barebones communication

… a blog on communication

picturing the communication process

Picturing the communication proces. It that possible? Why not?

The picture below has already been posted to this site once. I seem to revert to it from time to time. It has something to it that not easily can be described. A couple of days ago I finally grasped what is was. Or “some of” what it was. It is a picture illustrating the communication process. Easy as that, and I really wonder why it took me so long to realise it.

Here comes the picture.

Let’s look at this pictures in more detail using some of the tools laid bare on this blog in earlies posts.

Denotations:

Denotations are the picture basics. That content that we all are likely to agree on. The basic stepping stones of the image. What, literally, do we have? We have parts of a large room. The wall framing the image left hand and right hand sides. The roof is indicated, and the floor is clearly a major part of the physical spread of the photograph.

At the back of the room there is a large class wall leading out to the exterior. A lake, trees and more trees. Laves and trunks. The glass wall, which is floor-to-ceiling high is bloken by vertical (wooden) poles to enhance the vertical impression.

In the middle some kind of cylinder.  Glass of plastic cylinder. In both cases transparent. Two people look into the cylinder from opposite sides. Facing each other. The closes persons seems to have oversized shoes on. The other person is blurred by the glass or plastic so you can only guess that this is a person. It is more of an indication than a precise outline, but we are not in doubt that it is a person. The second person is intended.

The camera angle is downwards, and the lens clearly a wide one that distorts the natural perspective making the parts of the foreground look bigger than the objects further away.

These are the most obvious denotations. There are more, and they could all be described in greater detail, but this is sufficient for what is need here.

Connotations:

And now to the connotations. Those second layer contents that always are there to add to the reading and understanding of a message. As shown elsewhere on the blog, and in the wording of Roland Barthes, you can talk about connotation procedures to get a grip of how you deliberately can try to work specific connotations into a message.

I will treat them pretty overall here only stating that to me this photograph comes with a content of life, playfulness, curiosity and ambiguity. It is a happy and youthful picture, as well.

I am sure that you will read, if not identical, then somewhat similar connotations into the image. And maybe even a greater number, since the shift of layer from denotation to connotation brings with it a shift from objective reading to subjective reading. Personal taste, understanding and preferences are to a larger extent at play here.

So far so good.

Symbolism:

Are there more to it? As indicated in the blog title there should be: picturing the communications process. Call this a third layer, call it a level inherent in the denotations and connotations combined. Call is basically whatever you like since labelling is not the name of the game here. The more I looked at the picture I found it to be a good illustration of the communication process. To me it symbolises the communication process. Why? And how?

One way of defining communication is by pointing to a sender and a receiver of a message. This is communication defined in its simplest form and it makes the point needed here. The person in the foreground of the photograph is the sender of the message, and he is also the receiver of a message. So is the person on the far side of the cylinder. Thus the transmission and receiving of a message is a circular affair always in motion. Partly transparent to the observer. This continuous movement is filtered by the individual’s outlook of the world. The way he or she, in phenomenological terms, intends the world.

When using the word intention here it is not in the ordinary sense of the word. I am not talking about intent as in the intention of going to the movies. In the phenomenological world view the meaning of the word intention differs from that, and the term really brings us to the core theme of phenomenology. It is called intentionality, and is that core notion that sets phenomenology apart from anything else that you have ever read about or heard about. Intentionality is all embracing. That is why, when you look at the basic barebones resource diagram below you will find phenomenology is the rock that everything rests on. Including phenomenology itself.

Speaking about different theoretical frameworks phenomenology embraces gestalt psychology, semiology/semiotics, naturalism, experiential results, hermeneutics and whatever framework you can think of. By that, and this is important, the barebones communication universe constitutes a completely new and integreted way of combining, handling and analysing bits and pieces of communication. And of construction such pieces. Like in this case: a simple, maybe not so simple, photography. 

For a shoutcut to barebones communication resources, please go here.

What is intentionality?

