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21 pages, 7084 KiB  
Article
Chinese Paper-Cutting Style Transfer via Vision Transformer
by Chao Wu, Yao Ren, Yuying Zhou, Ming Lou and Qing Zhang
Entropy 2025, 27(7), 754; https://doi.org/10.3390/e27070754 - 15 Jul 2025
Viewed by 311
Abstract
Style transfer technology has seen substantial attention in image synthesis, notably in applications like oil painting, digital printing, and Chinese landscape painting. However, it is often difficult to generate migrated images that retain the essence of paper-cutting art and have strong visual appeal [...] Read more.
Style transfer technology has seen substantial attention in image synthesis, notably in applications like oil painting, digital printing, and Chinese landscape painting. However, it is often difficult to generate migrated images that retain the essence of paper-cutting art and have strong visual appeal when trying to apply the unique style of Chinese paper-cutting art to style transfer. Therefore, this paper proposes a new method for Chinese paper-cutting style transformation based on the Transformer, aiming at realizing the efficient transformation of Chinese paper-cutting art styles. Specifically, the network consists of a frequency-domain mixture block and a multi-level feature contrastive learning module. The frequency-domain mixture block explores spatial and frequency-domain interaction information, integrates multiple attention windows along with frequency-domain features, preserves critical details, and enhances the effectiveness of style conversion. To further embody the symmetrical structures and hollowed hierarchical patterns intrinsic to Chinese paper-cutting, the multi-level feature contrastive learning module is designed based on a contrastive learning strategy. This module maximizes mutual information between multi-level transferred features and content features, improves the consistency of representations across different layers, and thus accentuates the unique symmetrical aesthetics and artistic expression of paper-cutting. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method outperforms existing state-of-the-art approaches in both qualitative and quantitative evaluations. Additionally, we created a Chinese paper-cutting dataset that, although modest in size, represents an important initial step towards enriching existing resources. This dataset provides valuable training data and a reference benchmark for future research in this field. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Multidisciplinary Applications)
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35 pages, 1934 KiB  
Review
Environmental Sustainability of Advanced Structures: A Descriptive and Thematic Analysis
by Sarah Elattar, Xiancun Hu, Hamed Golzad and Saeed Banihashemi
Buildings 2025, 15(12), 2027; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15122027 - 12 Jun 2025
Viewed by 781
Abstract
This systematic review explores how environmental sustainability is addressed in advanced structural systems that utilize innovative materials and technologies such as lightweight designs, adaptive mechanisms, and energy-efficient components. Despite their growing adoption, significant gaps persist across the design–construction–operation continuum, particularly concerning embodied carbon, [...] Read more.
This systematic review explores how environmental sustainability is addressed in advanced structural systems that utilize innovative materials and technologies such as lightweight designs, adaptive mechanisms, and energy-efficient components. Despite their growing adoption, significant gaps persist across the design–construction–operation continuum, particularly concerning embodied carbon, energy efficiency, material performance, and long-term durability. A total of 61 peer-reviewed studies published between 2013 and 2025 were identified from Scopus and Google Scholar using the PRISMA methodology. The review employed a dual-method approach: a descriptive analysis to examine literature outlets, publication trends, and the frequency of advanced structural topics such as lightweight systems, long-span designs, form and aesthetics, and structural safety, and a thematic analysis using NVivo 14 software, which identified ten key environmental sustainability themes—carbon emissions, thermal performance, energy efficiency, construction waste, life cycle assessment, green certifications, material use, air quality, site and land use, and green environment. While research interest is expanding, limited studies offer comprehensive assessments of Tensile Membrane Structures (TMSs) or Long Span Structures (LSSs), with key challenges including inadequate material optimization and performance under extreme conditions. This review contributes a novel synthesis of existing knowledge by combining a PRISMA-guided selection, descriptive trend analysis, and thematic coding to identify critical gaps and emerging directions, offering a structured foundation for future research and practical strategies in designing environmentally sustainable advanced structures. Full article
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27 pages, 15985 KiB  
Article
Representation of Suffering, Destruction, and Disillusion in the Art of Marcel Janco
by Alexandru Bar
Arts 2025, 14(3), 61; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14030061 - 29 May 2025
Viewed by 686
Abstract
This article examines Marcel Janco’s Holocaust drawings, positioning them within the broader discourse of Holocaust representation, trauma, and avant-garde aesthetics. Created in response to the Bucharest Pogrom of January 1941, these works resist both forensic realism and pure abstraction, instead embodying rupture, instability, [...] Read more.
