DAKE, D. (2005a) Aesthetics
Theory. In: K. SMITH, S. MORIARTY, G. BARBATSIS and K. KENNEY (Eds) Handbook of
Visual Communication: Theory, Methods, and Media. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates. pp3-22.
“A verbal analysis of aesthetics only deals
with one part at a time and is therefore always incomplete in description and
understanding. In the creative design of visual messages, as well as in
creative viewing and interpretation, flexibility of structural construction is
vital. Flexibility provides for the purely perceptual apprehension of novelty,
originality, and message integrity. Ritualized, stereotyped, and repetitive
messages are not as likely to attract or sustain viewer attention. Therefore,
the message’s flexibility is crucial for discovering and imparting significant
aesthetic aspects of meaning.” (p8)
Annotation: The flexibility referred to
here is referring to an aesthetic that is the apotheosis to the ‘visual design’
attitude. The richness that visual communication can bring rests in the ability
to ensure that the design all works towards its intended outcome. The semiotic
structure will provide a lexicon of visual language to facilitate the
transmission of the intended collective message with the minimal disruption by
noise. How this is achieved should not be prescriptive and not just utilitarian,
nor should the design be homogenised into the lowest creative denominator for
the intended audience. A successful aesthetic attracts and retains attention
and focus. A poor aesthetic reduces the attention and length of time needed to perceive and interpret what
actions need to be taken. There is a difference between a simplistic (and
therefore a weak design), and a design that aids interaction because it makes
interaction simple by easily facilitating its complexity through clarity
of design.
No comments:
Post a Comment