The Visual Intelligence Center's inaugural white paper examines difference and division, through the analysis of images associated within three trends: Cardboard Tribes, You Do You, and Acronymania. #whitepaper#insight#image#psychology
https://t.co/shcNTe3LL8
This portrait of a contemporary Black man, wearing camo and Timberlands, riding a rearing horse in Napoleonesque fashion displayed in counterpoint next to Bonaparte Crossing the Alps (1800) reveals how representation shapes the historical record.
https://t.co/6RxkSMEeug
Street artists take account of the Black Lives Matter movement, dysfunctional democracy, and other realities, using a well-developed visual language of cultural memes. #semiotics#signsofchange#mediatedmeaning#visualintelligence https://t.co/K2kMF1lWjm
Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velazquez painted a slave as an aristocrat. The portrait received universal acclaim "everything else seemed like painting, but this alone like truth.’” Soon, Pareja was freed and became a painter himself. The year 1645.
https://t.co/S0RHH4OkWA