`This is among the most subtle and carefully developed books on the
topic of depiction to have hit the philosophical world since the
great triumvirate of texts by Ernst Gombrich, Nelson Goodman, and
Richard Wollheim defined the subject for analytical audiences. If
this book finally leads to a series of puzzles about depiction that
its terms of composition do not quite work out, the book has by
that point produced such an excellent advance in the terms
according to which the topic may be discussed as to have amply
justified its aim of "theory-building."'
Daniel Herwitz, The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Summer
1999
`The book is a worthwhile addition to the philosophical literature
on pictorial representation.'
Ira Newman, Philosophical Books 39 (October 1998)
`a thorough treatment of pictorial representation that
discriminatingly covers the recent literature and makes its own
contribution to the subject. Drawing on material from recent work
in the philosophy of language and of mind, and enriching the
discussion with material in the psychology of perception and art
history, the book is a more than welcome addition to the
field.'
Anthony Savile, MIND 109, 433 January 2000
`Understanding Pictures has been a pleasure to read, full of riches
and agreeably good humoured. Among other things it shows how
pictures enlarge our recognitional capacities, it discusses various
non-basic ways in which pictures refer to their sources, it offers
extended treatment of fictional pictures and provides original
reflection on what makes one picture a variation of another. I have
learnt a good deal from it and confidently expect it to become
a
part of the standard literature of this absorbing topic.'
Anthony Savile, MIND
`Understanding Pictures is a rich, interesting and suggestive book
... Those seriously interested in depiction will certainly find
much here to ponder.'
Robert Hopkins, British Journal of Aesthetics, vol.37 no.3,
1997
... Lopes writes in a very engaging and accessible way, allowing of
course for the inevitably abstruse elements that any serious
intellectual work must have. ... those much less versed than he can
expect to come away with a better understanding of what he shows to
be an interesting subject. This is philosophical writing of a very
high order, to my mind. Lopes is a master of simple, intriguing and
compelling arguments./ Lopes is to be congratulated on
producing
a first-class work in philosophical aesthetics. Clarendon is also
to be congratulated on an excellent production. Clear and simple
typography is matched by the convenience of footnotes at the bottom
of
the page, and not a single misprint that I could spot./ Gordon
Graham, University of Aberdeen, The Philosophical Quarterly, April
1999.
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