Abstract Many galleries and museums enforce a silent code: do not touch. This quiet injunction enshrines a deeper cultural bias–that art belongs primarily to the eyes. But our bodies know otherwise. The skin, our largest organ, perceives the warmth of a surface, the grain of a texture, the weight of an object, while our hands are fluent in the contours of shape and scale. Touch is our earliest language and our most expansive sense. It connects us to memory, to sensations of the past, and to a lineage of feeling our way through the world. It is inherently relational, for haptic perception requires contact. Yet in most cultural spaces, touch remains exiled from aesthetic experience. In disability culture, touch has been reclaimed as a mode of knowing, feeling, and accessing the world. Disabled artists and curators have developed creative access practices—tactile tours, audio description, and other forms of multisensory engagement—not as supplemental accommodations, but as aesthetic forms in their own right. By sketching a new dimension of language—a lexicon of sensation—these interventions advance a broader project: one in which art is not only seen or heard, but felt.
Chang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.