This article examines Marcel Janco’s Holocaust drawings, positioning them within the broader discourse of Holocaust representation, trauma, and avant-garde aesthetics. Created in response to the Bucharest Pogrom of January 1941, these works resist both forensic realism and pure abstraction, instead embodying rupture, instability, and fragmentation. Janco’s grotesque distortions neither document events with the precision of testimony nor dissolve into conceptual erasure; rather, they enact the instability of Holocaust memory itself. This essay argues that Janco’s Holocaust works, long overshadowed by his modernist and Dadaist contributions, challenge dominant frameworks of remembrance. Through comparative analysis with artists, such as David Olère, Anselm Kiefer, and George Grosz, it situates Janco’s approach at the limits of witnessing, exploring how his figures embody violence rather than merely depict it. While Olère reconstructs genocide through forensic detail and Kiefer engages with the material traces of memory, Janco’s grotesque forms share an affinity with Grosz’s politically charged distortions—though here, fragmentation serves not as critique but as testimony. Furthermore, the study interrogates the institutional and critical neglect of these works, particularly within Israeli art history, where they clashed with the forward-looking ethos of abstraction. By foregrounding Janco’s Holocaust drawings as both aesthetic interventions and acts of historical witnessing, this article repositions them as crucial yet overlooked contributions to Holocaust visual culture—demanding recognition for their capacity to unsettle, resist closure, and insist on the incompleteness of memory. Full article
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17 pages, 1049 KiB  
Article
The Philosophical Symbolism and Spiritual Communication System of Daoist Attire—A Three-Dimensional Interpretive Framework Based on the Concept of “Dao Following Nature”
by Qiu Tan and Chufeng Yuan
Religions 2025, 16(6), 688; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16060688 - 27 May 2025
Viewed by 664
Abstract
This paper examines the philosophy of “Dao follows nature” (道法自然) and investigates how Daoist clothing transforms abstract cosmological concepts into a “wearable interface for spiritual practice” through the use of materials, colors, and patterns. By integrating symbol system analysis, material culture theory, and the [...] Read more.
This paper examines the philosophy of “Dao follows nature” (道法自然) and investigates how Daoist clothing transforms abstract cosmological concepts into a “wearable interface for spiritual practice” through the use of materials, colors, and patterns. By integrating symbol system analysis, material culture theory, and the philosophy of body practice, this study uncovers three layers of symbolic mechanisms inherent in Daoist attire. First, the materials embody the tension between “nature and humanity”, with the intentional imperfections in craftsmanship serving as a critique of technological alienation. Second, the color coding disrupts the static structure of the Five Elements system by dynamically shifting between sacred and taboo properties during rituals while simultaneously reconstructing symbolic meanings through negotiation with secular power. Third, the patterns (such as star constellations and Bagua) employ directional arrangements to transform the human body into a miniature cosmos, with dynamic designs offering a visual path for spiritual practice. This paper introduces the concept of a “dynamic practice interface”, emphasizing that the meaning of Daoist clothing is generated through the interaction of historical power, individual experience, and cosmological imagination. This research fills a critical gap in the symbolic system of Daoist art and provides a new paradigm for sustainable design and body aesthetics, framed from the perspective of “reaching the Dao through objects”. Full article
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20 pages, 4152 KiB  
Article
Embodied, Exploratory Listening in the Concert Hall
by Remy Haswell-Martin, Finn Upham, Simon Høffding and Nanette Nielsen
Behav. Sci. 2025, 15(5), 710; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15050710 - 21 May 2025
Viewed by 585
Abstract
Live music can afford novel, transformative aesthetic interactions for individual audience members. Nevertheless, concert research tends to focus on shared experience. In this paper we offer an account of exploratory listening that foregrounds embodied–enactive engagement and affective resonance through close analysis of the [...] Read more.
