Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Week 3: Composition

The five panes represent five different landscape perspectives done during session, each of them taking in average five to ten minutes to complete, depending on the difficulty of the angle, very little on the level of detail or of spatial organizational elements. Composed using charcoal, the images were intended to clearly show the rule of thirds in application. The first and the fourth images are less dynamic than the second one, but clearly illustrate the third division concept, whereas the latter uses linear perspective as a way of creating a rudimentary form of the illusion of depth, by the positioning of the objects. The third and the last picture convey three dimensional space through two point linear perspective.
All of the drawings are a mere attempt of studying line, perspective and most intentionally composition, though they barely reach the goal since the vantage points are not the most favourable and the lack of foreshortening techniques clearly detriment the desired depth effect. Also, there is no shading, no true detail which could greatly improve the realistic feel of the objects.


  

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