Arts Endowment grantee Mark Morris Dance Group’s performance of The Hard Nut, Morris’ reinvention of The Nutcracker. Photo by Peter DaSilva
Veterans and civilians perform in A Long Journey Home, a production created for Arts Endowment grantee DIAVOLO | Architecture in Motion's Veterans Project. Photo by George Simian
- See the impact of the Arts Endowment on your state, and how the agency's work in research, accessibility, and other areas has had a major impact in the arts and culture of the country. The National Endowment for the Arts is an independent federal agency that funds, promotes, and strengthens the.
- Buy Thought Regular desktop font from Scholtz Fonts on Fonts.com.
Searching for fonts that look like Thought? Look no further! Here you will find fonts that look like Thought. Use the selector above to match other fonts in the family.
Alexander Calder’s La Grande Vitesse, the initial project of the NEA’s Public Art Initiative in 1967, helped revitalize the ailing downtown in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Photo courtesy of the Grand Rapids Public Library.
National Endowment for the Arts grantee BANDALOOP’s film Crossing. Photo by Braden Mayfield
Regional arts organization New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project supported the first touring production of Descent by the art ensemble Kinetic Light. Photo by Robbie Sweeny
How to Turn Anything into Something Else (2012) by the Miss Rockaway Armada on 207 North Broad Street, part of the Mural Arts Philadelphia program, supported by the Arts Endowment. Photo by Steve Weinik, courtesy of Mural Arts Philadelphia
Minnesota's state champion Isabella Callery (Anishinaabe) became the 2019 Poetry Out Loud National Champion. Photo by James Kegley
NEA Jazz Masters Bobby Hutcherson and Kenny Barron performing at the 2012 NEA Jazz Masters Tribute Concert. Photo by Michael G. Stewart
2017 National Heritage Fellow Chilkat weaver Anna Brown Ehlers (middle) with her friend Jacqueline Pata (left) and daughter Marie Ehlers (right) displaying her art form at the concert. Photo by Tom Pich
The Alliance for Media Arts + Culture’s Arts2Work, an Arts Endowment grantee, is the first federally registered national apprenticeship program in media arts and creative technologies. Photo by Wide Angle Youth Media, with Sakinah Bowman
Supporting the Arts in Your Community
Grants
The Artsfont For Thought Meditation
Impact
Violinist and Social Entrepreneur Aaron Dworkin
Chairman's Corner
A weekly podcast with Chairman Mary Anne Carter on issues
in the arts community. Listen
Some Facts about the National Endowment for the Arts
Percentage of Arts Endowment funding is awarded directly to the states through their state and regional agencies, reaching millions more people in thousands of communities.
Amount leveraged by private and other public funds for every $1 of direct Arts Endowment funding.
Direct grant-matching support for Arts Endowment projects each year.
Some Facts about the National Endowment for the Arts
Recommended for grant awards annually.
Percentage of Arts Endowment grants take place in high-poverty neighborhoods.
Percentage of Arts Endowment grants reach low-income audiences of underserved populations.
Some Facts from the National Endowment for the Arts
Amount the arts and cultural industries contribute to the U.S. economy.
Percentage of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product is accounted for by arts and cultural industries.
Americans work in the arts and cultural industries.
Some Facts about the National Endowment for the Arts
The Arts Endowment’s annual cost to each American.
The Arts Endowment’s percentage of the federal budget.
Amount awarded by the Arts Endowment since its beginning in 1965.
Some Facts about the National Endowment for the Arts
Attend a live arts event supported by the Arts Endowment annually.
Concerts, readings, and performances are supported annually.
Exhibitions are supported annually as well.
Some Facts from the National Endowment for the Arts
The state's residents attend live performing arts events at a higher rate than U.S. adults as a whole—with 62 percent for North Dakota residents versus 48.5 percent of U.S. adults.
Outperforms the national rate of attending art exhibits, with 33.5 percent of this state’s residents doing this activity versus 23 percent of Americans overall.
