Graphic design beyond the visual-optic experience

This article introduces an epistemological perspective of graphic design based on a broader conception of the concept of visuality. Instead of treating vision as a cognitive fact and visuality as the condition of visibility of artifacts, phenomena that have brought to the discipline the omission of...

ver descrição completa

Na minha lista:
Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor principal: Peña Casallas, Nicolás
Formato: Online
Idioma:spa
Publicado em: Universidad Nacional de Colombia - Sede Bogotá - Facultad de Artes - Instituto de Investigaciones Hábitat, Ciudad & Territorio 2020
Acesso em linha:https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/bitacora/article/view/81512
Tags: Adicionar Tag
Sem tags, seja o primeiro a adicionar uma tag!
Descrição
Resumo:This article introduces an epistemological perspective of graphic design based on a broader conception of the concept of visuality. Instead of treating vision as a cognitive fact and visuality as the condition of visibility of artifacts, phenomena that have brought to the discipline the omission of the body and the interest in the object, the current text proposes to understand, on the basis of the theoretical approaches of the visual culture studies, hermeneutics and phenomenology, the act of seeing as a fact traversed by all senses, accompanied by an intentionality and a constructed nature, which depends on the body and the otherness but not on objectivity. By revealing graphic design as an experience beyond visual-optics, the body is vivified as the genesis of the creative experience as well as the semiosis of the designed artifacts, the emphasis of the visual artifact is transferred to the interdependent relationship between the subject and what is seen, and the practice in the field is consolidated as an hermeneutic exercise, aspects that a posteriori seek to interrogate the ways of doing, teaching and analyzing the discipline.