Intentionality is the basic idea that consciuosness always is the consciousness of something. The implication is that consciousness never operated in a vacuum or towards blank spots. When I, or you, look at the picture above we always grasps something. That something might be the overall picture, a detail in it, or simply something that are not directly present in the picture.

Alas, when the two guys in the picture stare at each other they stare at something. That something may be specifically present like the guy on the other side of the tube, or it may not be present. It could for instance be an imaginary guy only present in the viewers phantasy. As a mental picture.

That something, that is always there, will be dependent upon a set of social and phychological or physical factors. Things are filtered based on factors just mentioned.  So the glass tube, the glass or plastic cylinder, reflects the idea of looking through filters. There are, as you can see in the picture, a senders filter, and there are a receivers filter.  Things are communication your way, and are received your way as well. This filtering sometimes makes communication difficult, as we all know.

Presence and absence

When there is presence there is always also absence, and as there always are presence there will always be absence. It is one of the major benefits of phenomenology to have shown this. Does this sound cryptic to you? It should not. Just take a look at the picture once more.

What do you see this time? Well, here are some of the things I see. I see a wall, I see a window, I see some trees, I see two people staring into a glass tube. This must then be the present elements.

On the other hand here is what I don’t see: I don’t see the back of the walls, I don’t see the fishes in the water, I don’t see the birds in the trees, I don’t see the feet in the shoes, I don’t see the surrounding landscape. These are then the absent elements that makes this picture understandible to me. As they will to you. There is no way of escaping this.

I will dwell on this aspect to a larger extent in later posts. My point here is simply this: when you communicate what you don’t say is as important as what you do say. When you show, like in  a picture, what you don’t show is a strong contender for meaning. Everyone knows how loud a silence can sound, how speaking a white wall can be.

However, and this is my postulate, very few of us are really good in controlling absent elements in the same way we think that we control present elements.

Apart from a short sum-up I will, accordingly, say no more, and leave you to filter in or to filter out the vaste areas of absences in the continuation of this blog post :-)  Only you can do that.

Cheers.

Illustration and photograph on this blog are copyrighted by the blog author Knut Skjærven. Must not be copied, downloaded or used in any form without the prior, written consent of the copyright holder.
 

June 11, 2008 Posted by knut skjærven | hermeneutics, phenomenology | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Barthes’ Connotation Procedures: 3. Objects. (Post 1 of 6)

As mentioned in a recent post I will elaborate on Barthes’ connotation procedures in separate posts. Here comes the first one starting with Barthes’ third procedure: objects.  There are, according to Barthes in his article, 6 areas for procedures in total.

3. Objects

Objects in themselves have connotative content. Barthes uses an example with a book case that might connote intellectualism. He states that “The interest lies in the fact that the objects are accepted inducers of associations of ideas (book-case = intellectual).. ” They can also work as symbols, he argues.

Some other examples; when you see an image of a big man in a close up, such a shot might connote power or dominance. When you have an image of a tiny woman that might connote fragility or fright. Obviously all object have second meaning connotations moving from neutral (in a neutral shot) to excessive in a more deliberately composed photograph.

Take a look at the “object” below. It is the rear of a car, but not any other car. It is the rear of a Bugatti Veyron at display in Berlin. Depending on the degree of car enthusiast you may or may not be, this picture will connote extreme wealth, extreme speed and excessive luxury to you. If you are not into cars at all, you might accept that this is indeed a stylish object of some class.

It is pretty clear from this picture (to me anyway), that images indeed contain second level contents; read connotations. This image does not only denote: rear of a car, but it strongly connote things like wealth and luxury, as well. 

For more on connotations (and denotations) you could go here.

 Bugatti in Berlin 

Copyright 2008: Knut Skjærven.  

 Library Thing. (Roland Barthes: Image, Music, Text, pages 15-31, Fontana Press 1977, UK. Essays selected and translated by Stephen Heath).

