Peter Galison's “The Color of Subjectivity,” in Objectivity
the individual has an objective truth regarding color, but color as a whole remains subjective regardless of individual notions
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Derek Jarman, “Into the Blue,” from Chroma: A Book of Color
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"Blue stretches, yawns and is awake"
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Robin Coste Lewis' Using Black to Paint Light: Walking Through a Matisse Exhibit Thinking about the Arctic and Matthew Henson
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Innocence
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Claudia Rankine Citizen #
"The apparatus: it is your fault for being invisible, not hers for not being able to recognize you."
-Hornby
Mary Corse
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white as innocence, purity, sterility
Herman Melville's “The Whiteness of the Whale,” excerpted in Color
whiteness as "the innocence of brides, the benignity of aging"
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Walter Benjamin's “A Child’s View of Color” in Selected Writings, Volume 1
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the child allows color to be expressed in the greatest transparency, free from the bounds of form, shape, and concentration
Wizard of Oz
color as a means of conveying wonder, awe, youthfulness in contrast to sepia-toned imagery devoid of emotion
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Loss of Innocence
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Richard Dyer's White
white as emptiness, absence, denial, or even a kind of death #
Franz Fanon's “The Fact of Blackness,” in Theories of Race and Racism: A Reader
demonization of Blackness creating a loss of dignity, innocence #
"denegrification" efforts deteriorate Black purity #
Shawn Michelle Smith's “Photography, Darkness, and the Underground Railroad: Dawoud Bey’s Night Coming Tenderly, Black
the installation is a historical project, but "the striking darkness
of the prints registers the unavailability of historical evidence and the lack of
material markers left latent in the physical landscape"
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Maria Popova's, 19th Century Insight into the Psychology of Color and Emotion # # # #
discussion of colors and each's significance, typical motifs, and symbolism that dominates the entire conversation of visual culture
permeates each of these sectors: loss of innocence, truth, innocence, and deception
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