Viewing the global impact of Asian aesthetics through a multidisciplinary lens, this photo essay emphasizes the complexity and entanglement of aesthetic experiences across cultures and time. Rejecting binary frameworks like East versus West or making versus judging, the author argues that aesthetic decisions are shaped by dynamic interactions among materials, makers, environments, and audiences. Drawing on theories from material culture, anthropology, and political ecology, the essay highlights how Asian artistic expressions, such as textiles, ceramics, and architecture, were adapted, appropriated, and reimagined globally, often through informal, interpersonal exchanges rather than imperial force alone. Rather than viewing these influences through the lens of domination or commodification, the author calls for a reconciliatory approach that acknowledges past injustices while embracing the creative possibilities of cross-cultural aesthetic exchange.
J. Ritchie Garrison (Sun,) studied this question.