Interaction Aesthetics In and Beyond the Flow

Main Article Content

Claudia Núñez Pacheco

Abstract

Although almost two decades have passed since the term aesthetics of interaction made its appearance in design-oriented Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), the actual understanding of the concept remains fuzzy and focused on the description of qualities of what constitutes an aesthetic experience. However, by trying to describe specific aesthetic qualities emerging from technology encounters, we risk offering endless definitions of potential aesthetic traits, mostly fixated on pleasurable interactions. This approach may discard other interactive expressions that could potentially lead us to meaningful insights. Drawing on the similarities between John Dewey's aesthetic experiences, Eugene Gendlin's process model, and Martin Heidegger’s analysis of tool use, this article offers a theoretical framework towards a broader, systematized view of aesthetics of interaction. To do so, the discussion exemplifies a series of phenomenological experiences ranging from transparency to breakdown: two opposites in the understanding of how technologies reveal themselves.

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How to Cite
Núñez Pacheco, C. (2019). Interaction Aesthetics In and Beyond the Flow. Diseña, (15), 48–69. https://doi.org/10.7764/disena.15.48-69
Section
Original Articles (part 1)
Author Biography

Claudia Núñez Pacheco, Universidad Austral de Chile

Designer, Universidad de Valparaíso. Master in Interaction Design and Electronic Arts, University of Sydney. PhD in Interaction Design, University of Sydney. She is Assistant Professor in the School of Design at Universidad Austral de Chile. Her research interests include Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), Somaesthetic Design, Aesthetics of Interaction, Design Research, Design Methods, Sensory Design, and Design Thinking. She is co-author of Design. Think. Make. Break. Repeat. A Handbook of Methods (with M. Tomitsch, C. Wrigley, M. Borthwick, N. Ahmadpour, J. Frawley, B. Kocaballi, K. Straker, and L. Loke; BIS Publishers, 2018). Some of her most recent articles are 'Towards a Technique for Articulating Aesthetic Experiences in Design using Focusing and the Felt Sense' (with L. Loke; The Design Journal, Vol. 21, N° 4) and 'Reflection through Inner Presence: A Sensitising Concept for Design' (Multimodal Technologies and Interaction, Vol. 2, N° 1).