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The British Journal of Aesthetics 2002 42(3):259-278; doi:10.1093/bjaesthetics/42.3.259
© 2002 by British Society of Aesthetics
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Three Depictive Views Defended

John Dilworth1

1 Department of Philosophy, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI 49008, USA. Email: dilworth{at}wmich.edu

I defend a ‘twofoldness’ thesis as to the inseparability of the perception of a picture and the perception of its subject matter, making use of a recently developed ‘interpretive’ theory of pictorial representation, according to which a picture is represented by its physical vehicle, so that a picture is itself part of the representational content of the vehicle—which picture in turn interpretively represents its subject matter. I also show how Richard Wollheim's own twofoldness thesis, along with related views of his, might be vindicated by reinterpretation along similar lines, and conclude by showing that Ernst Gombrich too may be protected from some standard criticisms of his views—which views are also consistent with those of Wollheim as thus reinterpreted.


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