5 Japanese Aesthetic Ideas (Applied to Presentation Design)

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Japanese artistic tradition has endured for centuries and is built around certain central principles. Learn these key aesthetic ideas and work them in to your own presentations to achieve a more harmonious and memorable design. Read a more in depth post here: https://medium.com/p/17bc257bb45 Reach out on Twitter: https://twitter.com/slide_guy Send me an email: https://twitter.com/slide_guy

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55 Japanese Aesthetic Ideas

(Applied to Presentation Design)

1. Shibui渋い

1. Shibui渋い

Simple, subtle, unobtrusive beauty is the ultimate goal for any design.

1. Shibui

渋い

The Macbook Air’s sleek sparing design embodies

the Shibui aesthetic .

“Simplicity is the Ultimate Sophistication”

-Leonardo DaVinci

Strip away everything except the core concept for a slide that is powerful, elegant, memorable and (above all) simple.

HOW TO BRIDGETHE DISTANCE

BETWEENBUSINESS STRATEGY

AND DESIGN

Shibui Applied to Presentation Design

Slide by Marty Neumeir

Natural beauty is enhanced by a slight degree of asymmetry or imperfection.

2. Wabi-Sabi

侘寂

2. Wabi Sabi

侘寂

Jeans improve with each wear and

imperfection. This is a perfect example of

Wabi-Sabi

Attitude or tone that is confident, calm and ironically detached — i.e. “cool.”

3. Iki

3. Iki粋

James Dean’s air of effortless confidence

exemplifies the notion of Iki

Iki Applied to Presentation Design

Slide by @JesseDeeSlide by @mzkagan

Inject your slides with an air of informal detachment. This will make your message more

impactful by cutting through the normal pretensions of business communication.

Use of subtlety and allusion to hint at deeper meaning and invite interpretation.

4. Yūgen

幽玄

4. Yūgen

幽玄

Alfred Hitchcok’s use of artful suspense in Psycho is a wonderful illustration

of Yūgen

Using tempo and build-up to create tension and excitement that enhances a story.

5. Jo-ha-kyū

序破急

5. Jo-ha-kyū

序破急

The juxtaposition of climbs and falls in roller

coasters embodies a core characteristic of

Jo-ha-kyū

Jo-ha-kyū MasterSteve Jobs

Toy with your audience’s expectations and keep them anticipating the big reveal. This is what Job’s did during the original iPhone Keynote.

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