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Abstract depiction of human figures in impressionist art and children's picture books

journal contribution
posted on 2020-05-18, 08:05 authored by Neil DodgsonNeil Dodgson
© 2019 The Author The human figure is important in art. I discuss examples of the abstract depiction of the human figure, from both impressionist painting and children's book illustration, and the challenge faced in algorithmically mimicking what human artists can achieve. I demonstrate that there are excellent examples in both genres that provide insight into what a human artist sees as important in providing abstraction at different levels of detail. The challenge lies in the human brain having enormous knowledge about the world and an ability to make fine distinctions about other humans from posture, clothing and expression. This allows a human to make assumptions about human figures from a tiny amount of data, and allows a human artist to take advantage of this when creating art. The question for the computer graphics community is whether and how we could algorithmically mimic what a human artist can do. I provide evidence from both genres to suggest possible ways forward.

History

Preferred citation

Dodgson, N.A. (2019). Abstract depiction of human figures in impressionist art and children's picture books. Computers and Graphics: X, 1, 100002-100002. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cagx.2019.100002

Journal title

Computers and Graphics: X

Volume

1

Publication date

2019-06-01

Pagination

100002-100002

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Publication status

Published

ISSN

2590-1486

eISSN

2590-1486

Article number

100002

Language

en

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