A quantitative analysis of the taxonomy of artistic styles

  • Viviane Clay* University of Osnabrück https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9152-0666
  • Johannes Schrumpf* University Osnabrück
  • Yannick Tessenow* University Osnabrück
  • Helmut Leder University Vienna
  • Ulrich Ansorge University Vienna
  • Peter König University Osnabrück
Keywords: Eye movements, eye tracking, GANs, Neural Networks, art styles

Abstract

Classifying artists and their work as distinct art styles has been an important task of scholars in the field of art history. Due to its subjectivity, scholars often contradict one another. Our project investigated differences in aesthetic qualities of seven art styles through quantitative means. This was achieved with state-of-the-art deep-learning paradigms to generate new images resembling the style of an artist or entire era. We conducted psychological experiments to measure the behavior of subjects when viewing these new art images. Two different experiments were used: In an eye-tracking study, subjects viewed art-style-specific generated images. Eye movements were recorded and then compared between art styles. In a visual singleton search study, subjects had to locate a style-outlier image among three images of an alternative style. Reaction time and accuracy were measured and analyzed. These experiments show that there are measurable differences in behavior when viewing images of varying art styles. From these differences, we constructed hierarchical clusterings relating art styles based on the different behaviors of subjects viewing the samples. Our study reveals a novel perspective on the classification of artworks into stylistic eras and motivates future research in the domain of empirical aesthetics through quantitative means.

Published
2020-06-09
How to Cite
Clay*, V., Schrumpf*, J., Tessenow*, Y., Leder, H., Ansorge, U., & König, P. (2020). A quantitative analysis of the taxonomy of artistic styles. Journal of Eye Movement Research, 13(2). https://doi.org/10.16910/jemr.13.2.5
Section
Special thematic issue "Eye Tracking and Visual Arts"

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