Artful Terms: A Study on Aesthetic Word Usage for Visual Art versus Film and Music
Despite the importance of the arts in human life, psychologists still know relatively little about what characterises their experience for the recipient. The current research approaches this problem by studying people's word usage in aesthetics, with a focus on three important art forms: visual...
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2012-06-01
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Series: | i-Perception |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1068/i0511aap |
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doaj-7a644208025a4b0dbcfdc0bf2c2d310e2020-11-25T03:45:05ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952012-06-01310.1068/i0511aap10.1068_i0511aapArtful Terms: A Study on Aesthetic Word Usage for Visual Art versus Film and MusicM Dorothee AugustinClaus-Christian CarbonJohan WagemansDespite the importance of the arts in human life, psychologists still know relatively little about what characterises their experience for the recipient. The current research approaches this problem by studying people's word usage in aesthetics, with a focus on three important art forms: visual art, film, and music. The starting point was a list of 77 words known to be useful to describe aesthetic impressions of visual art (Augustin et al 2012, Acta Psychologica 139 187–201). Focusing on ratings of likelihood of use, we examined to what extent word usage in aesthetic descriptions of visual art can be generalised to film and music. The results support the claim of an interplay of generality and specificity in aesthetic word usage. Terms with equal likelihood of use for all art forms included beautiful, wonderful, and terms denoting originality. Importantly, emotion-related words received higher ratings for film and music than for visual art. To our knowledge this is direct evidence that aesthetic experiences of visual art may be less affectively loaded than, for example, experiences of music. The results render important information about aesthetic word usage in the realm of the arts and may serve as a starting point to develop tailored measurement instruments for different art forms.https://doi.org/10.1068/i0511aap |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
M Dorothee Augustin Claus-Christian Carbon Johan Wagemans |
spellingShingle |
M Dorothee Augustin Claus-Christian Carbon Johan Wagemans Artful Terms: A Study on Aesthetic Word Usage for Visual Art versus Film and Music i-Perception |
author_facet |
M Dorothee Augustin Claus-Christian Carbon Johan Wagemans |
author_sort |
M Dorothee Augustin |
title |
Artful Terms: A Study on Aesthetic Word Usage for Visual Art versus Film and Music |
title_short |
Artful Terms: A Study on Aesthetic Word Usage for Visual Art versus Film and Music |
title_full |
Artful Terms: A Study on Aesthetic Word Usage for Visual Art versus Film and Music |
title_fullStr |
Artful Terms: A Study on Aesthetic Word Usage for Visual Art versus Film and Music |
title_full_unstemmed |
Artful Terms: A Study on Aesthetic Word Usage for Visual Art versus Film and Music |
title_sort |
artful terms: a study on aesthetic word usage for visual art versus film and music |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
i-Perception |
issn |
2041-6695 |
publishDate |
2012-06-01 |
description |
Despite the importance of the arts in human life, psychologists still know relatively little about what characterises their experience for the recipient. The current research approaches this problem by studying people's word usage in aesthetics, with a focus on three important art forms: visual art, film, and music. The starting point was a list of 77 words known to be useful to describe aesthetic impressions of visual art (Augustin et al 2012, Acta Psychologica 139 187–201). Focusing on ratings of likelihood of use, we examined to what extent word usage in aesthetic descriptions of visual art can be generalised to film and music. The results support the claim of an interplay of generality and specificity in aesthetic word usage. Terms with equal likelihood of use for all art forms included beautiful, wonderful, and terms denoting originality. Importantly, emotion-related words received higher ratings for film and music than for visual art. To our knowledge this is direct evidence that aesthetic experiences of visual art may be less affectively loaded than, for example, experiences of music. The results render important information about aesthetic word usage in the realm of the arts and may serve as a starting point to develop tailored measurement instruments for different art forms. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1068/i0511aap |
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