CALL FOR PAPERS 
"What Are Artworks and How Do We Experience Them"

Winter Symposium at the Center for Semiotics 
Aarhus University 
26-28 January 2012 

The Center for Semiotics, Aarhus University announces its annual
Winter Symposium, this year on the properties of aesthetic
objects and the mechanisms involved in their cognition. The
purpose of this conference is to investigate the multifarious
aspects of the relation between an artwork (visual, literary, or
musical) and its objective properties, the meaningful experience
of it, and the cognitive skills and acts involved in the latter. 

>From an ontological point of view, artworks differ from plain
everyday objects in different respects. From this perspective,
follows a number of questions:
What properties do artworks possess that plain objects don't? If
artworks depict or represent something, then what exactly is
depiction or representation? If artworks are intentional objects
par excellence, how is this intentionality encoded in them, and
how can it be retrieved, if it is to be retrieved in the first
place? If artworks are valuable in a sense that plain objects are
not, what do we mean by value?

On the other hand, the experience or cognition of artworks and
aesthetic objects in general is obviously of another type than
experience of plain objects. This lead to another list of
research questions, which rather aim at characterizing the
subjective correlate of aesthetic experience: If we attend to
aesthetic objects differently than to plain everyday objects,
what, then, characterizes this intentional attitude or mindset?
If there is a difference between the phenomenology of seeing
three apples, a photo of three apples or a painting of three
apples, what, then, characterizes the phenomenology of aesthetic
experience? If artworks affect us perceptually, by virtue of
their qualitative (visual, textual or acoustic) layout, what are
the phenomenal or qualitative properties, which are particularly
significant for us? If artworks affect us by virtue of given
properties of our visuo-cognitive system what are, then, the
relevant properties exploited to that effect? If there is a
specific phenomenology of aesthetic experience, does it follow
that there is a general brain state or a neural dynamics that
correspond to that phenomenology? 

The aim of this conference is to explore the complementarity of
these domains of investigation and how they may mutually
enlighten each other. We have invited eminent philosophers,
psychologists, art historians, neuroscientists; including
scholars specialized in the crossovers between the above domains.
Our hope is thus, first, that the conference will be the scene
for state of the art discussions within each of these fields: the
ontology of art and the psychology of art, broadly taken. And,
next - that these insights will help us better understand the
logic and nature of meaning-making in the aesthetic domain.

Confirmed keynote speakers:
Anjan Chatterjee (University of Pennsylvania) Peter Dixon/Marisa
Bortolussi (University of Alberta) John M. Kennedy (University of
Toronto Scarborough) Jerrold Levinson (University of Maryland)
Paul J. Locher (Montclair State University) Dominc Lopes
(University of British Columbia) Raymond A. Mar (York University)
Jeff Mitscherling (University of Guelph) Jean Petitot (CREA,
Ecole Polytechnique) Barry Smith (State University of New York at
Buffalo) Kendall Walton (University of Michigan) Peer Bundgaard
(Aarhus University) Frederik Stjernfelt (Aarhus University)

Format:
The conference welcomes a limited number of submitted papers (20
minutes and 10 minutes for discussion).

Submission of abstracts:
Abstracts should not exceed 200 words: the bibliography is
excluded from this count, but should be kept essential. Please,
clearly indicate a title, a thesis, and the line of the
argumentation.

Abstracts should be submitted electronically to [email protected]
Please include the following information in the main body of your
e-mail: 
author's name, affiliation, title of talk, 3-5 keywords, 
e-mail address for correspondence. 

Submission deadline: 
December 9th 2011

For further information: 
See www.hum.au.dk/semiotics/ 

Riccardo Fusaroli, post.doctoral fellow
http://www.google.com/profiles/fusaroli 
Center for Semiotics - Institute of Aesthetics and Communication
Interacting Minds - Center of Functionally Integrative
Neuroscience University of Aarhus 

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