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State of the Art: Economic Development Through the Lens of Paintings

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  • Clément Gorin
  • Stephan Heblich
  • Yanos Zylberberg

Abstract

This paper analyzes 630,000 paintings from 1400 onward to uncover how visual art reflects its socioeconomic context. We develop a learning algorithm to predict nine basic emotions conveyed in each painting and isolate a context effect—the emotional signal shared across artworks created in the same location and year—controlling for artist, genre, and epoch-specific influences. These emotion distributions encode subtle but meaningful information about the living standards, uncertainty, or inequality characterizing the context in which the artworks were produced. We propose this emotion-based measure, derived from historical artworks, as a novel lens to examine how societies experienced major socioeconomic transformations, including climate variability, trade dynamics, technological change, shifts in knowledge production, and political transitions

Suggested Citation

  • Clément Gorin & Stephan Heblich & Yanos Zylberberg, 2025. "State of the Art: Economic Development Through the Lens of Paintings," Bristol Economics Discussion Papers 25/793, School of Economics, University of Bristol, UK.
  • Handle: RePEc:bri:uobdis:25/793
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