Classic text and exercise in this area is:
Betty Edwards
New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain Workbook
Has all you need
Sunil Chhatralia
-----Original Message-----
From: The UK drawing research network mailing list
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Janet Allison
Sent: 25 October 2005 12:43
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Undergraduate Dissertation
Dear All,
I am a undergraduate studying Psychology (I previously studied art at
Leeds
Art College at Degree level) at Trinity & All Saints College in Leeds.
I am
interested in how art making is/could form another, parallel language
and
access/expression of what we see and remember. To this end my 3rd year
dissertation is investigating any affect that art making has on the
recall
of an everyday event in comparison to a cognitive/structured interview.
I am currently at the design stage and considering such things as Left
vs
Right mode of drawing etc.
For example I am thinking of having a pre-lim task of drawing something
upside down to a) encourage confidence in art making and b) to encourage
the
use of the right (creative) hemisphere but am concerned that this may
affect the everyday memory (un-prompted/motivated) that they have just
been
exposed to - I wondered if there was any literature/advice available on
this
. . . ?
I would welcome and appreciate any and all input that could be spared(!)
Thank you for taking time to read this e-mail and apologies if this is
not
relevant to your field of interest.
Sincerely
Janet Allison-Love
_________________________________________________________________
Be the first to hear what's new at MSN - sign up to our free
newsletters!
http://www.msn.co.uk/newsletters
This email has been scanned for all viruses by the MessageLabs Email
Security System.
This email has been scanned for all viruses by the MessageLabs Email
Security System.
|