62

Visual order4

  • Upload
    echu

  • View
    214

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

unfinished... but with more color!

Citation preview

Page 1: Visual order4

V I S U A L

or_der.

Page 2: Visual order4

content

Page 3: Visual order4

figure/ground

similarity

proximity

closure

continuance

translation

rotation

reflection

glide/reflection

dilation

symmetric balance

asymmetric balance

ambiguous balance

neutral balance

Page 4: Visual order4
Page 5: Visual order4

figure/ground Figure stands on ground to be noticed/

Ground lays behind figure to help it be noticed/

Page 6: Visual order4

.

Page 7: Visual order4
Page 8: Visual order4
Page 9: Visual order4

similarityObjects that have the same size/

Objects that have the same color/

Objects that have the same shape/

Objects that have the same direction/

Page 10: Visual order4
Page 11: Visual order4
Page 12: Visual order4
Page 13: Visual order4

proximityThe farness between objects/

The closeness between objects/

Page 14: Visual order4
Page 15: Visual order4
Page 16: Visual order4
Page 17: Visual order4

closureA quality of objects that a viewer understands as complete,

encapsulating or finished despite their true physical state/

A quality of object groups that a viewer understands as

complete, encapsulating or finished despite their true physical

state/

Page 18: Visual order4
Page 19: Visual order4
Page 20: Visual order4
Page 21: Visual order4

continuanceWhen an object communicates a distance, direction or shape

beyond itself to a viewer/

Page 22: Visual order4
Page 23: Visual order4
Page 24: Visual order4

translationWhen an object is replicated next to the original.

This may continue in a straight line.

Page 25: Visual order4
Page 26: Visual order4
Page 27: Visual order4
Page 28: Visual order4

rotationWhen a replicated object shares a single point with it’s original.

Page 29: Visual order4
Page 30: Visual order4
Page 31: Visual order4
Page 32: Visual order4

reflectionWhen an object is rotated off the the visible plain,

back to the visible plain aparently backwards.

Page 33: Visual order4
Page 34: Visual order4
Page 35: Visual order4
Page 36: Visual order4
Page 37: Visual order4

glide/reflectionWhen an object is reflected accross an axis and translated

accross the other.

Page 38: Visual order4
Page 39: Visual order4
Page 40: Visual order4

dilationWhen an object expands evenly from a central point.

Page 41: Visual order4
Page 42: Visual order4
Page 43: Visual order4
Page 44: Visual order4
Page 45: Visual order4

symmetric balanceWhen the visual weight of a piece is the same in placement and

value on both sides of an axis.

Page 46: Visual order4
Page 47: Visual order4
Page 48: Visual order4
Page 49: Visual order4

asymmetric balanceWhen the value of the visual wieght, but not the placement of the

weight, is the same on both sides of a sentral axis.

Page 50: Visual order4
Page 51: Visual order4
Page 52: Visual order4
Page 53: Visual order4

ambiguous balanceWhen there may or may not be ballance.

Page 54: Visual order4
Page 55: Visual order4
Page 56: Visual order4
Page 57: Visual order4

nuetral balancewhen weight value and weight position are spread evenly through

out the composition.

Page 58: Visual order4
Page 59: Visual order4
Page 60: Visual order4
Page 61: Visual order4

® Eos Chu, 2013z

completed as a requirement for visual communication course in the

graphic design program at the kansas city art institute.

michael kidwell, assistant professor.

Page 62: Visual order4