4.5 Article

The Effect of Sadness on Visual Artistic Creativity in Non-Artists

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci13010149

Keywords

mood induction; drawing; creativity; divergent thinking; emotion; sadness; valence; music

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This study investigated the effects of mood states on artistic creativity and found that participants in a negative mood group had higher scores in depression and lower scores in vigour compared to the other two groups. However, their artistic drawings were rated as more creative and emotional by independent judges. These findings suggest that negative mood states may enhance artistic creativity.
The study of the relationships between mood and creativity is long-standing. In this study, the effects of mood states on artistic creativity were investigated in ninety non-artist participants. Mood states were induced by instructing participants to listen to self-selected happy, sad, or neutral music for ten minutes. Then, all participants were asked to make two artistic drawings. To check for mood manipulation, the Profile of Mood States (POMS) was administered before and after listening to the self-selected music. After the mood induction, the negative group reported higher scores than the other two groups in the 'depression' subscale and lower scores than the other two groups in the 'vigour' subscale of the POMS; the positive mood group showed more vigour than the negative mood group. Yet, three independent judges assigned higher ratings of creativity and emotionality to the drawings produced by participants in the negative mood group than drawings produced by participants in the other two groups. These results confirmed that specific negative mood states (e.g., sadness) positively affect artistic creativity, probably because participants are more likely to engage in mood-repairing. Limitations and future research directions are presented.

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