It is Good.
After The Creator made the land, with all of its eco-systems, from the mountains to the seashore: the swamps, the forests, the plains, the wetlands, the polar regions, the tropical jungle, the deserts, etc. and made the animals inhabiting the eco-systems, God considered everything created, declaring, “It is good” (The Holy Bible, Genesis 1:31). God looked aesthetically at the created works, seeing it was “good.” God took a moment, however long a moment is for God, to enjoy the works created. Artists also take moments to look at their works aesthetically.
Next, Genesis relays The Creator formed Man. God scooped up mud and sculpted the bones—the femur, the spinal column, the sternum, and the rest of the skeletal system from the top of the skull down to the little toe; then formed the brain, eyes, lungs, heart, and the rest organs, placing them in their allotted places; layering muscles and connecting muscles to bones. God spread more mud around, covering everything just sculpted, and made an enclosing-protective casing, a skin, that protects the inner body, and this skin receives sensory stimulus through its senses. Look in an anatomy book and see the way a person’s body is joined together, how muscles are laid down, layered and connected. Also, observe how body systems inter-relate: between Respiratory, Nervous, Circulatory, Digestive, Immune, etc.
People’s bodies are aesthetically pleasing, as well.
Then The Creator breathed vitality/life into Man.
After God finished crafting Man, God took another moment to aesthetically perceive and delight in the created work, exclaiming, “It’s all good!” [i]
Philosopher/educator John Dewey (1859-1952) touched on the moment in the creation process that God found the work good, relating artists have similar experiences and perceptions when they make works.
“The process of art in production is related to the [a]esthetic in perception organically—as the Lord God in creation surveyed his work and found it good. Until the artist is satisfied in perception with what he is doing, he continues shaping and reshaping. The making comes to an end when its result is experienced as good—and that experience comes not by mere intellectual and outside judgment but in direct perception. An artist, in comparison with his fellows, is one who is not only especially gifted in powers of execution but in unusual sensitivity to the qualities of things. This sensitivity also directs his doings and makings.”[ii]
[i] Refer to the Holy Bible, Genesis chapter 1 and 2
[ii] Dewey, John, Art As Experience, p.49