The Image suggesting Tactility 

 

The touch is a cornerstone of the individual’s interaction with what they see, when we observe a surface, if there is no recognisable image then its texture is the next quality in line we notice, and often when this texture is alien to us we have the urge to touch it, to feel it, to bring it in line with an index more legible to our sensory grasp on reality. What may be of interest to our pursuit is that occasion upon which a spectator would look upon a surface and find it to have a particularly tactile quality, that is to say, by simply looking at an image of this surface the feeling of it against one’s skin is brought immediately to mind.

 

In popular culture these images can infest social media via online clickbait articles hoping to either entrance or disgust you with a compilation of images thrown at you in quick succession, each of these images shown in an attempt to evoke a physical response in the viewer. These compilations, although not explicitly advertised as such, function for the most part via a simple formula of evoking sensory experiences through memory of them. A static image alone is primarily a visual experience, the surface of which prevents it from coming into conversation with any senses other than in most cases. The exception to this rule exists when the image references a sensory experience that the viewer has already undergone, relying on the memory of this experience and the senses affected by it rather than the image’s own sensory properties in order to function in an affective manner.

 

These images display a connection with affect that is inherent to the image's ability to reference concrete phenomena. Images made from, or imitating elements of a real form can tap into the database of past experience of our encounters with forms that ressemble the one presented within the image.