Article
Concept of Aesthetics
OVERVIEW
Aesthetics is defined as an appreciation for beauty and a feeling of wonder. Teachers can help
develop children’s aesthetic senses by involving them in the arts through introduction to works
of art, music, dance, and literature. Children’s aesthetic sensibilities are enhanced by allowing
them to explore their environment in a manner that encourages divergent thinking. In discussing
art with children, basic elements such as line, color, form, space, and design are all appropriate.
Teachers can create aesthetic opportunities in the classroom by providing children with
materials, supplies, room décor, objects, books, visiting artists, and varied activities to stimulate
their aesthetic sense.
There are three basic ways to provide young children with developmentally appropriate
aesthetic experiences in the early childhood program:
Provide many opportunities to create art.
Provide many opportunities to look at and talk about art.
Help children become aware of art in their everyday lives.
Developing children’s aesthetic sensitivity is important because it improves the quality of their
learning and encourages the creative process.
KEY TERMS
aesthetic development
—
Teaching young children to appreciate art through everyday
experiences, play, and conversations
aesthetic experiences
—
Experiences involving an appreciation of the beauty of nature, the
rhythm and imagery of music or poetry, or the qualities of works of art.
aesthetic learning
—
Joining what one thinks with what one feels
Aesthetics Movement
—
Movement in the world beginning in early 1800 and lasting the
decade, emphasizing the “science of the beautiful” or the “philosophy of taste.”
aesthetics
—
An appreciation for beauty and a feeling of wonder. It is a sensibility that uses the
imagination as well as the five senses.
aesthetic sense —
One’s own specific taste or preference.
art appreciation
— Seeing and appreciating good artwork; learning to look at and learning to
create visual arts
art elements
—
Basic factors of art that can be used to describe art. These elements include
color, line, form or shape, space, and design.
balance —
The principle of design that deals with visual weight in a work of art
color/hue —
The color name
pattern —
When a particular shape, color, or motif is repeated in a rhythmic way
intensity —
The varied color when a hue’s complementary color, the color opposite it on the
color wheel, is added to the original color
language of art —
Expansion of the language of the early childhood classroom.
The words of
the language are the elements of art.
line —
A continuous mark on a surface
multicultural aesthetics —
A worldview of art which honors heritage, community, and tradition
multimedia artwork —
Integration of art such as walk-in sculpture environments; mixes of live
dance and films; and art exhibitions with drama, where actors move into the audience to engage
in the drama
primary colors —
Red, blue, and yellow
secondary colors —
Orange, violet (purple), and green
sensory awareness —
Helping children to focus on the variations and contrasts in the
environment
shape/form —
Terms used to describe the contours of enclosed spaces in art
tertiary colors —
Red-violet, red-orange, blue-violet, blue-green, yellow-orange, and yellow-
green
unity —
The feeling of wholeness or oneness in an artwork that is accomplished using the
elements and principles of art
value —
The relative lightness or darkness of a hu