Their literary reading rates (upwards of 60 percent) far exceed the U.S. as a whole (44 percent).
Thoughtography, also called projected thermography,psychic photography,nengraphy, and nensha(Japanese: 念写), is the claimed ability to 'burn' images from one's mind onto surfaces such as photographic film by psychic means.[1] While the term 'thoughtography' has been in the English lexicon since 1913, the more recent term 'projected thermography' is a neologism popularized in the 2002 U.S. film The Ring, a remake of the 1998 Japanese horror film Ring.[2]
History[edit]
Thoughtography (also known as psychic photography) first emerged in the late 19th century due to the influence of spirit photography.[1] Thoughtography has no connection with Spiritualism, which distinguishes it from spirit photography.[3] One of the first books to mention 'psychic photography' was the book The New Photography (1896) by Arthur Brunel Chatwood. In the book Chatwood described experiments where the 'image of objects on the retina of the human eye might so affect it that a photograph could be produced by looking at a sensitive plate.'[4] The book was criticized in a review in Nature.[5]
The psychical researcher Hereward Carrington in his book Modern Psychical Phenomena (1919) wrote that many psychic photographs were revealed to be fraudulent produced by substitution and manipulation of the plates, double-printing, double-exposure and chemical screens. However, Carrington also stated he believed some of the photographs to be genuine.[6] The term 'thoughtography' was first introduced at the beginning of the twentieth century by Tomokichi Fukurai.[3]
Skeptics, among them professional photographers, consider psychic photographs to be faked or the result of flaws in the camera or film, exposures, film-processing errors, lens flares, flash reflections or chemical reactions.[7][8][9][10]
Claims[edit]
Tomokichi Fukurai[edit]
Around 1910, during a period of interest in Spiritualism in Japan, Tomokichi Fukurai, an assistant professor of psychology at Tokyo University began pursuing parapsychology experiments using Chizuko Mifune, Ikuko Nagao, and others as subjects. Fukurai published results of experiments with Nagao that alleged she was capable of telepathically imprinting images on photo plates, which he called nensha. When journalists found irregularities, Nagao's credibility was attacked, and there was speculation that her later illness and death was caused by distress over criticism.[11] In 1913, Fukurai published Clairvoyance and Thoughtography. The book was criticized for a lack of scientific approach and his work disparaged by the university and his colleagues. Fukurai eventually resigned in 1913.[12]
Eva Carrière[edit]
In the early 20th century the psychical researcher Albert von Schrenck-Notzing investigated the medium Eva Carrière and claimed her ectoplasm 'materializations' were the result of 'ideoplasty' in which the medium could form images onto ectoplasm from her mind.[13] Schrenck-Notzing published the book Phenomena of Materialisation (1923) which included photographs of the ectoplasm. Critics pointed out the photographs of the ectoplasm revealed marks of magazine cut-outs, pins and a piece of string.[14] Schrenck-Notzing admitted that on several occasions Carrière deceptively smuggled pins into the séance room.[14] The magician Carlos María de Heredia replicated the ectoplasm of Carrière using a comb, gauze and a handkerchief.[14]
Donald West wrote that the ectoplasm of Carrière was fake and was made of cut-out paper faces from newspapers and magazines on which fold marks could sometimes be seen from the photographs. A photograph of Carrière taken from the back of the ectoplasm face revealed it to be made from a magazine cut out with the letters 'Le Miro'. The two-dimensional face had been clipped from the French magazine Le Miroir.[15] Back issues of the magazine also matched some of Carrière's ectoplasm faces.[16] Cut out faces that she used included Woodrow Wilson, King Ferdinand of Bulgaria, French president Raymond Poincaré and the actress Mona Delza.[8]:520