Buy the English translation of Barthes’ work. Follow the link and support the site:
Image-Music-Text

March 30, 2008 Posted by knut skjærven | semiology, semiotics, toolbox | , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Barthes’ Connotation Procedures in Photography.

 

One of the major thinkers on photography is Roland Barthes. He has written a number of important texts that I will refer to on the blog. Barthes worked within the semiological tradition. In his article from 1961 The Photographic Message he talks about connotation procedures.

 

It is, according to Barthes, “possible to separate out various connotation procedures”. I will use Barthes’ “headlines” from his article, but bring in my own elaboration and examples. And pictures.

Barthes works with 6  procedures in his scheme. I will treat each one separately in forthcoming posts. 

1. Trick effects 

2. Pose 

3. Objects 

4. Photogenia 

5. Aestheticism 

6. Syntax 

Stay tuned for a short separate treatment of each of Barthes’ connotation procedures. For a shortcut to some of his famous articles, please see the book referred to in Library Link below.

When I post on the individual procedures, I will link the separate posts from this introductory post. So, eventually you will be able to reach all posts from this post. Look for the links above, and you will notice that the post on 3. Objects is already there. 

Good luck with it. 

Library Thing. (Roland Barthes: Image, Music, Text, pages 15-31, Fontana Press 1977, UK. Essays selected and translated by Stephen Heath)

Buy the English translation of Barthes’ work. Follow the link and support the site:
Image-Music-Text

 

 

 

March 30, 2008 Posted by knut skjærven | semiology, semiotics | , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Are these the bare bones? (notebook)

 Bare bones of an ostrich

Are these the bare bones? 

Yes, they certainly are. These are the bare bones of an ostrich. The struthio camelus is the largest living bird in the world. Originates in Africa. But it can’t fly, can it? It runs fast, though.

An “ostrich” is also the label of a person who refuses to face reality and accept facts. And a way to get your head chopped off if you are not careful as a photographer.

But is it even a photograph of the barebones bare bones? Well, we’ll see about that :-)  In a while. Right now I am in the process of preparing a couple of posts on what I have, so far, labeled the notebook on phenomenology. You will be amazed how useful phenomenology is for understanding communication. And using it.

And here are some tasks for you to engage in - while you wait. Please elaborate on

a) parts and wholes in the picture

b) identity in manifolds

c) presence and absence 

And by the way, what are the connotations of this picture (semiology)? And how would you mentally close it (gestalt closure)? So all at once we speak of semiology, gestalt psychology and phenomenogy within the same universe. As a combined instrument of understanding communication. And for doing it.

Unless you want to bury your head in the sand that is :-) (The context begged for this one, sorry).

Good luck with it.

I’ll be back :-)

 Ostrich shot by the blog author.

March 10, 2008 Posted by knut skjærven | barebones notebook | , , , | No Comments

this feeling of gratitude (pitstop)

The Pace 

“Yet this feeling of gratitude does not fully characterize our true situation. Quite often we  feel overcome by a profound weariness, as if the rythm of life which technology has produced does violence to us. This is because technological progress is achieved to the detriment of other essential values. We are not satisfied with hurrying. We often find ourselves using the phrase “scientific barbarism” when we want to point to one of the characteristic traits of our time, and we speak with regret of the slow pace and the luxury of the good old days. We feel revolt rumbling in us; we would like to recapture our rights over time, rights of which contemporary life seems to have deprived us”.

Eugène Minkowski: Lived Time. Phenomenological and Psychopathological Studies, translated with an introduction by Nancy Metzel, Northwestern University Press, Evanston, USA, 1970, page 3.  

Library Thing

More on pitstops.

 Picture by blog author. 

March 9, 2008 Posted by knut skjærven | pitstop | , , , , | No Comments

tilting for connotations (notebook)


Here is one for you.
 
Louisiana Museum of Modern Art is probably the most well know art gallery in Scandinavia. It is about a 30 minutes drive north of Copenhagen, Denmark.
 
I went there this weekend and took this shot from the hip?
 
