Saturday, October 31, 2015

Visual Arguments

For centuries, Artists and images have been often glamorized and studied throughout human history. Historians attempt to interpret and learn from the remarkable talents demonstrated by Renaissance Artists such as Michelangelo, Raphael, and Donatello. We can learn how images influence wars by looking at Nazi propaganda during World War II, and the oppression of African-Americans throughout American history. Many paintings and artistic imagery have been carved in human history, and it can help us understand the affects that images can have to influence and argue a social agenda. 

David Fleming rejects the idea that images cannot argue because images do not have both statement and proof. He also stats that pictures “lack the internal linear arrangement that characterizes verbal discourse” and also lacks a two-sided proposition of an argument. I on the other hand, believe images, especially art, can not only argue but also persuade, reflect and influence society.

An argument, based on its definition, is a reasoned attempt to convince the audience to accept a particular point of view about a debatable topic (being two-sided). In order to first develop an argument, communicating a premise is necessary. Artists communicate this through their work in several ways.

There are many reasons why artists create. Some feel that it is a way for them to relax and make something that they find beautiful. Some find art as an escape from pressure or a way to deal with stress. Others find it as a way to convey a certain feeling or idea. In other words, artists can convey an idea through their own artistic work of visual communication. Artists can express society’s ideologies or their own ideas through their own interpretation. Nonetheless, artists can manifest images to state a premise (and sometimes conclusion) and its up to the audience to interpret what the artist is revealing.


Not only do images create statements of a claim, but also indirectly stat proofs of that argument. Humans have the ability to interpret, analyze, and make rationale decisions. Helen Keller still had the ability to interpret the world around her even though she was limited by being both blind and deaf. This is a great example of how humans can interpret and rationalize the world around them even without verbal and visual communication. It is up to the audience to interpret an image’s statement and it’s proof. Neither words nor images do this alone. It’s within the viewer’s power to understand and interpret through our own analysis of what those words or images mean.

Christian Boehm