![]() ![]() When we give ourselves time to view and think about what we are seeing, we can recognize how our habits and our contemporary culture are leading us to a particular assessment of the piece of art whether it is a painting or color photography. Our perception changes when we give ourselves a chance to quietly study a painting. ![]() Berger notes that what we see is a “function of habit and convention” (BBC Episode 2). Some of our perceptions of what we see are conscious and some are sub-conscious. If we stop and gaze at the art though, the longer we observe the painting, the more time our eye has to understand the painting. If we glance at the oil painting as we walk by then we have one understanding of the painting. When we view an oil painting the oil painting stays the same. ![]() I suggest that a color photograph, just as with an oil painting, is seen differently the longer we allow ourselves to view the image. Modern technology has given us color photography which is perhaps the modern substitute for oil paintings. When we view art museum paintings created in the last half of the twentieth century we see something different than a viewer of that time would have seen. John Berger is an artist and art critic who helps us think about the different ways art is ‘seen’ or perceived. ![]()
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