2018
DOI: 10.1177/0301006618770347
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Variation and Likeness in Ambient Artistic Portraiture

Abstract: An artist-led exploration of portrait accuracy and likeness involved 12 Artists producing 12 portraits referencing a life-size 3D print of the same Sitter. The works were assessed during a public exhibition, and the resulting likeness assessments were compared to portrait accuracy as measured using geometric morphometrics (statistical shape analysis). Our results are that, independently of the assessors' prior familiarity with the Sitter's face, the likeness judgements tended to be higher for less morphologica… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The tendency for the portrait averages to attract high likeness assessments may be due to the portrait averages being aesthetically pleasing. During the exhibition there were a few inquiries from the visitors (and two of the Artists) as to who created portraits K and W, and one visitor was overheard explaining the (manual) artistic techniques that were applied by the ‘artist’ to create the visual effects present in portrait average K. There is also the possibility that, as with our previous study (Hayes et al., 2018), the process of undertaking the assessments of the portraits likely provided otherwise unfamiliar visitors with a mental image of each Sitter’s face, and this priming effect has been found to increase recognisability (and therefore likeness) when unfamiliar viewers are exposed to a range of ambient photographs depicting a target face (e.g., Andrews, Jenkins, Cursiter, & Burton, 2015; Ritchie & Burton, 2017). As described in the Methods section, both portrait averages were exhibited last in each of the curated portrait sequences, and therefore, for those visitors who chose to assess each of the portraits following the exhibited sequence (and some were observed to do this), their assessment of the portrait average would likely have been influenced by their increased levels of familiarity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 80%
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“…The tendency for the portrait averages to attract high likeness assessments may be due to the portrait averages being aesthetically pleasing. During the exhibition there were a few inquiries from the visitors (and two of the Artists) as to who created portraits K and W, and one visitor was overheard explaining the (manual) artistic techniques that were applied by the ‘artist’ to create the visual effects present in portrait average K. There is also the possibility that, as with our previous study (Hayes et al., 2018), the process of undertaking the assessments of the portraits likely provided otherwise unfamiliar visitors with a mental image of each Sitter’s face, and this priming effect has been found to increase recognisability (and therefore likeness) when unfamiliar viewers are exposed to a range of ambient photographs depicting a target face (e.g., Andrews, Jenkins, Cursiter, & Burton, 2015; Ritchie & Burton, 2017). As described in the Methods section, both portrait averages were exhibited last in each of the curated portrait sequences, and therefore, for those visitors who chose to assess each of the portraits following the exhibited sequence (and some were observed to do this), their assessment of the portrait average would likely have been influenced by their increased levels of familiarity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…The aims of this study were to see if ambient portrait averages were both shape accurate and good likenesses, and whether our 2017 findings (Hayes et al., 2018) would differ and/or be replicated with a more facially familiar Sitter (Mayor Bradbery) and a Sitter with relatively low levels of prior familiarity (Professor Wallace).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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