After Schrenck-Notzing discovered Carrière had taken her ectoplasm faces from the magazine he defended her by claiming she had read the magazine but her memory had recalled the images and they had materialized into the ectoplasm.[13] Schrenck-Notzing was described as credulous.[14]Joseph McCabe wrote 'In Germany and Austria, Baron von Schrenck-Notzing is the laughing-stock of his medical colleagues.'[17]
Ted Serios[edit]
In the 1960s, it was claimed that Chicago resident Ted Serios, a hotel bellhop in his late forties, used psychokinetic powers to produce images on Polaroid instant film.[18] Serios's psychic claims were bolstered by the endorsement of a Denver-based psychiatrist, Jule Eisenbud (1908–1999), who wrote a book, The World of Ted Serios: 'Thoughtographic' Studies of an Extraordinary Mind (1967), arguing that Serios's purported psychic abilities were genuine.[19] However, professional photographers and skeptics found that Serios was employing simple sleight of hand.[20][21]
Masuaki Kiyota[edit]
Masuaki Kiyota is a Japanese psychic who was claimed to possess psychokinetic powers.[22][7]:198 Kiyota was tested by investigators in London by Granada Television and the results were negative. It was discovered that with tight controls, Kiyota was unable to project mental images onto film. He could only achieve success when he had the film in his possession without any control for at least 2 hours.[7]:198
According to magician and skeptic James Randi 'Kiyota's Polaroid photos were apparently produced by preexposing the film, since it was noted that he made great efforts to obtain a film pack and spend time with it in private.'[23][24] In a 1984 television interview, Kiyota confessed to fraud.[25]
Uri Geller[edit]
In 1995, famed psychic Uri Geller began to use a 35 mm camera in his performances. The lens cap left on the camera, Geller would take pictures of his forehead and then have the pictures developed. Geller claimed that subsequent images had come directly from his mind.[10]:313 James Randi claimed Geller had performed the trick by using a 'handheld optical device' or by taking photographs on already exposed film.[10]:313
References[edit]
- ^ abKrauss, Rolf H. (1995). Beyond Light and Shadow: The Role of Photography in Certain Paranormal Phenomena: An Historical Survey. Munich: Nazraeli Press. p. 57. ISBN9783923922383.
- ^Lowenstein, Adam (2015). Dreaming of Cinema: Spectatorship, Surrealism, and the Age of Digital Media. Columbia University Press. pp. 124–. ISBN9780231538480. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
- ^ abChéroux, Clément (2005). The Perfect Medium: Photography and the Occult. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. p. 155. ISBN9780300111361.
- ^Arthur Brunel Chatwood. (1896). The New Photography. Downey. p. 93
- ^Norman Lockyer. (1896). Nature. Volume 53. p. 460
- ^'Modern psychical phenomena, recent researches and speculations'. Internet Archive. 2010-07-21. Retrieved 2016-12-17.
- ^ abcNickell, Joe (2005). Camera Clues: A Handbook for Photographic Investigation. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. p. 195. ISBN9780813191249.
- ^ abStein, Gordon (1996). The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal (2nd ed.). Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books. p. 517. ISBN9781573920216.
- ^Brugioni, Dino A. (1999). Photo Fakery: A History of Deception and Manipulation (1st ed.). Dulles, Virginia: Brassey's. p. 160. ISBN9781574881660.
- ^ abcCarroll, Robert Todd (2003). The Skeptic's Dictionary: A Collection of Strange Beliefs, Amusing Deceptions, and Dangerous Delusions. Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley. ISBN9780471272427. Retrieved 11 February 2017.
- ^Kristen Lacefield (1 April 2013). The Scary Screen: Media Anxiety in the Ring. Ashgate Publishing. pp. 34, 37–. ISBN9781409476191. Retrieved 11 February 2017.
Later that year Fukurai began to study another psychic, Ikuko Nagao, who possessed a talent he called 'nenagraphy' or simply nensha. Fukurai coined this term from the Japanese nen, meaning 'thought' or 'idea,' and the Greek graphein, meaning 'writing' or 'representation,' intending it to refer to the power of inscribing images directly onto photographic plates by sheer force of will. This phenomena was known among western psychical researchers as 'psychography' or 'thoughtography,' a practice that first emerged with the discovery of so-called 'N-rays' around the turn of the century.
