PictorialComposition MJAngel
PictorialComposition MJAngel
PictorialComposition MJAngel
Foreword
I: First Principles
The Centre, Dominance, Unity and Variety, Anomaly,
Counterpoint, Balance, Symmetry and Asymmetry
Outline
V: Value Composition
Silhouettes, The Value Keys, Tenebrism, Rembrandt,
van Dyck and Holbein schemes, Moving Elements
into the Distance
VII: Palettes
Some Historical Palettes: an 18th-Century Portrait
Painting Palette, the Flesh-Colour Palette, Frank
Reillys Palette, the Harmonic Palettes, Denman
Ross
Appendix
The Colour Charts
Foreword
Why compose?
Human beings delight in the invention and discovery of systems astronomical, physical, artistical. We have an inherent need to arrange things
and organize them: we do not place our furniture haphazardly in our
rooms, but organize it into a pleasing and functional arrangement.
When presenting a business proposal at a meeting, we require the proposal to be logically and clearly set out. When examining the universe,
we try to understand it as an integrated system and, when telling a
story, we need that story to be well organized and to flow.
In addition, more germane and most important, we compose to make
the painting involve the viewer emotionally to make it more powerful, more compelling and more expressive. To simply copy nature is to
do as Andy Warhol did when he filmed a person sleeping for twelve
hours: the film lasts twelve hours and is easily one of the most boring
visual experiences imaginable. A good director, by emphasizing some
things and eliminating others, can create a powerful impression of a
twelve-hour sleep in fewer than ten seconds. I think this may have been
Warhols point. A simple list is not a work of literature.
For us modern figurative artists, pictorial composition began in the
Renaissance, when the painters needed to find better and more intense
ways to tell their stories. The church was the largest buyer and the
imperatives to the painters were threefold: tell the story in a clear way
for the simple, an eye-catching and memorable way for the forgetful,
and tell it with full use of all emotional resources, in order to involve
the viewer. All these concerns are in the domain of composition, and, in
order to do them well, the painters drew on a great medival tradition
of picture-making and then, later, began to examine the techniques of
the ancient Romans, as more and more of their work was unearthed.
These studies were all practical their purpose was to learn how a
life-like and convincing image could be fabricated, how a figure could
be made to express emotion and how an element could be given dominance, so that a story could be told effectively. Later, the idea of beauty
Foreword
entered the picture (every pun intended) and joined with the search for
expression. The painters and sculptors learned all this from studying
works of art and coupling this with observation of nature. They had no
textbooks.
Like these earlier artists, our purpose here is to examine the principles
of composition as they are found in the paintings themselves. It is
not important to us whether the painters consciously employed these
principles or not (although I believe they did): the beauty exists in the
work and it is this beauty and expressive power that we are trying to
understand.
The discipline of art history tends to concentrate more on the artist, the
artists environment and the painting's provenance than on the work of
art itself. The painting often seems to be important to the art historian
only as an icon for the painter and his, or her, times.
This gives art students some grave problems, as they need information
about the methods of expression contained in the paintings they
want to learn how to create beautiful and powerful works of art and
need to know of what such things are made. As a painter, I am much
more interested in the work of art than in the person who painted it.
Should it turn out that Rembrandts Man in the Golden Helmet is a nineteenth-century fake, I could not care less. It remains a beautiful, miraculous and powerful painting.
* * * * *
Foreword
Because of this, the last thing these socially minded artists wanted was
to be associated in their publics mind with the nitty-gritty of studio
practice. Their books expound in broad, philosophical generalities and
use a language designed to separate the writer from the common man.