Live music can afford novel, transformative aesthetic interactions for individual audience members. Nevertheless, concert research tends to focus on shared experience. In this paper we offer an account of exploratory listening that foregrounds embodied–enactive engagement and affective resonance through close analysis of the music, physiological measurements, and reflections from interviews. Our analysis centres on data collected from two musician audience members about one specific piece out of a larger interdisciplinary project involving concerts given by the Stavanger Symphony Orchestra and The Norwegian Radio Orchestra in March and June of 2024. Through the combination of in-depth phenomenological interviews with musically skilled audience members and measurements of breathing and body motion, we explore aesthetic enactment beyond common patterns of ‘synchronised’ response, focusing on audience members’ experiences of Harald Sæverud’s ‘Kjempeviseslåtten’ (The Ballad of Revolt) (1943). We find forms of absorbed, both imaginative and embodied involvement, of listeners enacting meaningful contact with, and pathways through, the music that in some ways corroborate crowd patterns but also reveal exploratory expertise and idiosyncratic affective orientations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Music Listening as Exploratory Behavior)
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21 pages, 3323 KiB  
Article
‘You Really Have to Get in There and Actually Figure It Out’: Engaging Pre-Service Teachers in Children’s Literature Through Transmodality
by Jill Colton and Sarah Forrest
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(4), 496; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15040496 - 15 Apr 2025
Viewed by 954
Abstract
Transmodality—the process of transforming a text or section of a text into another mode or modes—enables readers to engage deeply and imaginatively with literature through interpretation and response. It is a valuable pedagogical approach in initial teacher education, where pre-service teachers are developing [...] Read more.
Transmodality—the process of transforming a text or section of a text into another mode or modes—enables readers to engage deeply and imaginatively with literature through interpretation and response. It is a valuable pedagogical approach in initial teacher education, where pre-service teachers are developing dispositions towards reading and cultivating knowledge of literature. In this article, two case studies are presented of undergraduate and post-graduate courses that aimed to engage pre-service teachers with children’s literature by asking them to respond to texts through embodied and multimodal modes. The work is underpinned by theories that highlight the role of semiotic modes in reading and writing, with a focus on the gestural, spatial, and auditory modes. The first case study examines the ways in which gesture and space worked to create multimodal ensembles that communicate and make meaning. The second case study considers pre-service teachers engaged in transferring meaning across linguistic and aural modes as they read a classic literary text and composed a soundscape. In both cases, we consider how mode-switching developed and demonstrated pre-service teachers’ aesthetic, cognitive, and affective engagement as part of their embodied experience with literary texts. This research has implications for the way teachers and teacher educators can inspire engagement with children’s literature through embodied and multimodal ways in English curriculum contexts and initial English teacher education. Full article
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14 pages, 3274 KiB  
Article
Beautimeter: Harnessing GPT for Assessing Architectural and Urban Beauty Based on the 15 Properties of Living Structure
by Bin Jiang
AI 2025, 6(4), 74; https://doi.org/10.3390/ai6040074 - 10 Apr 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 952
Abstract
Beautimeter is a new tool powered by generative pre-trained transformer (GPT) technology, designed to evaluate architectural and urban beauty. Rooted in Christopher Alexander’s theory of centers, this work builds on the idea that all environments possess, to varying degrees, an innate sense of [...] Read more.
Beautimeter is a new tool powered by generative pre-trained transformer (GPT) technology, designed to evaluate architectural and urban beauty. Rooted in Christopher Alexander’s theory of centers, this work builds on the idea that all environments possess, to varying degrees, an innate sense of life. Alexander identified 15 fundamental properties, such as levels of scale and thick boundaries, that characterize living structure, which Beautimeter uses as a basis for its analysis. By integrating GPT’s advanced natural language processing capabilities, Beautimeter assesses the extent to which a structure embodies these 15 properties, enabling a nuanced evaluation of architectural and urban aesthetics. Using ChatGPT4o, the tool helps users generate insights into the perceived beauty and coherence of spaces. We conducted a series of case studies, evaluating images of architectural and urban environments, as well as carpets, paintings, and other artifacts. The results demonstrate Beautimeter’s effectiveness in analyzing aesthetic qualities across diverse contexts. Our findings suggest that by leveraging GPT technology, Beautimeter offers architects, urban planners, and designers a powerful tool to create spaces that resonate deeply with people. This paper also explores the implications of such technology for architecture and urban design, highlighting its potential to enhance both the design process and the assessment of built environments. Full article
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11 pages, 204 KiB  
Article
Delineating Ecoethics in Alexis Wright’s Carpentaria and The Swan Book
by Minimol P G and Preeti Navaneeth
Humanities 2025, 14(4), 81; https://doi.org/10.3390/h14040081 - 1 Apr 2025
Viewed by 489
Abstract
Literary works of contemporary Australian Aboriginal writers are widely read for their engagement with expressions of resilience and resistance against colonial supremacy. But these works have a greater significance in modern times, as they carry forward the Aboriginal cultural traditions of caring for [...] Read more.