I am sure that you recognize the denotative elements in the shot: people, paintings, ceiling, walls, lights, more paintings, etcetera.
 
But what does it do to the content of the picture that the camera was tilted when I pressed the trigger. You could describe that content as the pictures connotative content. 
 
I did a slight makeover in Photoshop (most cropping), so please notice that even if this is a casual shot, I ended up with a fairly strict and balanced composition, anyway.  But is is tilted.
 
If you were forced to pick a product for this shot what product would you say that should be?  
 
I pose this as an open question, and, gosh, listening to this I really start wondering if I should take up schoolteaching. The point is, that I can see from the blog statistics, that the posts with the most clicks on the blog, are those concerned with denotation and connotation. So, I am simply responding to a marked demand :-)
 
Here comes the picture.
 
Enjoy the tilt :)
 
Louisiana Museum of Modern Art. 600/400 
 

February 17, 2008 Posted by knut skjærven | notebook | , , , , , | No Comments

poles apart (notebook)

Hi there

I am sure that this picture is pretty easy to decompose in terms of gestalt factors. Proximity and similarity could be some of the factors used for such a decomposition.

But, are there other striking features in this image that you would like to point to? That makes you want to take a closer look?

Be my guest :-) 

Amalienborg, Copenhagen, Denmark.  Man in Window. 

More on barebones notebook.   

 

February 3, 2008 Posted by knut skjærven | notebook | , , | No Comments

Wertheimer would have loved this one, too! (barebones notebook)

It is late Saturday the last weekend of January 2008.

And I really think that Wertheimer would have loved this one too. I am sure Barthes would.

Reasons why? You tell me :-)Go here

BTW, this is shot outside Hotel Churchill in Dover, UK, April 2007. There is a tiny beach there.

Good Curves.

 

January 26, 2008 Posted by knut skjærven | barebones notebook | , , , | No Comments

nostalgie rundfahrt (barebones notebook 07)

It is really good that I have all these pictures, right :-) . Since they all speak more than a thousands words.

Each.

Well I enjoy it, and if you too participate in the initial stages of the barebones community building, you will as well :-) .

So here is another notebook brief for you. The white bus in Berlin. Shot this August.

White Bus in Berlin, August 2007 

I could ask you how this fit will a couple of gestalt factors, but that would be too easy. Obviously both proximity and similarity are at work here, as the two most dominant factors. Nearness and similarity of objects have me perceive this picture as a picture of two groups of people (not six individuals): one group upstairs and another group downstairs.

Let’s however make this notebook brief a bit more interesting by pointing to two levels of closure potent in the image. Do you remember, that I talked about a physical closure and a mental closure in the post on gestalt closure.

Closure is, in a quick word, the human capacity to perceive a bit more than you actually get. The whole is more than the sum of its physically given parts.  This is the gestalt basic.

Now, the picture that you find in this post is a pretty complete one. There are no blank spots or areas. Things that you need to fill in to comprehend them. You should be able to recognize, at first glance, what the picture is all about.

On the other hand, there are still things “missing” in the picture. Let me point to a few:  you don’t see the bodies of the talking heads on the bus, and you don’t see the whole bus. Yet, that is what you perceive; people with intact bodies, and a bus that will certainly drive away if the driver tends to it.  Your are not in doubt about these things.

So for reason that will be clear in future posts, I will introduce two additional layers within the closure concept. These are layers 2 and 3 below.

1) Closure, as the capacity to mentally close figures where visual information is actually lacking (as in the example with the dog in the blog post on closure). This is the gestalt original. 

Then, let me add some layers to this: 

2) Closure, as the capacity to mentally close figures where the visual information is actually hidden or cropped away (as the bodies of the talking heads or the parts of the bus that are not actually there).

3) Closure, as the capacity to mentally elaborate on the context of the actual visual stimuli. You clearly have a notion of what these people are doing on that bus, don’t you? And you have an idea of how they are going to spend the next hours, haven’t you? You even may have an idea of why these guys are in Berlin in the first place? How will you close this open context and continue the story?

