Author:
Mikuni Jan,Spee Blanca T. M.,Forlani Gaia,Leder Helmut,Scharnowski Frank,Nakamura Koyo,Watanabe Katsumi,Kawabata Hideaki,Pelowski Matthew,Steyrl David
Abstract
AbstractIn empirical art research, understanding how viewers judge visual artworks as beautiful is often explored through the study of attributes—specific inherent characteristics or artwork features such as color, complexity, and emotional expressiveness. These attributes form the basis for subjective evaluations, including the judgment of beauty. Building on this conceptual framework, our study examines the beauty judgments of 54 Western artworks made by native Japanese and German speakers, utilizing an extreme randomized trees model—a data-driven machine learning approach—to investigate cross-cultural differences in evaluation behavior. Our analysis of 17 attributes revealed that visual harmony, color variety, valence, and complexity significantly influenced beauty judgments across both cultural cohorts. Notably, preferences for complexity diverged significantly: while the native Japanese speakers found simpler artworks as more beautiful, the native German speakers evaluated more complex artworks as more beautiful. Further cultural distinctions were observed: for the native German speakers, emotional expressiveness was a significant factor, whereas for the native Japanese speakers, attributes such as brushwork, color world, and saturation were more impactful. Our findings illuminate the nuanced role that cultural context plays in shaping aesthetic judgments and demonstrate the utility of machine learning in unravelling these complex dynamics. This research not only advances our understanding of how beauty is judged in visual art—considering self-evaluated attributes—across different cultures but also underscores the potential of machine learning to enhance our comprehension of the aesthetic evaluation of visual artworks.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference67 articles.
1. Jacobsen, T., Buchta, K., Köhler, M. & Schröger, E. The primacy of beauty in judging the aesthetics of objects. Psychol Rep 94, 1253–1260 (2004).
2. Baumgarten, AG. Aesthetica. 1st ed. (1750). Olms Verlag G, editor. (1970).
3. Kant I. Critique of Judgment. 1st ed. (1790). Hackett Publishing Company, editor. (1987).
4. Dissanayake, E. What Is Art For. Washington University Press. (2015).
5. Dissanayake, E. Homo aestheticus: Where art comes from and why? Washington Press Uni. (2001).