Literary works of contemporary Australian Aboriginal writers are widely read for their engagement with expressions of resilience and resistance against colonial supremacy. But these works have a greater significance in modern times, as they carry forward the Aboriginal cultural traditions of caring for the country (an Aboriginal concept that comprises people, their culture, and all living and non-living entities in a place, including the land) and in vocalising the concerns that arise from grief for the loss of the natural environment. This paper investigates how Alexis Wright, in her postmillennial novels Carpentaria (2006) and The Swan Book (2013), redefines dominant ethical and aesthetic frameworks and tries to delineate ecoethics in these novels through a critical analysis of the representation of relationality and interconnectedness between Aboriginal people and their natural environment. By exploring the Aboriginal belief system as represented in the texts and its role in shaping Aboriginal environmental values, this paper argues that Carpentaria and The Swan Book embody ecoethics and offer a reimagining of deep ecological perspectives in contemporary literature. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue World Mythology and Its Connection to Nature and/or Ecocriticism)
32 pages, 4278 KiB  
Article
The Design Process in the Development of an Online Platform for Personalizing Wearable Prostheses: A Preliminary Approach
by Sara Peixoto, Nuno Martins, Daniel Miranda, Demétrio Matos and Vítor Carvalho
Designs 2025, 9(2), 39; https://doi.org/10.3390/designs9020039 - 31 Mar 2025
Viewed by 731
Abstract
This study is part of the research project Dep-Project: Design and Embodiment of Wearable Prostheses, funded by the Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT), whose main objective is the development of wearable myoelectric prostheses for upper limbs, which are economically accessible, socially [...] Read more.
This study is part of the research project Dep-Project: Design and Embodiment of Wearable Prostheses, funded by the Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT), whose main objective is the development of wearable myoelectric prostheses for upper limbs, which are economically accessible, socially accepted, and personalizable. In this context, the need arose to create an online platform with an intuitive interface, which would facilitate the access to persons with upper limb amputation to information about prosthetics and allow them to personalize their prosthesis, according to their aesthetic preferences. Thus, this work aims to demonstrate the importance of designing interfaces for greater inclusion, as well as demonstrating and describing the efficiency of the design process adopted with the aim of potentially being adopted in similar cases. The methodology adopted was Design Thinking, an approach centered on user needs. The development of the platform involved the creation of user personas, information architecture, user flows, wireframes, wireflows, and a design system. The interactive prototype underwent usability testing to evaluate the user experience and identify possible areas for improvement. The results, obtained through the System Usability Scale (SUS) post-test questionnaire, revealed a high success rate, which confirmed the efficiency of the designed solution. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Smart Manufacturing System Design)
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19 pages, 2605 KiB  
Article
Suitability Evaluation of Architectural Images Built in Communities Based on the Niche-Fitness Model
by Wenjun Peng, Yanyan Huang, Chuanhui Ren, Tiancheng Yang and Xu Wang
Buildings 2025, 15(6), 881; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15060881 - 12 Mar 2025
Viewed by 700
Abstract
Architectural images, experienced visually and spatially, embody urban culture, aesthetics, and identity, yet their suitability in urban communities remains underexplored. This study addresses this gap by evaluating the suitability of architectural images using the niche-fitness model, combined with residents’ perception assessments. Evaluation indicators [...] Read more.
