The Visual Culture can be termed as new because it focuses on visual as something which contests and creates meanings. Visual culture developed with picture theory, and as a result of inadequate means available for analyzing the changes world; visual culture can be referred to as a crisis of visual overload and information on the everyday life. Television has made the Western society dumb, and has pointed universities for keeping the students away from books; involving them in the visual pleasure obtained from television and other sources of visual media.
Aesthetics and Visual Culture
Introduction
Visual arts describe those skills that are visible to the human eye, including drawing, painting, sculpture, architecture, graphic art, decoration, and later photography and film. The visual arts are the expression of human creativity, visualization of the way we see life and the world around us. Standing midway between what is perceived and what is believed, they stem from a need to make sense of human existence and explain it, both internally and externally. Changes in the aesthetic style of images do more than simply chart the history of art and visual culture; they can also indicate the development of different kinds of world views (Currie, 1991).
One of the earliest forms of communication, the visual arts forms a language through which humans speak about the world. This language is tempered by the society from which it springs, conditioned by its beliefs, its rituals, and its social codes. Pablo Picasso's painting Guernica (1937), for example, can be fully understood only when related to the environment of the Spanish civil war (1936-1939). It seems clear that some form of aesthetic appreciation is a universal experience of human nature. Indeed, whereas tastes and preferences might be influenced by factors such as culture or prior subjective experiences an aesthetic response mechanism appears to be hardwired in the human brain (Currie, 1991).
It is believed that the history of the visual arts begins with sculpture, the creation of a three-dimensional form. One of the earliest examples was the Lion-Human of Hohlenstein-Stadel, Germany (c. 30,000 BCE), a fantastic form carved from mammoth ivory. Half human and half beast, it marks the meeting of external reality with inmost reality, and it is at this juncture that visual art occurs.
Thesis Statement
In order to undertand the forms of visual arts and its developments in various forms
Aesthetics
The decorative arts and aesthetics have always served both an ornamental and a functional purpose. Originating with the daubing of the body, it was an impulse that led to the fashioning of jewellery, pottery, glassware, textiles, and furniture. Some of the most important elements of the visual arts and aesthetics are drawing, the creation of an image, and painting, the application of colour to a surface. At Chauvet, in southwestern France, there are caves full of early drawings and paintings of animals (dating from 25,000 to 17,000 BCE). A visual expression of the world in which early humans lived, these pictures depict the beasts that were hunted and ...