
In my last abstractions post, I talked about The Power of the Center: A Study of Composition in the Visual Arts by Rudolf Arnheim, and the ideas of centric and eccentric composition. Arnheim goes on to talk about how forces like gravity can effect composition which I found interesting.
Arnheim says, “Walking downhill, dropping, or falling is experienced kinesthetically as acceding to one’s own weight. One is being pushed downward by a force situated in the center of one’s own body. . . .The dominant pull of gravity makes the space we live in asymmetrical. . . .Human beings experience the dynamic asymmetry, or anisotropy, of space by means of two senses, kinesthesis and vision. The physical effect of gravity is perceived as tension in the muscles, tendons, and joints of the body. Visually, the world is pervaded by a similar downward pull, whose influence on the dynamic character of the things we see may be illustrated by the difference between what goes on visually in horizontal and vertical surfaces.”
He continues to state that the horizontal orientation is centric composition, since all points have the same relation to the ground, but because of our physical interactions with gravity, vertical orientation is strengthened by a gravitational vector and is thus interacting with an outside center and an eccentric composition. He states that since we must put effort into upward movement, but not into downward movement, we perceive an element in the upper part of the vertical image as having more weight than an element in the lower part. Thus the element in the upper part should be smaller to counterbalance an element below.
Today’s images
I liked the new compositions I was making with the wrapped ring in the mirrorworld, but wanted to see if a smaller ring that actually fit inside the frame of the mirror would have better results. While looking for materials to make the form, I noticed some old wire hat stands I had and decided to try wrapping them with lights. I had three, so I stacked two of them, and wrapped them with colored lights, and left one as is and wrapped it with white lights. This idea has so much potential because they stand freely and I can move them around in relation to each other.
Inspired by Arnheim’s discussion of horizontal and vertical weight, I made a clear plastic filter and drew a symmetrical cross in black sharpie, and I cut out a paper filter with a symmetrical cross in the middle of a circle. The plastic filter creates texture, and I can layer the two filters and move the paper one over the plastic one to cross the crosses at different angles. These images show the paper filter.
What do you think? Do you feel a gravitational pull in the vertical image, but not the horizontal?
dVerse Poets Pub
For today’s Poetics prompt, Lillian provided some portraits by Thorvald Hellesen (1888 – 1937) as inspiration. I chose “Portrait of Eivind Eckbo” painted in 1914 for today’s poem.
The Man in Motion
He is a whirl of spring air
spinning, spinning always turning
but with one eye holding my stare
like a ballerina in an eternal pirouette
one leg steady—in the shadow under there
under his billowing cloak rising
and falling, a dangerous snare—
the other continuing the momentum
pointing in, pointing out, so beware
He is fluttering soft petals on a fragrant breeze
whirling, whirling, but that eye on me stares
the head almost appears to have a plan to stay
still as the body turns, but then all hair
it snaps around and is back and then it does it again—SNAP!
the head has come around, never losing that stare
And the spinning never stops
as with each turn he becomes more aware
that he’s a pastel shimmer in motion
more breezy, more one with the spring air
and forgets he has a leg on the ground
in the shadows under that cloak that has flown off somewhere.
It feels like he is using the eye contact to orient himself, at least for awhile, until he loses it and flutters off…
LikeLiked by 1 person
The feel that you are looking farther down, like your picture won’t end. Definitely a vertical perception
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love the rhythm of your poem ❤️
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you.
LikeLiked by 1 person
“with each turn he becomes more aware
that he’s a pastel shimmer in motion”
You brought the painting to life. Nice one Maria.
Much💖love
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you.
LikeLike
Lovely!! I especially admire; “He is fluttering soft petals on a fragrant breeze
whirling.” 😀
LikeLiked by 1 person
The way you capture motion while the stare remains intact works very well in the image,,, and this; ” one with the spring air” which us si well in tune with the season
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love the motion in your poem, Maria, and the way you’ve captured it in the ‘whirl of spring air’, the repetition of ‘spinning’ and ‘whirling’, and the marvellous simile ‘like a ballerina in an eternal pirouette’ – you’ve definitely captured his stance. I also love the creepiness of the lines:
‘it snaps around and is back and then it does it again—SNAP!
the head has come around, never losing that stare’.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love the spinning head effect! This is a great take on the painting!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you. I spent way too many years in ballet class: It was nice to see a use for it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ha ha… very creative way to use it! Well done!
LikeLiked by 1 person
This is a nice “spin” on the many facets of the painting.
LikeLiked by 1 person
😉😊
LikeLiked by 1 person
Love these words:
“And the spinning never stops
as with each turn he becomes more aware
that he’s a pastel shimmer in motion”
So glad you posted to the prompt!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you. I really enjoyed the prompt, both for the cubism and Norway. I haven’t seen the fjords since I was a thirteen year old exchange student in Sweden and went on a road trip with my Swedish family. I love that I can understand most Norwegians when they speak, though the written language is a bit different.
LikeLike