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I happened across this post and I thought it was extremely interesting for several reasons:
Source: The Future of Web Design is Hidden in the History of Architecture
It lays out the main eras in architecture and shows a side by side comparison of a key piece of architecture from that period and compares it to a website from the analogous period. He goes...
Not only does this give us a framework of understanding styles in web design but let's us attempt to be ahead of the curve. Of course you can't push too far ahead or the culture will reject it.
It also, on a much larger philosophical level shows that there seems to be some kind of evolutionary path for the maturation of art forms embedded in our psyches.
Source: The Future of Web Design is Hidden in the History of Architecture
It lays out the main eras in architecture and shows a side by side comparison of a key piece of architecture from that period and compares it to a website from the analogous period. He goes...
- Neolithic / Simple, limited structures / 1992
- Classical / Order and proportion, with some embellishment / 1996
- Romanesque / Thicker forms and rounder edges / 2000
- Gothic / Ornate and mesmerizing / 2005
- Renaissance / Clean, logical, and precise / 2012
Not only does this give us a framework of understanding styles in web design but let's us attempt to be ahead of the curve. Of course you can't push too far ahead or the culture will reject it.
It also, on a much larger philosophical level shows that there seems to be some kind of evolutionary path for the maturation of art forms embedded in our psyches.