Aesthetic value refers to how beautiful or pleasing something is to the senses, especially in art or design. It is a measure of the visual or overall appeal of something, based on its appearance or qualities.
Full definition
The fact that surfaces themselves have
aesthetic value in paintings sets painting apart from, say, digital work.
The key design elements that define the character line of the exterior, including the radiator grille and headlamps, were created to achieve the
highest aesthetic value possible.
«It's important that everything has
great aesthetic value so that when you walk into a room there is a sense of unexpected delight,» says the owner.
The most teachers can do is
make aesthetic value present; whether or not it is apparent to the study relies on other factors.
Though aesthetic values such as creativity and ingenuity comprise an important part of being fully human, on their own they are sorely lacking.
Rather than push the genetic envelope to weird extremes for
perceived aesthetic value, we treat genetic health as a true priority.
The question on everyone's lips coming up to launch was whether this «gimmick» would provide anything more than
simple aesthetic value to the overall experience.
Called upon to create custom storefront and panel wall systems to withstand proper wind loads, dead loads, and snow loads while maintaining
intended aesthetic value.
Moreover, rather than being bulky, this power bank is quite slim which serves to be a source of convenience while
adding aesthetic value to the product.
The high
aesthetic values of returning director Shekhar Kapur's 1998 historical drama are in tact here, and screenwriters William Nicholson and the returning Michael Hirst continue to make history more accessible to the masses by focusing on conspiracies, unrequited and jealous love, and wartime politics.
This can be a common games platform (even in the 80's, games magazines succeeded primarily by being about one kind of microcomputer), or shared
aesthetic values for play, or just shared values for talking about the practices of play.
It is hilarious if you know anything about dog breed and the focus
on aesthetic values placed on a dog, then you would quickly know that most breeds are not born with no tails or have erect ears.
Onitron case for your iPhone X also uses the popular carbon fiber texture to add
aesthetic value as well as protective measures to your phone.
Productive green roofs combine food production with ecological sustainability, such as reduced rainwater run - off, temperature benefits such as potential reduction of heating and cooling requirements (resulting in reduced emissions), biodiversity,
improved aesthetic value and air quality.
Creatures capable of self - reflectively
enjoying aesthetic values contribute richer, more diverse experiences than simpler creatures.
Collectible: Something
with aesthetic value but no cash flows, and no function as a medium of exchange.
In it he stresses the
potential aesthetic value of large paintings in an architectural environment, a new social space, «where people work or gather together.»
The focus of the collection was one way to ask when and why once did it come to pass long ago so long ago that I would become an artist, and how did this original moment mingle with the original moment of developing other more serious personal bad misdemeanors, although in fact coming from an environment where such
aesthetic values did not play any role, instead everything was perfect to develop a good person whose life duration is defined by good events.
It is apparent in an art which is capable of turning even Campbell soup - cans into objects of artistic representation (Warhol), or in a music which
discovers aesthetic value in common noises and in listening to silence (Cage), or in a photography which captures the beauty of doorknobs and cracked walls, driftwood and wrinkled faces.
It has been noted in the cybernetic analysis of music that this orchestrated balance between pattern and spontaneity offers «the highest degree of
aesthetic value attainable» (CO 203).
Because, for Whitehead, those experienced values are
essentially aesthetic values, this radical empiricism is aesthetic in orientation, and it can lead, in turn, to a developed, empirical aesthetic.15
Religion, says Ward in his lecture, «seeks axiological explanation [ie an explanation of the universe in terms of moral and
aesthetic values] and is grounded in existential self - understanding.
Similarly, Madden and Hare suggest that Whitehead's God is willing to pay any amount in moral and physical evil to
gain aesthetic value...» (ECG 124).
Above all,
aesthetic value implies the transformation of contradictions into contrasts that arouse a fullness and intensity of feeling, a sense of beauty, in those who experience the aesthetic object.
If there's one thing many people fail to mention about moving to a new house, buying a new house, or even renting a new place by yourself, it's that the livability of a place goes far beyond the
immediate aesthetic value of the place.
Although the interior is quite bland, the performance and reliability far outweigh the lack in
interior aesthetic value.
I spoke of the «real» mathematics of Fermat and other great mathematicians, the mathematics which has
permanent aesthetic value, as for example the best Greek mathematics has, the mathematics which is eternal because the best of it may, like the best literature, continue to cause intense emotional satisfaction to thousands of people after thousands of years.
Dear Sir: I've always supposed that artists were allowed to paint however - whatever they pleased and to do whatever they please with their work — or not to give, sell, lend, allow reproduction, rework, destroy, repair, or exhibit it... Rauschenberg's decision was part of a solution of differences of opinion between him and me over commercial and
aesthetic values relating to that work.
Given that African artifacts, whether originals or replicas have been used as interior design elements for decades, Harrison is rightly suspicious of
how aesthetic value and supposed scarcity can paradoxically both exalt and trivialize an object.
The series is printed as archival inkjet on highly textured watercolour paper giving the works a painterly style reminiscent of early Japanese watercolours and a tactile quality that harks back to
Pictorialist aesthetic values.
Phrases with «aesthetic value»