Meanwhile, the fine old art of picture-making went on, but its principles were communicated to the student only in the studios, through
examples and through word-of-mouth. The late nineteenth century
saw the triumph of the socially minded artist art came to be about
the Artist, the Genius; the work of art became less and less important and, in the twentieth century, the art of picture-making almost
disappeared. It hung on in the work of some of the great illustrators
of the 1930s, 40s and 50s and in the work of some little known and
shamefully ignored figurative artists (Pietro Annigoni, Anna Hyatt,
Ives Gammell, Mario Parri, Gertrude Fiske, Adelaide Chase, Gretchen
Rogers, Fannie Duvall, Andrew Wyeth the list is actually very large),
but none of them, to my knowledge, wrote a how-to-do-it book on
picture-making, and the algorithms, the step-by-step instructions, for
this art all but disappeared.
The twenty-first century is seeing a renaissance in Humanism, in the
concern for a human way of life and in the figurative art forms which
echo that. But where is the student to learn the practicalities of this art?
Like our predecessors of the Italian Renaissance, we look to the great
art of the past, and the works of art themselves become our text.
This empirical attitude happened also in music, by the way. For hundreds of years, the musicians who came after Bach analyzed his compositions and the compositions of other of their predecessors, and developed a myriad of successful variations of musical form. This became the
huge structure of compositional practice.
Annigoni said that there is only one art, and it manifests itself in dierent forms:
music, painting, literature, etc. In an abstract form, identical compositional
principles apply to all the arts and to all times. Simon and Garfunkle are using
the same principles in their Six OClock News as many Classical composers have
done: the introduction of a quiet background element that grows and grows
until it becomes the dominant sound. This principle is employed in the colour
composition of many paintings, and we nd it, too, in novels wherein a seemingly minor incident encountered early in the book takes on more and more
signicance as the story develops and, nally, shows itself to be a major theme.
In the book that follows, however, I am talking about these principles as they
apply to painting.
Foreword
The exercises which follow each chapter are the heart of this course. It is
not enough for the painter to merely understand the principles outlined
in the following text; the artist must practice them, in order to learn the
skills required by this fine art of composition. As you have found in
your work from plaster casts, the principles themselves are fairly easy
to understand, but the assimilation of them is won only by long hours
of practice. The same is true for the discipline of Composition. Never
cut corners in your studies; to do so is to opt for mediocrity.
First Principles
figure 1
figure 2
figure 3
figure 4
figure 5
C P P C
est contrast closest to the centre, and the tendency of the eye to rise.
:
A painting, like any other work of art, needs to
be arranged in a comprehensible order, a system: there should be a dominant element, with
secondary and tertiary elements ancillary to it.
In fact, one definition of a work of art is that it is the presentation of a
(real life) subject in an artistical form. The painter can use old forms,
which are tried and true, or invent new forms; but, in either case, some
form must be discoverable by the viewer if the painting is to be a work
of art. We shall look at these wonderful old forms in Chapter 3; they
are surprisingly simple.
All painters work within a system, just as all poets, musicians and
choreographers do. A poets system can be one or another of the sonnet forms, or the ballade, or the sestina; a musician can use any of the
concerto forms, or the symphonic form, etc., etc.
To say the same thing a different way, the artist must first establish
a system within which she can work. One cannot, for example, introduce a variant without first having a unified system into which that
variant can be introduced. Nor can one move elements back into
space, another example, without a system within which they can be
moved.
It is this system which is the most difficult part to design. And it is
this unified system that gives the strong, over-all character to the work.
A work of art is composed of two major, contradictory aspects:
Unity and Variety. Unity (sameness) gives character to the work, whereas variety (contrast) gives vivacity and life. Of the two, unity (the unified system mentioned above) is the hardest to design and is the most
fundamental. Unity creates the field within which the painter operates.
Two examples of portraits, unified by the consistent use of the oval
construct are figs. 5 and 6 (Raphael and Ingres). The oval creates the
sense of wholeness and of motion. Figure 7 shows a 17th-century
Dutch still life by Willem Kalf, which uses the circle in both its constructs and its placements. Fig. 8 is a portrait by van Dyck, using flowing lines, which give animation and verve.