Architectural images, experienced visually and spatially, embody urban culture, aesthetics, and identity, yet their suitability in urban communities remains underexplored. This study addresses this gap by evaluating the suitability of architectural images using the niche-fitness model, combined with residents’ perception assessments. Evaluation indicators focus on architectural form, color, features, and values to assess how well buildings align with residents and environmental contexts. The findings reveal significant variations in suitability across six studied buildings in a high-density community in Wuhan. One building showed high ecological adaptability and alignment with residents’ functional and aesthetic preferences, while others exhibited moderate to low suitability, reflecting mismatches with residents’ perceptions. The inharmonious adaptability of these buildings demonstrates the need to harmonize architectural images with residents’ psychological preferences to enhance community livability and identity. Combining Wuhan’s regional characteristics, suggestions for improving the governance of architectural images are proposed to address mismatches. This study analyzes the role of architectural image suitability in improving residents’ quality of life and shaping urban community characteristics. By offering a practical approach for guiding the renewal of architectural images in communities, this research contributes to creating livable and culturally resonant environments to support sustainable urban development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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14 pages, 276 KiB  
Article
Connective Embodied Activism of Young Brazilian and Portuguese Social Media Influencers
by Suely Ferreira Deslandes and Vitor Sérgio Ferreira
Youth 2025, 5(1), 28; https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5010028 - 10 Mar 2025
Viewed by 1280
Abstract
Digitalised relationships expand political participation and promote the inclusion of various social segments, especially young people, who stand out for their digital literacy. Youth digital activism ranges from participation in traditional social movements to influencer actions that combine marketing, advocacy, and identity expressions. [...] Read more.
Digitalised relationships expand political participation and promote the inclusion of various social segments, especially young people, who stand out for their digital literacy. Youth digital activism ranges from participation in traditional social movements to influencer actions that combine marketing, advocacy, and identity expressions. This article analyses the repertoire of connective engagement adopted by young social media influencer-activists in Brazil and Portugal. Based on four cases and 87 posts on Instagram, we examined the connective forms that were anchored in affectivity, embodiment, self-image and other discursive and aesthetic strategies that promote engagement. Activists employing diverse languages adapted to algorithmic impositions debate “uncomfortable”, silenced or disruptive topics in an attractive and humorous way. In discursive-affective marks, they generate engagement in a sphere of everyday political sensibilities—infrapolitics. Such actions call for decentred boundaries of conventional political action in order to see the potential of young influencers’ digital activism actions. Full article
21 pages, 552 KiB  
Article
From Journey to Theatre: Unraveling the Influence of Traditional Chinese Opera’s Cultural Value on Tourists’ Behavioral Intentions
by Yujia Zheng, Gong Chen, Zaijun Li and Meijuan Hu
Sustainability 2025, 17(4), 1544; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17041544 - 13 Feb 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2104
Abstract
As a cornerstone of Chinese traditional culture, traditional Chinese opera encapsulates deep historical significance and embodies the national spirit, acting as a vital conduit for transmitting intangible cultural heritage. However, in today’s society, this art form confronts the challenge of becoming marginalized, underscoring [...] Read more.
As a cornerstone of Chinese traditional culture, traditional Chinese opera encapsulates deep historical significance and embodies the national spirit, acting as a vital conduit for transmitting intangible cultural heritage. However, in today’s society, this art form confronts the challenge of becoming marginalized, underscoring the urgency for its revitalization and preservation. This study adopts a mixed-methods approach, integrating questionnaire surveys with semi-structured interviews, to explore how perceived value in opera culture shapes tourists’ behavioral intentions. Key findings include: (1) Emotional and socioeconomic perceived values significantly positively affect tourists’ intentions to revisit and recommend through the lens of cultural identity. (2) Conversely, aesthetic perceived value significantly negatively influences revisit intention when mediated by cultural identity but does not substantially impact word-of-mouth communication. These insights suggest that fostering emotional resonance and socioeconomic value perception among tourists is essential for positively strengthening their cultural identity and influencing their behavior. Additionally, there is a need to refine and enhance the aesthetic experience based on real-world encounters. Building on these conclusions, it is advised that opera troupes and tourist destinations innovate in presenting operas while the government bolsters policy support to boost market competitiveness and enrich audience experience design. In doing so, we can aid the rejuvenation of opera culture for the modern era. Full article
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15 pages, 7763 KiB  
Article
From Spectacle to Scene: A Pragmatist Approach to Performing Live
by Barbara Formis
Philosophies 2025, 10(1), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies10010025 - 13 Feb 2025
Viewed by 1043
Abstract
Drawing from the philosophies of pragmatism and somaesthetics, as developed by Richard Shusterman, this inquiry argues that performance holds a unique ontological status, one that emphasizes participation, shared meaning making, and the aesthetic qualities of ordinary, lived experience. As a philosopher trained as [...] Read more.