It does not really matter how you close it. The important thing is that you have the ability to close it. Any way you want :-) . Remember the last pitstop. I do :-) .

So much for the nostalgische rundfahrt, apart from that tiny, but important thing, that what I just did was to link a gestalt factor to that popular idea of telling a story, as a communication means.  That passport to success, would you believe it? I think they call it storytelling, right? :-) .

I also introduced another gestalt factor: the factor of experience or habit

More on this later, so stay tuned to a barebones blog near you.

And, sorry for taking all the notes myself.  I will make up for it :-) .

January 21, 2008 Posted by knut skjærven | barebones notebook, resources | , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Gestalt Factor: The Good Curve


More on gestalt factors. In our context, we are now on the fifth factor.
 
In his article Wertheimer has just explained the condition for The Factor of Closure, or the tendendy to perceive unfinished materiel as being more completed, than is actually is.
 
He continues: “It is not true, however, that closure is necessarily the dominant Factor in all cases which satiesfy  the conditions. In Fig 23, for example, it is not three self-enclosed areas but rather The Factor of the “Good Curce” which predominates”.
 
Figure 23 in Wertheimers book, is a figure somewhat similar to this one. 
 
 Figure of Good Curve.
 
The figure contains three fully drawn “self-enclosed areas”, but none of these seems to be dominant. Much more is it the diagonal curve that we perceive. This is the factor of the good curve, then. Wertheimer talks about “the influence of a tendency towards the “good” gestalt”. It is the good curve that holds this figure together. 
 
Not that complicated, right? 
 
For Wertheimer’s exact wording on the gestalt factors including his original drawings, you could go here.  I have the online article from from an internet resource developed by Christoffer D. Green for York University in Toronto, Canada. It is the same article that I have been referring to all along. I just found it on the net the yesterday. So, go read the original.
 
To illustrate the good curve I have two pictures. The first one shot at Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, Germany in August last summer. It is from the inside of Sony Center.
 
The second one is shot at Louisiana Art Museum at Humlebæk north of Copenhagen in Denmark. Shot some years back. The curve aspect in both pictures is pretty obvious, so let me just accompany each picture with a few words. Very few words.
 
Good Curve: Berlin. 
 
 Potsdamer Platz, berlin 2007.
 
To me, anyway, it is pretty obvious that what holds this impression together is the curve of the Sony Center’s beautiful glass roof. It dominates this picture. Everything else is subordinate to the dominant curve.  As in Wertheimer’s example, the picture contains enclosed areas: the glass buildings, but in this lay-out they clearly take on a minor role. (Please let me know if you disagree on this).
 
For those interested in photography, I should mention that this image is shot with a 16 mm Hologon lens. Famous stuff, actually.
 
 
Good Curve: Copenhagen. 
 
 Glass House Louisiana Art Museum, Copenhagen, Denmark.
 
Copenhagen good curve.
 
Maybe not that predominant as the Sony Center glass roof, but all the same. One of the items holding this picture together, is the glass cylinder in the middle of the exhibition room. Please notice, that in terms of physical dimensions , the cylinder is not even the major object in the picture. The walls takes up more space. Nevertheless it is the glass cylinder, the good curve, that perceptually steal the show.
 
No, this is not the 16 mm Hologon. It is the 21 mm Biogon  :-) . Got you.
 
 
How to use:
 
Well, if you have a complicated shot or a drawing or another piece of visual or a layout, that you want to round up as one coherent, controlled unit, simply use a good curve to accomplish that job for you.
 
If you don’t have that ambition, or that need, then don’t.
 
By all means, there are other ways to influence perception, but right now, and here, the talk is about curves. Good curves.
 
And remember, that if you want to have a glance at the gestalt factors so far, go to the tag cloud and hit “gestalt factor”. They are all there.
 
Good luck with this, as well :-)
 

January 14, 2008 Posted by knut skjærven | gestalt factor good curve | , , , | No Comments