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Aesthetic Judgment and Visual Complexity: A Student Art Education Experiment

Updated: Apr 4

This project is part of the SMartS project, which promotes inquiry-based and interdisciplinary learning in schools (SMArtE method) and contributes to international research in art education.


INTRODUCTION

This project explores how different levels of visual complexity influence aesthetic judgment, investigating how people perceive and evaluate images based on their structural characteristics. Developed within the SMArtE method (Scientific Method in Art Education), the study applies an inquiry-based approach to analyze the relationship between complexity, perception and beauty.

 

RESEARCH QUESTION

How does visual complexity influence aesthetic judgment?

Do people prefer simple or complex images, and under what conditions?

 

METHOD

Students observed and evaluated images with different levels of complexity, ranging from simple and regular patterns to more complex and irregular compositions. They were asked to describe their preferences and justify their aesthetic judgments.

The experiment focused on comparing responses across different types of visual structures, analyzing how complexity affects perception.


images with different levels of visual complexity in art education experiment

student analysis of simple and complex visual patterns

RESULTS

The results showed that aesthetic judgment varies depending on the level of complexity. Simple images were often perceived as clear and harmonious, while more complex images were associated with richness, interest and depth.

Preferences differed among students, suggesting that aesthetic evaluation is influenced by individual perception and interpretative strategies.

 

DISCUSSION

The findings highlight that aesthetic judgment is not fixed, but depends on the interaction between simplicity and complexity. Both extremes can generate aesthetic value, depending on context and perception.

This approach allows students to reflect on how visual structure influences interpretation and emotional response.

 

CONCLUSION

This project demonstrates how the scientific method can be applied to the study of aesthetic judgment in art education, transforming subjective evaluation into a structured investigation.

By analyzing visual complexity, students develop critical awareness of how perception and interpretation shape aesthetic experience.


Explore more student projects based on the scientific method in art education (click on the link):


 
 
 

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