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Posts by Matthew MacKisack

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Exploring artists' imagery experience You are invited to participate in an online survey about visual artists’ mental imagery. Background Mental imagery is perception-like experience of an object or scenario, without that object or scena...

How does an #artwork come into being? 🎨🖌️

I'm researching creative processes - specifically, the relationship between #imagining and #making.

If you're a visual #artist and have a spare 15 minutes, I'd love your input.

More info & take part here: forms.gle/PXHqaWGQ3Pa6...

Feel free to share 🎨🖌️

13 hours ago 3 0 0 0
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The Art of Seeing Differently: How Aphantasic Artists Challenge the Myth of the Visualizing Genius Art historian Matthew MacKisack's research reveals that aphantasic artists create stunning work through external composition—challenging centuries of assumptions about creativity and imagination.

Had a lovely chat with the fine folk at Aphantasia Network about all things #art, #imagination, and #aphantasia, and now it's on their YouTube channel, where I appear agreeably enhanced aphantasia.com/video/art-of...

4 days ago 3 0 0 0

Very happy to be co-convening, with Prof Whitney Davis, and presenting on Friday morning at #AAH2026. We're talking 'Images and Pictures': what are they, what's the difference, and who decides? forarthistory.org.uk/session-imag...

1 week ago 1 1 0 0

Thanks for the mention, @aaronhertzmann.com - and thanks for sharing the Matisse video, hadn't seen that before. New paper looks great, will read with interest

3 weeks ago 2 0 0 0
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Live Science Talk with Researcher Matthew MacKisack - Aphantasia Community Event Join researcher Matthew MacKisack as he discusses his study examining how aphantasia (absence of mental imagery) and hyperphantasia (extremely vivid mental imagery) influence artistic creation—and why...

I'm going to be giving a talk on #art and #aphantasia on Tuesday 16th December, for the fine folk at Aphantasia Network - you can watch online here: aphantasia.com/event/019a92...

4 months ago 5 0 0 0

Very glad to have talked to Larissa MacFarquhar for this beautiful piece on extremes of imagining. Goes deep into the experiences of artists Clare Dudeney and Sheri Paisley; more on their and others' practices in our research article here medicine-vet-medicine.ed.ac.uk/sites/defaul...

5 months ago 2 0 0 0

Thanks Aaron, your work looks really interesting. Yes please do submit a proposal - you would need to be able to get to Cambridge though

6 months ago 1 0 1 0
Images and Pictures - For Art History The relationship between pictures and images – not only the retinal images processed in visual perception but also the mental images of memories, dreams and visualisations – have been objects of scien...

#callforpapers I’m co-convening a session at The AAH 2026 Conference with the wonderful Whitney Davis. If you're interested in the relationship between images in the head and in the world, what constitutes a picture, etc, drop us a proposal! forarthistory.org.uk/images-and-p...

6 months ago 0 0 1 0
Aphantasia: How to Write Without a Mind’s Eye
Aphantasia: How to Write Without a Mind’s Eye YouTube video by Dustin Grinnell, Sci-fi With Heart

How can you describe something if you can't visualise it?Fascinating insight into creative writing with #aphantasia by author Dustin Grinnell www.youtube.com/shorts/DAB-E...

7 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Love this. Another poke in the eye of the genius/hero/human template of creativity.

aeon.co/essays/did-a...

9 months ago 1 0 0 0

Yes that sounds like future-oriented hoarding rather than past-oriented. I suppose the objects in both cases help to structure thought, in a way. Would be interesting to assess imagery of future-oriented hoarders

10 months ago 0 0 0 0

That's a good question, I'm not sure - in one of the papers this paper cites they find hoarders 'perceive throwing away as a threat to memory', the objects are more of a cue, that connect them to their past - so maybe in the same way that non-hoarders keep family photos

10 months ago 0 0 1 0

Enjoying Adam Zeman's takeover of New Scientist this week with all things imagination #scicomm #psychscisky

10 months ago 7 1 0 0
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Very happy to declare that 'Global Culture after Gombrich: Art, Mind, World', is out!

Published by Intellect: www.intellectbooks.com/global-cultu...

Launch at the Warburg Institute on the 24th of June: warburg.sas.ac.uk/events/tradi...

#ArtHistory #Art #History #Culture

10 months ago 1 0 0 0
Through the mind’s eye: mapping associations between hoarding tendencies and voluntary and involuntary mental imagery | Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy | Cambridge Core Through the mind’s eye: mapping associations between hoarding tendencies and voluntary and involuntary mental imagery

On imagining and its varieties, e.g. #2:

Individuals who hoard use objects as receptacles for memories; hoarding tendencies are associated with reduced visualising ability; so, 'visualisation difficulties may promote a reliance on objects to facilitate recall'

www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

11 months ago 0 0 1 0
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Why does every film and TV series seem to have the same plot? | Aeon Essays The three-act ‘hero’s journey’ has long been the most prominent kind of story. What other tales are there to tell?

no hugging, no learning

Seinfeld's rejection of the formula providing 'opioid reassurance in the form of redemption and the simultaneous restoration of normality: the hero always achieves self-optimisation within the acceptable confines of bourgeois respectability' aeon.co/essays/why-d...?

11 months ago 2 0 0 0
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OSF

There's so much great work on imagining and its varieties at the moment.

E.g. ‪@eazanon.bsky.social‬, @kerblooee.bsky.social‬ and others' introduction of #prophantasia: the ability to project mental images into the external world osf.io/preprints/os...

11 months ago 1 0 0 0

Not much. I was being flippant. Maybe 'hard to conceptualise' would have been better.

1 year ago 0 0 1 0

An interesting and provocative find regarding aphantasia and reading - but still find non-conscious imagery hard to believe in

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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‘OpenAI’s metafictional short story about grief is beautiful and moving’ | Jeanette Winterson I think of AI as alternative intelligence – and its capacity to be ‘other’ is just what the human race needs

Sounds just like a review AI would give 🧐 ... www.theguardian.com/books/2025/m...

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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Ces artistes qui créent en l’absence d’images dans la tête - A translation of Hervé Morin's 2024 article in Le Monde

Here's a translation of @hnirom.bsky.social's article on aphantasic art-making - I sound so much more profound in French, but there you go artimescience.org/updates/f/ce...

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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The art of Aphantasia: how ‘mind blind’ artists create without being able to visualise The condition challenges the centuries-old idea that all great artists are able to envision what they’re drawing.

Great to read of aphantasic art-making here and in the replies. This is an intro to our research on the subject -
theconversation.com/the-art-of-a... - and my website has the peer-reviewed stuff artimescience.org. New research participants are very welcome!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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Visualising genius Try this thought experiment. Michelangelo - Michelangelo Buonarroti, the Renaissance genius who created the statue of David and the Sistine Chapel ceiling – claimed,

Here's a wee blog post, wondering if Michelangelo really did see angels in blocks of stone artimescience.org/updates/f/vi...

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
A drawing of 19th-century horse-drawn carriage, without the horses

A drawing of 19th-century horse-drawn carriage, without the horses

On oldie but a goodie

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

Hello and thank you for reaching out - glad to hear these ideas make sense to you as a non-imager. More to follow!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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ARTIMESCIENCE

Well this is nice. I've also gone and made a website with a blog (!) where I update on the book project and other things art, science, and imagining artimescience.org

1 year ago 4 0 1 0