Stylish Notes on Art and Culture :: Rorschach




Today is Swiss Psychologist Hermann Rorschach's Birthday. Had he still been alive he would have been 129 years old. He is perhaps most famous for creating The Rorschach test, also knows as "The Ink Blot test." As a child he was known as “Klecks,” thanks to his love of klecksography – the art of turning inkblots into recognisable images. This childhood hobby was something that would later shape his career as a psychiatrist. This progressive test, a series of 10 inkblots, was reportedly designed to reflect unconscious parts of the personality. The psychologist would gain insight to his patients' thought processes as they reported to him what objects or figures they saw in each picture. 

According to the Independent " Rorschach began to wonder why some people have completely different responses to the same inkblots paintings, so he started showing the artworks to children in order to analyse their wildly varying responses. After years of conducting these tests while working as an assistant director at the regional psychiatric hospital in Herisau, Rorschach wrote Psychodiagnostik – a book describing how inkblot tests can be effectively used in psychoanalysis. Rorschach died less than a year after writing the ground-breaking work, killed by peritonitis brought on by a ruptured appendix. He was 37."

Each of the test's ten ink blots is bilaterally symmetrical, created that way on purpose, an important characteristic that is also echoed in Warhol's Rorschach paintings. In the mid 1980s Pop Icon Andy Warhol created a series of paintings to based on these well known inkblot tests. His were never meant to explore the deep consciousness of the viewer, and were meant simply as foray into abstract art. But his paintings became less about abstraction for the sake of abstraction, and more about what the viewer interpreted.






They're so lovely. Aren't they? I love Rorschach paintings. I think the one directly above looks like one of Georgia O'Keefe's skulls. Don't you? I wonder what this says of me? What do you see?

When my children were young we did a lot of Rorschach paintings. They're fun and so simple. We had such fun deciphering the images. For more on this click here.

Jessica

Rorschach in art: Meet Alexander Warhol

Do you see what I see?

Two kissing sea horses?
or
The bodice of a designer dress?

What do you see?




Rorschach painting, Andy Warhol, 1984

Leave it to Andy Warhol to take the Rorschach test and turn it into a series of paintings. Leave it to Andy to command high prices for these simple, simplistic paintings. Hardly works of art, really. Or were they? Are they?

Analyze this!

In 1984, Warhol created this series specifically so that the paintings could be analyzed. "I was trying to do these to actually read into them and write about them, but I never really had the time to do that. So I was going to hire somebody to read into them, to pretend it was me, so that they'd be a little more . . . interesting."*

A bit bizarre, no?

Well, Rorschach painting is fun and entertaining. Kids of all ages love it. They love to see what a few strategically dots and smears will turn into. Alexander loves to paint, but easily gets frustrated because he can't draw anything decipherable and he tires easily of painting his random abstract object.

This afternoon he wanted to paint. He painted one picture and got bored. I always spend 20 minutes setting the art supplies up, only to have them used for less than 5 minutes. I then remembered the "Butterfly Painting" that Rebecca and I used to do when she was little. We called this "Butterfly Painting" because she always though her creations looked like colorful butterflies.



Artist's Supplies...
Alexander used these today, a Christmas gift from his aunt Jennifer.






Alexander's first painting...
Poodle in a Tutu?







Two Dancing Hens





Do you see what I see?
A Butterfly? Or Bumblebee?





What is it that you see?




The Artist at Work...





Lilly Pulitzer's Mask for the Pink and Green Masquerade Ball?
Wouldn't it be grand?
Or,
As Alexander sees it
An Alien Mask!

The next time your kids are bored and you are looking for something to do, grab some paints, grab some brushes, even glitter glue. Make a pattern, or pour it randomly on a piece of paper, white or colored, then gently fold it in half, and gently press down to smooth out the paint, open it up and voila!

What kind of fun will you make today? Will you see what I see?


(When your done your children will naturally be starving after their creations. You'll have to try Rebecca's Fruit Smoothies. They are absolutely divine!)