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What Would an African Theory of Beauty Look Like? Rethinking Aesthetics Through Ubuntu

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Most discussions of aesthetics begin in Europe. Philosophy textbooks often start with Greek thinkers such as Plato and Aristotle. Later chapters move to philosophers like Kant, Hegel, or Nietzsche. These traditions ask important questions about beauty, taste, and art. Yet they also shape the boundaries of the conversation. When people ask about African aesthetics, they often mean African art objects rather than African philosophical ideas. This difference matters. A theory of aesthetics asks deeper questions than the study of art objects. It asks how people understand beauty. It asks what role art plays in human life. It asks whether beauty belongs to individuals, communities, or the natural world. To ask what an African theory of aesthetics might look like means asking whether African philosophical ideas change how we define beauty itself. One concept appears immediately in this discussion:  Ubuntu . Ubuntu comes from several Southern African philosophical traditions. The idea app...

When Everything Matches

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Design advice often repeats one rule: make everything match. Colors should coordinate. Furniture should follow the same style. Materials should look consistent from room to room. The result is a space that feels calm and controlled. Yet when every object agrees with every other object, something important may disappear. The room becomes cohesive, but it may also lose tension, character, and surprise. Interior design has long valued harmony. Designers speak about “visual balance” and “cohesive palettes.” These ideas come partly from classical aesthetics. Ancient Greek thinkers believed beauty emerged from proportion and order. Balance created a sense of stability. The mind found pleasure in symmetry. This belief continues to shape design advice today. A typical design guide recommends choosing one color palette and repeating it throughout a home. Furniture styles should stay consistent. Materials should echo one another. A room with oak flooring might also use oak furniture. Metal finis...

Can Something Be Beautiful and Morally Wrong? The Ethics Hidden Inside Aesthetics

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People often treat beauty as neutral. A building looks elegant. A piece of furniture feels refined. A handcrafted object appears delicate and impressive. Many people assume beauty stands apart from morality. Yet beauty often hides a deeper story. Objects and spaces carry histories of labor, power, and ownership. This raises a difficult question.  Can something be beautiful and still be wrong? For centuries, philosophers treated beauty as something pure. Ancient Greek thinkers linked beauty to harmony and proportion. A balanced form creates pleasure for the human mind. Later philosophers expanded this idea. In the eighteenth century, philosopher  Immanuel Kant  described beauty as something that produced “disinterested pleasure.” People could admire beauty without thinking about practical or moral concerns. Yet real objects rarely exist in isolation. Buildings, furniture, and decorative arts emerge from human systems. They require land, labor, and materials. These systems ...

Blue Is Not Calm — It’s Control

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Authority, corporate aesthetics, and the myth of serenity Blue has been sold to us as calm. It is the colour of sky, water, and breath. It is recommended for bedrooms, offices, and meditation rooms. It appears in wellness branding, therapy spaces, and productivity apps. We are told it slows the heart rate and clears the mind. But blue is not neutral, and it is not innocent. Blue is control. To understand this, we have to move beyond the idea of blue as “peaceful.” We need to look at how it operates in power structures, branding systems, and architectural space. The calm we associate with blue is not softness. It is an order. The Authority of Blue Look at institutions that require trust. Banks. Technology firms. Insurance companies. Government agencies. A large percentage of them rely on blue in their visual identity. This is not a coincidence. Blue signals reliability, logic, and structure. It reduces emotional volatility. It communicates stability without warmth. Where red excites and...

The Colours of the Cape: Building a Room Palette Inspired by South African Landscape

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Colour in South Africa is not decorative. It is historical, geological, political, and occasionally an act of defiance. Before you reach for a paint chart inspired by the Western Cape, it is worth understanding what you are actually drawing from  because the colours of this particular landscape carry more weight than most interior design guides will tell you. That weight is what makes them worth using. It is also what makes using them carelessly a missed opportunity. The Light Changes Everything South African light is different. This is not poetic licence. It is physics. Cape Town sits at 33 degrees south latitude, similar to Sydney, Los Angeles, and Buenos Aires. The light is intense, direct, and remarkably clear. Research has claimed that Cape Town's sky is among the five bluest in the world. The bone-white walls of a Cape Dutch homestead in Stellenbosch are not simply a stylistic choice. They are a functional response to the light, thick whitewashed surfaces that reflect rather ...

How Do You Find Your Interior Style Without Copying Someone Else?

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You scroll through images of beautiful homes. Everything looks cohesive, polished, and intentional. You save inspiration, try to recreate it, and buy similar pieces. But when you put it all together, something feels off. It looks good, but it does not feel like you. This is where many people get stuck. They confuse inspiration with imitation. They follow trends, replicate images, and end up with a space that feels generic. The problem is not a lack of taste. It is a lack of clarity. Finding your interior style is not about copying what works for someone else. It is about understanding what works for you. Why Copying Never Feels Right Copying seems like the easiest way to get a good result. If a space looks great, it makes sense to recreate it. But design is not just visual; it is contextual. A room that works in one home may not work in another. Lighting, layout, and lifestyle all influence how a space feels. When you copy without adapting, the result often feels disconnected. More imp...