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Content provided by Dena Shottenkirk. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dena Shottenkirk or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
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Episode #107: Hendrix speaks with R.P. Shottenkirk about how art can make the viewer feel as though they are being seen

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Manage episode 424650359 series 2780951
Content provided by Dena Shottenkirk. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dena Shottenkirk or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Timestamps:

  • 00:10: Introductions with Hendrix
  • 00:50: Is it about the purpose of Art? Defining cognition to boot.
  • 01:50: Art is cognition, especially for the Artist. It comes from cognition. Pollock would approach Art differently from Picasso, likely based on the stimuli in their respective lives.
  • 03:45: Emotion also comes from cognition. How you feel comes from how you think. A dog or a cat person, depending on our judgments, our emotions change. We bring our prejudices everywhere. Except in this case, regarding pet preferences
  • 05:15: The way you capture the world depends on how you've seen it and how you've lived, even two close siblings can differ. Art functions as cognition for the Artist as a mix of judgment, emotion and other things.
  • 06:30: For the viewer, Art & cognition stems from a stimulus you pick up from the Art. If a painting strikes you, brings complex emotions, it just might be cognition.
  • 08:30: A Pollock piece brings the idea of being noticed. The chaos of the painting helps to bring out a personal feeling. It's not about noticing the chaos in the image, but instead noticing the chaos within.
  • 10:30: If two individuals had the exact same events happen to them, would they become the same person? Are people intrinsically unique or are they purely formed through experience?

Support the show

Twitter: @talkpopc
Instagram: @talkpopc

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Episode #107: Hendrix speaks with R.P. Shottenkirk about how art can make the viewer feel as though they are being seen (00:00:00)

2. Introductions with Hendrix (00:00:10)

3. Is it about the purpose of Art? Defining cognition to boot. (00:00:50)

4. Art is cognition, especially for the Artist. It comes from cognition. Pollock would approach Art differently from Picasso, likely based on the stimuli in their respective lives. (00:01:50)

5. Emotion also comes from cognition. How you feel comes from how you think. A dog or a cat person, depending on our judgments, our emotions change. We bring our prejudices everywhere. Except in this case, regarding pet preferences (00:03:45)

6. The way you capture the world depends on how you've seen it and how you've lived, even two close siblings can differ. Art functions as cognition for the Artist as a mix of judgment, emotion and other things. (00:05:15)

7. For the viewer, Art & cognition stems from a stimulus you pick up from the Art. If a painting strikes you, brings complex emotions, it just might be cognition. (00:06:30)

8. A Pollock piece brings the idea of being noticed. The chaos of the painting helps to bring out a personal feeling. It's not about noticing the chaos in the image, but instead noticing the chaos within. (00:08:30)

9. If two individuals had the exact same events happen to them, would they become the same person? Are people intrinsically unique or are they purely formed through experience? (00:10:30)

133 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 424650359 series 2780951
Content provided by Dena Shottenkirk. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dena Shottenkirk or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Timestamps:

  • 00:10: Introductions with Hendrix
  • 00:50: Is it about the purpose of Art? Defining cognition to boot.
  • 01:50: Art is cognition, especially for the Artist. It comes from cognition. Pollock would approach Art differently from Picasso, likely based on the stimuli in their respective lives.
  • 03:45: Emotion also comes from cognition. How you feel comes from how you think. A dog or a cat person, depending on our judgments, our emotions change. We bring our prejudices everywhere. Except in this case, regarding pet preferences
  • 05:15: The way you capture the world depends on how you've seen it and how you've lived, even two close siblings can differ. Art functions as cognition for the Artist as a mix of judgment, emotion and other things.
  • 06:30: For the viewer, Art & cognition stems from a stimulus you pick up from the Art. If a painting strikes you, brings complex emotions, it just might be cognition.
  • 08:30: A Pollock piece brings the idea of being noticed. The chaos of the painting helps to bring out a personal feeling. It's not about noticing the chaos in the image, but instead noticing the chaos within.
  • 10:30: If two individuals had the exact same events happen to them, would they become the same person? Are people intrinsically unique or are they purely formed through experience?

Support the show

Twitter: @talkpopc
Instagram: @talkpopc

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Episode #107: Hendrix speaks with R.P. Shottenkirk about how art can make the viewer feel as though they are being seen (00:00:00)

2. Introductions with Hendrix (00:00:10)

3. Is it about the purpose of Art? Defining cognition to boot. (00:00:50)

4. Art is cognition, especially for the Artist. It comes from cognition. Pollock would approach Art differently from Picasso, likely based on the stimuli in their respective lives. (00:01:50)

5. Emotion also comes from cognition. How you feel comes from how you think. A dog or a cat person, depending on our judgments, our emotions change. We bring our prejudices everywhere. Except in this case, regarding pet preferences (00:03:45)

6. The way you capture the world depends on how you've seen it and how you've lived, even two close siblings can differ. Art functions as cognition for the Artist as a mix of judgment, emotion and other things. (00:05:15)

7. For the viewer, Art & cognition stems from a stimulus you pick up from the Art. If a painting strikes you, brings complex emotions, it just might be cognition. (00:06:30)

8. A Pollock piece brings the idea of being noticed. The chaos of the painting helps to bring out a personal feeling. It's not about noticing the chaos in the image, but instead noticing the chaos within. (00:08:30)

9. If two individuals had the exact same events happen to them, would they become the same person? Are people intrinsically unique or are they purely formed through experience? (00:10:30)

133 episodes

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