Sure, but this is a list of aesthetics, not a list of techniques or tools. Their artist-assigned labels may have nothing to do with how they were created. For example, "Corporate Memphis" has nothing to do with the Memphis Group or the design movement they drove in the 80s— it stemmed from a Facebook documentation branding initiative that was just another page in the big book of bland postmodern corporate art. However, artists and designers needed to reason about that aesthetic differently than, say, an art historian, called it "Corporate Memphis" because of several key aesthetic similarities to the Memphis design movement and it's distinct corporate blandness.