Abstract

This paper examines Shaverien's concepts of the embodied and diagrammatic images and argues that these are valuable tools for the understanding of aesthetic phenomena but suggests that without extra conceptual dimensions, this can lead to an oversimplification of the dynamics towards and within images in the art psychotherapy context. Two additional concepts to the ‘embodied image’ and ‘diagrammatic image’ are introduced and illustrated through case examples, which help to convey the otherness of the image that the author refers to as ‘unstructured’ and ‘disembodied’. The last part of the paper explores the aesthetics of the embodied image as having its origins in Langer's account of a modernist pursuit of universal truth. The author argues that the concept of the embodied image has not, until now, been brought up to date with contemporary debate within a post-modern era. Barthes’ ‘death of the author’ is used as an example of the way that post-modernism has reframed experience beyond a ‘monotheistic’ perspective. The paper describes an aesthetic matrix which allows greater scope for the acknowledgement of internal difference in parallel with social diversity

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