This paper examines the structural transformation of consciousness that occurs when an individual stands before an artwork and begins to encounter their own inner state. Before conscious recognition takes hold, the inner world exists as a layered, undifferentiated field — not absent, but without orientation. The act of sustained aesthetic encounter initiates a phenomenological reversal: consciousness turns back upon itself not through deliberate effort, but through the gradual release of its outward momentum.Drawing on Husserl's account of pre-predicative experience, Merleau-Ponty's analysis of pre-reflective bodily consciousness, and Noë's concept of aesthetic arrest, this paper argues that artworks function not as objects of interpretation but as conditions of presence — structural grounds upon which self-aware perception can emerge. Darkness, in this account, is not a deficiency to be overcome but a necessary phenomenological condition that preserves the density of inner experience before it is fragmented into language and concept.The paper traces five structural moments: the invisible place of pre-reflective suspension, the density of darkness, the turning of consciousness toward itself, the artwork as ground of presence, and the altered temporality of return. Together, these moments describe a form of self-awareness that does not arise from interpretation but from the cessation of its urgency.
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Daedo JUN
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Daedo JUN (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a02c380ce8c8c81e9640d87 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20107872