Please note that the different types of elements create different
emotional responses in the viewer. As we have just seen, flowing elements give animation and verve, while the oval gives a sense of wholeness. The straight line gives architecture and strength, the zig-zag is
electric and shallow curves (both S-curves and C-curves) are lyrical.
The horizontal gives calm and repose, the vertical creates dignity and
the diagonal is full of action.
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figure 6
figure 7
figure 8
When a different type of element is introduced into the unified field,
the result is startling. We see in fig. 9 how the attention is caught and
held by the two small, leaf-like shapes, even though the vast majority
of shapes in the picture are box-like. It is this maverick element, called
an anomaly, which calls to the viewer and may become the main subject. In writing, as you are seeing, italic text acts as an anomaly, calls out
to us and impresses itself on our attention.
figure 9
figure 10
figure 11
Figs. 10 and 11 are two abstract examples of anomaly. In fig. 10, our
attention is immediately caught by the circle, while in fig. 11, which is
an example of anomaly of placement, our eyes go straight away to
the displaced square (the one that has dropped down). The Ciseri
Trasporto di Cristo (fig. 12) is a figurative example of anomaly of placement, the equivalent of fig. 11.
In fig. 13 we see an example of anomaly used in landscape; the
majority of the painting (the clouds and the land) is constructed out
of cloud-like curves, but our attention is held by the startling horizontal straight lines across the centre, near the horizon.
We introduce anomalies for
the sake of variety and, as we have
seen, they are real attention-getters. If, however, our anomaly is
not to be the main subject, we
must introduce more, similar elements and place them around the
dominant, or focus, such that the
figure 12
attention of the viewer falls in
between them; i.e., falls on the focus. Please note that the anomalies do
not have to be placed at equal distances about the dominant, nor do
C P P C
figure 13
figure 14
they all have to be the same size, or exactly the same colour. They need
to be placed asymmetrically and with wit, such that the resultant tensions (as the pulls between these elements are called) hold the viewers
attention at the required focus. Fig. 14 is an example of a single-figure
composition (a portrait, by Bouguereau), in which the dominant, unifying shape is the oval, but into which has been introduced several
rectangular shapes, for variety.
Let me stress again that the main focus is almost always placed on
the vertical centreline. If it is not, there must be a good reason for it.
All our discussion of anomaly should not lead you to believe that the
main subject must be a maverick element. This is simply not true; the
main subject is often made up of the unifying elements, but it is given
power and made to hold the attention because of its placement near
the vertical centreline.
A spectacular example of a powerful use of anomaly is Bonnats
Portrait of Cardinal Lavigerie (fig. 15), in which the over-all rectangular constructs are interrupted at the centre by the anomaly of the single triangle, created by the opening at the front of the cardinals robe.
The effect is riveting. It is true that there are hints of half-formed triangles elsewhere in the painting, a suggestion of counterpoint (see
below), but nothing so blatant as this powerful, centrally placed triangular monolith. Please note how the eye then rises to look at the
Cardinals head, as we discovered earlier (page 2).
figure 15
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figure 17
figure 18
figure 19
We have learned that the main element, the dominant, is usually placed
somewhere on the vertical centreline. But how should the ancillary elements be placed? There are three types of arrangement: symmetrical,
asymmetrical and asymmetrically symmetrical.
Fig. 20 is an example of pure symmetry. The main subject is placed
on the centrelines and the ancillary elements are distributed exactly
equally on either side: whatever is added on the left is mirrored on the
right and vice versa. Symmetry was much favoured in the Middle Ages
and during the Early Renaissance. It is also a favourite with the
Symbolists, as this exact central placement and this exact mirroring is
unnatural and immediately creates a sense of otherworldliness, or of
dreams.
The danger with pure symmetry is that it very quickly becomes
tedious when used in a work, such as an easel painting, that is small
enough to be seen all at once. In a large work, such as in a mural, or in
architecture, where the composition is carried in the memory, the simplicity of symmetry is a positive factor, rather than a bore.
