Friday, 12 August 2011

Assignment 5 - Colour — abstraction,
 perception 
and
 modernity


How has the experience and experimentation of artists influenced our understanding of colour and the development of a theory of ‘colour vision’?

The search for the true meaning of colour has gone on for centuries but the first person who was interested in colour as optics, was none other than the great philosopher Isaac Newton. He approached the aspect of colour in a scientific view, and believed that using light as a key was a better way to understand colour. Creating a spectrum of colour by dividing light using a glass prism, he tried to find a formula or/and measure for colour through the use of light. After Newton’s theory, Goethe came with a different view of colour in 1810 through his book ‘Theory of Colours’ (Gage, 1993,). Unlike Newton, Goethe’s idea and experimentation were based on shading of colour with light and shadow. He found the After Image Theory through experimentation. He bagan experimenting after an experience with a girl with black hair and a scarlet bodice. The girl came to the room, and as she presently turned away he saw on the white wall where she had been, a black face with a bright light (Gage, 1993,). These experimentation and experience influenced impressionism and post-impressionism. The concept of Impressionism was based on understanding one’s own time, so impressionists drew what they experienced and the moment the eye saw, and this created a style called optical mixing. On the other hand post- impressionism was based on what happened in the mind of viewer so, post-impressionists drew what they felt from the object or scenery rather than what they saw.


<Reference>
Gage, J. (1993). Colours of the Mind in Colour and Culture: Practice and Meaning from Antiquity to Abstraction (pp.191-212). New York: Thames and Hudson.

Friday, 5 August 2011

Assignment 4 - Ornament 
or 
Nature


“The evolution of culture is synonymous with the removal of ornament”
 -Adolf Loos-

 I partly agree with him because it is true that ornament has been simplified and is now less popular compared to the 18th and 19th century. 
Adolf Loos and Hendrik Petrus thought that ornament is waste and a disturbance to design, instead they prefer simplicity. However, unlike these two,  I do not think that ornament is completely unnecessary. The appropriate use of ornament can gives easily bring beauty to an object and reflects happiness upon people who see it. 
A good example of this is the Notre Dame de Paris, which was constructed from 1163 into 1240s . If you see the photo above, you can see a series of beautiful stain glass windows which compliment the structure it surrounds. These are in harmony with the lake surrounding the Cathedral and the spirit in which it was built for .These show the beauty of its organic and dynamic structure. This may be against Adolf Loos’s rule but they reflect Paris's and the building’s charm and absolute beauty making it a more distinctive landmark .