Art and Praxia. Plastique and Technique in Young Children's Drawings
Details
Download: BIB_87839E2FD9AA.P001.pdf (140.97 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: Not specified
State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: Not specified
Serval ID
serval:BIB_87839E2FD9AA
Type
Book:A book with an explicit publisher.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Art and Praxia. Plastique and Technique in Young Children's Drawings
Publisher
Neuropsychologie Editions
Address of publication
Lausanne
ISBN
978-2-8399-1250-1
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2013
Language
english
Number of pages
229
Abstract
Children's drawings have been studied as indicating intellectual development, expressing
emotional life, revealing environmental experience, stressing problem-solving activities, but
more rarely as showing the child's artistic talents.
There are two ways of considering objets d'art: analysing and just enjoying. The present
book offers both, by showing two sets of constrained and free drawings by the same children.
The first part of the book presents a thorough experiment on the development of
constructional praxia which are compared with apraxia, i.e. acquired disability through
brain injury in adults.
The second part shows the free drawings' gallery from the same children who took part in
the first experiment.
It clearly appears that the two skills, the constructional praxic ability and the free artistic
expression, do not evolve in parallel. Very skilled children often are poor artists and the
observer can find aesthetic drawings in young and praxically unskilled children. In other
words, already in the 4 to 7 age bracket, the artisan does not make the artist.
However, the authors avoid any classification in art.
emotional life, revealing environmental experience, stressing problem-solving activities, but
more rarely as showing the child's artistic talents.
There are two ways of considering objets d'art: analysing and just enjoying. The present
book offers both, by showing two sets of constrained and free drawings by the same children.
The first part of the book presents a thorough experiment on the development of
constructional praxia which are compared with apraxia, i.e. acquired disability through
brain injury in adults.
The second part shows the free drawings' gallery from the same children who took part in
the first experiment.
It clearly appears that the two skills, the constructional praxic ability and the free artistic
expression, do not evolve in parallel. Very skilled children often are poor artists and the
observer can find aesthetic drawings in young and praxically unskilled children. In other
words, already in the 4 to 7 age bracket, the artisan does not make the artist.
However, the authors avoid any classification in art.
Keywords
art, children's art, praxia, drawing, child neuropsychology
Create date
16/09/2013 17:02
Last modification date
21/07/2020 6:09