- ^David B. Baker (13 January 2012). The Oxford Handbook of the History of Psychology: Global Perspectives. Oxford University Press. pp. 354–. ISBN9780195366556. Retrieved 11 February 2017.
- ^ abBrower, M. Brady (2010). Unruly Spirits: The Science of Psychic Phenomena in Modern France. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. p. 120. ISBN9780252077517.
- ^ abcd'Spiritism and common sense'. 2010-07-21. Retrieved 2016-12-17.
- ^West, Donald. (1954). Psychical Research Today. Chapter Séance-Room Phenomena. Duckworth. p. 49
- ^McHargue, Georgess (1972). Facts, Frauds, and Phantasms: A Survey of the Spiritualist Movement. Doubleday. p. 187. ISBN0385053053.
- ^Harris, Frank (1993). Debates on the Meaning of Life, Evolution and Spiritualism. Buffalo, New York: Prometheus Books. p. 77. ISBN9780879758288.
- ^Nickell, Joe (2010). Camera Clues: a Handbook for Photographic Investigation. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. p. 197. ISBN978-0813138282. Retrieved 11 February 2017.
Psychokinetic Photographs. In 1967 the world learned of a Chicago man with apparently remarkable powers: he could merely think of pictures and cause them to appear on photographic film -- a supposedly psychokinetic (PK) process called 'thoughtography.' The man, an often unemployed bellhop named Ted Serios, was the object of a sensational article in Life magazine and even an entire book written by Denver psychiatrist Jule Eisenbud, The World of Ted Serios. To accomplish his marvelous feat, Serios looked through a paper tube that he pressed against the camera's lens. A Polaroid model was used . . .
- ^Kripal, Jeffrey J. (2011). Authors of the Impossible: The Paranormal and the Sacred. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press. p. 285. ISBN9780226453897. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
- ^Hines, Terence (2002). Pseudoscience and the paranormal (2nd ed.). Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books. p. 77. ISBN9781573929790.
- ^''Psychic Projections' Were a Hoax - The Chronicle of Higher Education'. Chronicle.com. Retrieved 2016-12-17.
Anyone who knows anything about this issue knows that Mr. Serios was long ago exposed and thoroughly debunked as a fraud. This was done with absolute certainty by professional photographers Charlie Reynolds and David Eisendrath in the October 1967 issue of Popular Photography. Serios was observed, when he thought no one was looking, sticking pictures into his 'gizmo,' a tube he held between his head and the camera lens. That some claim he produced images without the tube, and at some distance from the camera, is easily attributed to double exposure or use of previously made exposures, followed by the fake snapping of a picture.
- ^Paul Kurtz (1985). A Skeptic's Handbook of Parapsychology. Buffalo, New York: Prometheus Books. p. 348. ISBN9780879753009.
- ^'K - Encyclopedia of Claims'. James Randi Educational Foundation. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
- ^Randi, James (1995). An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural (1st ed.). New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN0312151195.
- ^Melton, J. Gordon; Shepard, Leslie (2001). Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology (5th ed.). Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research Company. p. 865. ISBN081039488X.
Randi's point was driven home in 1984 when Masuaki Kiyota, hailed as the Japanese Uri Geller, revealed in a television interview that he had faked the phenomena that had been verified by both American and Japanese researchers.
Alt URL
Further reading[edit]
- Hereward Carrington. (1921). The Problems of Psychical Research. Dodd, Mead and Company.
The Artsfont For Thought Meaning
External links[edit]
- The Jule Eisenbud Collection on Ted Serios and Thoughtographic Photography, 1931-2001, bulk 1964-1989 at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County
- Factual Basis Behind The Ring, Ringworld.com, accessed February 23, 2006
- Mind Power or Hoax? Thoughtography, accessed February 24, 2006