Elements can also be balanced asymmetrically. A large, central element, or group of elements, can be
balanced by a small mass, placed
away from the centre, near the
frame (fig. 21). Figs. 22 and 23
show two examples, by Corot and
by Friant respectively, wherein a
large, dark mass at the right is
balanced by a much smaller dark
mass over to the left.
figure 20
figure 21
figure 22
figure 23
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figure 24a
figure 24
figure 26
Fig. 24, Vojtech Hynaiss The Judgement of Paris, is one of my favourites. Look how the artist has given the figure of Paris, off to the left,
extra weight by playing up the colour of his Pythian cap, which helps
him to balance the figures and landscape at the right. This sense of balance is important to the viewer; human beings are immensely uncomfortable when confronted by a lack of equilibrium. Notice, in the
black-and-white version (fig. 24a), how the dominant changes when
the red of the cap is removed; the attention is held by the nude goddesses at the centre and they become the element of greatest contrast
nearest the centre. The artistical balance behaves very much like a
weigh-scale: the further away from the centre the smaller mass is
placed, the larger the apparent weight that it can balance (fig. 25).
The third type of arrangement is asymmetrical symmetry and is
a type used often by artists it is, in my opinion, the most interesting.
As an example, let us look at a Raphael compositional sketch (fig. 26).
The main subject, the Madonna, is placed on the vertical centreline, as
we would expect. To the right of her, almost sitting on her knee, is the
baby Jesus and to the left is another baby, the infant St. John the
Baptist. However, St. John is not placed perfectly symmetrically, but
asymmetrically: he is lower. This is true too of the landscape behind
the Virgins head whatever happens on the right is repeated on the
left, but with variations: the trees on the right are smaller and more
plentiful, the trees on the left are larger and fewer, etc., etc. This sketch
has been composed so well, that we mistake it at first for Naturalism;
it is only after some minutes that we become aware of the formal symmetry. Many paintings are designed this way.
A more obvious example of asymmetrical symmetry is Maxfield
Parrishs mural, Old King Cole, in the Hotel Knickerbocker (fig. 27).
C P P C
figure 25
figure 27
The king is in the centre and is flanked by two jesters, one on each side.
But the one on the left leans towards the king, while the one on the
right stands up and twists away. The two boys, who sit at the kings feet
are likewise variations on a theme, as are the two guards, halfway
between the centre and the edges of the painting. On the far left is a
beautifully designed grouping of three adults, who are momentarily
static and bowing, while at the far right is the group which balances
these three, but which consists of only two people, a man and a boy,
who walk in from the side. Behind all these, we see a fairyland landscape, with its trees that rush in from the right, while the castle, mountain and clouds dream away asymmetrically, on the left. Between the
landscape and the figures, we see perfectly symmetrical architecture.
Kenyon Coxs The Sciences (fig. 29), a mural painted for the Library
of Congress, is the same kind of thing, although simpler. Fig. 28 further illustrates the idea, using a single figure on the left to play against
a whole group on the right.
figure 28
figure 29
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figure 30
figure 31
Before closing this chapter, let us take a brief look at the situation
wherein the main subject of the narrative is off-centre.
We have already seen some examples of this, in the section on true
asymmetry. The smaller part, which is off to one side and which balances the larger, is often such an attention-getter that it may be used as
the focus (fig. 22). The success of this depends on the strong contrast
inherent in the smaller element (if the contrast were not strong, the
smaller element would not be great enough to balance the larger); so,
this kind of off-centre situation is just an extreme case of greater contrast dominating over a weak-contrast centre (see the top of page 2).
The rule here, then, is to not place any kind of strong contrast near the
centre if you want the off-centre contrast to dominate. You must also
not place a strong-contrast element on the opposite side of the painting from your off-centre subject. This would result in the viewers
figure 32
C P P C
figure 34
C O: F P
figure 33
figure 22
figure 35
Exercises
Chapter I
Please note: although they do not specifically state it, the following exercises must be created using the principles of dominance and
placement (balance) learned in Chapter I.