Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead
The Pictorial World of the Child
A lavishly illustrated book giving a comprehensive account of children's understanding and production of pictures.
Maureen Cox (Author)
9780521531986, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 17 November 2005
392 pages, 8 colour illus. 5 tables
24.8 x 17.4 x 1.9 cm, 0.786 kg
'Cox effortlessly navigates a large body of work to provide a lavishly illustrated, beautifully written coherent contemporary account of the study of children's pictorial representation. … both engaging and informative - a rich overview of the research. Whether you are a researcher, student or interested browser, you should definitely buy … this book.' The Psychologist
In this lavishly illustrated book, Maureen Cox gives a comprehensive and scholarly account of children's understanding and appreciation of art and their developing ability to produce their own pictures. She discusses the main influences on children's picture-making, including the popular media, adults' examples and other children's pictures. As well as discussing the artistic development of typically developing children, the book also includes a discussion of children with intellectual disabilities and those with a talent for art, some of whom are children with autism. We tend to think of pictures as a strictly visual medium, but the section on blind children's ability to recognise pictures challenges this assumption. Cox evaluates the way that various professional groups use children's pictures, for example to aid recall of past events. Finally, she discusses the art curricula in different countries and different educational philosophies and suggests ways in which these different approaches could be evaluated.
1. Introduction
2. Children's understanding of the representational nature of pictures
3. Children's appreciation
4. Children's early mark-making
5. Being realistic
6. The spatial organisation of the picture
7. Children's ability to depict expressions of emotion
8. The development of children's pictures and the history of art
9. Artistic development in special populations
10. Cultural influences on children's artwork
11. Professionals' use of children's drawings
12. Children's art and education
13. Picturing the future
Appendix: Theories of visual perception and the perception of pictures
References.
Subject Areas: Clinical psychology [MMJ], Psychiatry [MMH], Health psychology [MBNH9], Child & developmental psychology [JMC]