Drawing from the philosophies of pragmatism and somaesthetics, as developed by Richard Shusterman, this inquiry argues that performance holds a unique ontological status, one that emphasizes participation, shared meaning making, and the aesthetic qualities of ordinary, lived experience. As a philosopher trained as a dancer, I share some insights from my own experience as a performer offering a first-person aesthetic experience as a tool for conceptual inquiry. This experience allows the inquiry to explore the distinction between “scene” and “spectacle”, positioning the scene as a space of co-creation, in contrast to the distant, objectifying gaze encouraged by spectacle. By examining participatory projects and firsthand artistic experiences, I try to illustrate how performance can dissolve the boundaries between art and life, proposing a model of art that is shared, embodied, deeply connected to the rhythms of the everyday and gives foundation to a political transformation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Aesthetics of the Performing Arts in the Contemporary Landscape)
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29 pages, 41771 KiB  
Article
The Aesthetic Imagery of Traditional Garden Door and Window Forms: A Case Study of the Four Major Traditional Gardens of Lingnan
by Zhongwei Wang, Ruyue Zheng, Jian Tang, Shaobin Wang and Xubo He
Buildings 2025, 15(4), 513; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15040513 - 7 Feb 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1416
Abstract
Traditional Lingnan gardens, one of the three major types of Chinese garden design, have evolved over nearly a millennium, embodying the distinctive craftsmanship and aesthetic sensibilities of the Lingnan region. The architectural elements of doors and windows in these gardens serve as key [...] Read more.
Traditional Lingnan gardens, one of the three major types of Chinese garden design, have evolved over nearly a millennium, embodying the distinctive craftsmanship and aesthetic sensibilities of the Lingnan region. The architectural elements of doors and windows in these gardens serve as key expressions of regional cultural identity. This study focuses on four renowned Lingnan gardens (e.g., Yuyin Garden in Guangzhou, Liang Garden in Foshan, Qinghui Garden in Shunde, and Ke Garden in Dongguan) as primary case studies to examine the typologies, decorative characteristics, and aesthetic qualities of their doors and windows. Based on aesthetic imagery, the research elucidates both the functional and structural principles governing these designs, while also exploring their aesthetic resonance with traditional Chinese arts, such as calligraphy, painting, and poetry. By deepening the theoretical understanding of the formal and artistic features of Lingnan garden doors and windows, this study contributes to advancing the scholarly discourse on traditional garden architecture and supports the ongoing cultural preservation of this important heritage. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Built Heritage Conservation in the Twenty-First Century: 2nd Edition)
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16 pages, 1439 KiB  
Article
Is Aesthetic Relational Knowing a Common Factor in Psychotherapy? A Comparison Among Different Models
by Margherita Spagnuolo Lobb, Serena Iacono Isidoro, Claudia Savia Guerrera, Febronia Riggio and Santo Di Nuovo
Eur. J. Investig. Health Psychol. Educ. 2025, 15(2), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe15020016 - 31 Jan 2025
Viewed by 3001
Abstract
This study explores how aesthetic relational knowing (ARK), as assessed by the ARK-T scale, is used by psychotherapists of different psychotherapeutic models. The ARK-T, a tool based on Gestalt therapy principles, evaluates three core factors of this therapeutic competence: body awareness, affective empathy, [...] Read more.
This study explores how aesthetic relational knowing (ARK), as assessed by the ARK-T scale, is used by psychotherapists of different psychotherapeutic models. The ARK-T, a tool based on Gestalt therapy principles, evaluates three core factors of this therapeutic competence: body awareness, affective empathy, and intuitive resonance. A sample of 158 therapists from various approaches, including Gestalt therapy, cognitive–behavioral, systemic–relational, and psychodynamic models, participated in the study. The results show that while body awareness and affective empathy vary in emphasis, depending on the therapeutic approach, intuitive resonance emerges as a shared competence among therapists across orientations. These findings suggest that ARK, particularly the therapist’s capacity to attune to the client’s emotional and relational dynamics, may be a core component of effective therapy. The study highlights the significance of these relational competences in fostering effective therapeutic outcomes across diverse psychotherapeutic frameworks. Full article
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