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How art can help you analyze - Amy E. Herman

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    There's a prevailing attitude
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    that art doesn't matter in the real world.
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    But the study of art can enhance our perception
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    and our ability to translate to others
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    what we already see.
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    Those skills are useful.
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    Those skills can save lives.
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    Doctors, nurses, and law enforcement agents
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    can use painting, sculpture, and photography
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    as tools to improve their visual acuity
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    and communication skills,
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    which are critical
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    during investigations and emergencies.
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    If you're treating an injury,
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    investigating a crime scene,
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    or trying to describe either of those things
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    to a colleague,
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    art can make you better at it.
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    Here, imagine you're a seasoned cop
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    or a dedicated doctor,
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    but also imagine you are at a museum
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    and let's look at a painting.
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    Rene Magritte's "Time Transfixed" of 1938
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    depicts a mysterious and complex interior
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    that invites analysis
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    not only that required of a patient's symptoms
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    or a scene of a crime.
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    A miniature train whose origin
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    and destination are unknown
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    is emerging from a fireplace,
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    and the smoke from the locomotive
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    appears to be floating up the chimney
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    as if from the fire
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    that is conspicuously absent below.
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    The eeriness of the scene
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    is echoed in the empty living room,
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    enhanced by wood-grain floors
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    and decorative wall molding to fireplace.
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    Perched atop the mantelpiece
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    are two candlesticks and a clock.
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    Behind these objects is a large mirror
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    that reveals an empty interior
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    and only a partial reflection
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    of the objects before it.
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    The juxtaposition of the objects
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    surrounding the moving train
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    raises numerous questions
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    for which there seem to be no apparent answers.
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    Did I summarize the painting accurately
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    or leave any details out?
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    It's no big deal if you see
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    something else in a painting,
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    but what if we're both seasoned cops?
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    I call you for back-up.
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    You show up only to realize
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    that the two bank-robbing ninjas I mentioned
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    were actually six bank-robbing ninjas with lasers.
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    Close study of art can train viewers
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    to study thoroughly,
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    analyze the elements observed,
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    articulate them succinctly,
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    and formulate questions
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    to address the seemingly inconsistencies.
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    Scrutinizing the details
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    of an unfamiliar scene,
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    in this case the work of art,
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    and accurately conveying
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    any observable contradictions
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    is a critically important skill
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    for both people who look at x-rays
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    and those who interrogate suspects.
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    Let's interrogate this painting, shall we?
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    Okay, Magritte, that's quite a little picture you've painted.
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    But why aren't there any train tracks?
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    Why no fire?
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    What happened to the candles?
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    Why doesn't the fireplace
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    have a little tunnel for the train?
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    It just comes straight through the wall.
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    And the clock says
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    it's about quarter to one,
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    but I'm not sure the light
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    that comes through the window at an angle
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    says it's just past noontime.
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    What's this painting all about, anyway?
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    That's when you, my trusty partner,
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    hold me back
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    and then I leave.
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    You give Magritte a cup of coffee
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    and keep grilling him
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    to see if this painting would hold up in court.
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    Viewers can provide a more detailed
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    and accurate description of a situation
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    by articulating what is seen
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    and what is not seen.
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    This is particularly important in medicine.
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    If an illness is evidenced by three symptoms
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    and only two are present in a patient,
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    a medical professional must explicitly state
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    the absence of that third symptom,
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    signifying that the patient
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    may not have the condition expected.
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    Articulating the absence of a specific detail or behavior
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    known as the pertinent negative
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    is as critical as stating
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    the details and behaviors that are present
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    in order to treat the patient.
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    And conspicuous absences are only conspicuous
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    to eyes trained to look for them.
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    Art teaches professionals
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    across a wide spectrum of fields
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    not only how to ask more effective questions
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    about what cannot be readily answered,
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    but also, and more importantly,
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    how to analyze complex, real-world situations
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    from a new and different perspective,
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    ultimately solving difficult problems.
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    Intense attention to detail,
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    the ability to take a step back
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    and look differently,
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    we want first responders to have the analytical skills
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    of master art historians at least.
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    Art trains us to investigate,
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    and that's a real-world skill if there ever was one.
Title:
How art can help you analyze - Amy E. Herman
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-art-can-help-you-analyze-amy-e-herman

Can art save lives? Not exactly, but our most prized professionals (doctors, nurses, police officers) can learn real world skills through art analysis. Studying art like René Magritte's Time Transfixed can enhance communication and analytical skills, with an emphasis on both the seen and unseen. Amy E. Herman explains why art historical training can prepare you for real world investigation.

Lesson by Amy E. Herman, animation by Flaming Medusa Studios Inc.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:50

English subtitles

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