'Review from previous edition 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.'Daniel Herwitz, The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism'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 apart 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'Lopes writes in a very engaging and accessible way . 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 . [he] is to be congratulated on producing a first-class work in philosophical aesthetics.'Gordon Graham, The Philosophical Quarterly.