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Ellen Dissanayake

    Ellen Dissanayake is an independent scholar and author whose writings on the arts synthesize numerous disciplines, including evolutionary biology, ethology, cognitive psychology, anthropology, and art theory. She investigates how art arose as a universal human need and how it has been shaped throughout evolution. Her approach offers a unique perspective on art as a biologically rooted phenomenon. Dissanayake thus enriches our understanding of the origins and function of art in human society.

    Art and Intimacy
    Homo Aestheticus
    What Is Art For?
    Early Rock Art of the American West
    • 2018

      Early Rock Art of the American West

      • 298 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      A CHOICE OUTSTANDING ACADEMIC TITLE The earliest rock art - in the Americas as elsewhere - is geometric or abstract. Until Early Rock Art in the American West, however, no book-length study has been devoted to the deep antiquity and amazing range of geometrics and the fascinating questions that arise from their ubiquity and variety. Why did they precede representational marks? What is known about their origins and functions? Why and how did humans begin to make marks, and what does this practice tell us about the early human mind? With some two hundred striking color images and discussions of chronology, dating, sites, and styles, this pioneering investigation of abstract geometrics on stone (as well as bone, ivory, and shell) explores its wide-ranging subject from the perspectives of ethology, evolutionary biology, cognitive archaeology, and the psychology of artmaking. The authors' unique approach instills a greater respect for a largely unknown and underappreciated form of paleoart, suggesting that before humans became Homo symbolicus or even Homo religiosus, they were mark-makers - Homo aestheticus.

      Early Rock Art of the American West
    • 2012
    • 1992
    • 1988

      What Is Art For?

      • 266 pages
      • 10 hours of reading
      4.1(77)Add rating

      This book is probably one of the most intellectually enriching interdisciplinary studies of art that has ever been written.

      What Is Art For?