Transcript Rhythm

Rhythm
The repetition of visual movement –
colors – shapes – or lines. Variety is
essential to keep rhythms exciting
and active, and to avoid monotony.
Movement and rhythm work together
to create the visual equivalent of a
musical beat.
Dum, Dum, Dum,
Dum
• Rhythm is a basic part of
life. Think of heartbeats,
music, walking, dancing,
or breathing. Rhythm as a
design principle is based
on repetition of colors,
shapes, forms, lines or
value contrasts.
Developing rhythm in a
work of art will help unify
the surface and create a
pleasant feeling of
planned organization.
Architects Use Rhythm
• Architects repeat
shapes of windows,
columns, arches, or
other details to unify
the appearance of their
building. Several such
repetitions or rhythms
are seen in the United
States capitol building.
Unifying the Look
• The rhythmic sequence of columns, and
other architectural details were used to
unify this Greek architecture.
Regular Rhythms are planned.
• Regular Rhythm is planned by an artist, craftsperson, or
builder. The vertical boards in picket fences create regular
rhythms because the boards sizes and spacing are the same.
They rise and fall in a regular rhythm, just like notes in a
song.
Regular Rhythms May Have
Variety
• Regular rhythms may have variety and need not be
repeated exactly. Although the nine chickens seem to look
alike, each is a little different in shapes and placement.
Some are higher, some are lower. Variety provides interest.
Planned Repetition turns into
Regular Visual Rhythm
• Any planned
repetition will
produce regular
visual rhythm.
• Ceramic artists often
decorate their glazed
surfaces with
regularly repeated
elements to create
rhythm.
Craftspeople and Rhythm
• The repeated
shapes, colors, and
lines in this very
detailed pot created
by native American
Efren Ledezma not
only causes the eye
to sweep over the
pot, it causes it to
have a visual
rhythm or beat.
Patterns – Movement - Rhythm
• The patterns on his
vases, are what makes
his work not only have
movement, but also
rhythm.
• You can see in the view
from the top how the
lines undulate back and
forth, like waves in the
ocean.
• Regular rhythm is the repetition of elements that are the
same or nearly the same in regular sequence. They have
variety in that they all look a little different in shape. The
pop cans create a rhythm. They are in rows, but go up
and down with size, like notes on a music scale, while the
cloth that they are laying on has a pattern.
The difference between Rhythm
and Pattern?
• These pop cans are in
rows too, and on a shelf
which has a pattern, but
they are not nearly as
interesting as the previous
image. The notes* stay
the same, and are stagnate
and monotonous.
• The variety of the shapes
added rhythm and interest
to the previous image.
Flowing Rhythms
• You can easily see the
flowing rhythm in this
ceramic plate.
• The top row of
cups is a
regular
rhythm, boring
and stagnate.
• The bottom row
is an irregular
rhythm, which
has more
interest because
of variety.
Regular vs Irregular
• A row of evenly
spaced trees or rocks,
like in the top image,
create a regular
rhythm.
• In the bottom image,
the trees are spaced
unevenly so they
create an irregular
rhythm.
Staccato
Rhythms over
patterns
• Rhythm in art, as in
music, may change
from one work to
another. Here,
staccato repetitions
seem like quick bursts
of energy and are
placed over a regular
horizontal pattern.
• Staccato
Rhythms are
repetitions that
are abrupt and
that change
frequently.
Irregular Rhythms In Nature
• Irregular Rhythms are often seen in nature
because trees and flowers are not planned by a
gardener.
More Irregular Rhythm
• A city’s skyline is also irregular because
buildings and spaces are different.
Rhythm is based on repetition
• Rhythm as a design principle is based on repetition of
colors, shapes, forms, lines or value contrasts.
• The shapes of the buildings are different, but the same
in that they are tall skyscrapers.
• They all have different patterns on them.
• Another artists interpretation of a cityscape using
irregular rhythm.
More Irregular
Rhythms
Watercolor, 18 x 28 in
• Irregular or
unplanned
rhythms are
formed by waves
and sloshing
water. In the
painting by Mary
Alice Braukman,
Waves and Rocks,
the flowing
rhythms are
unplanned and
are not repeated
exactly
throughout the
painting.
• Irregular
rhythms
might repeat
throughout a
painting
without any
exact
duplication.
Robert Delaunay
& Orphism
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Painting complementary colors
opposite one another,
revolutionary French artist Robert
Delaunay exuberantly conveyed
life’s delights and complexities in
“Rhythm, Joie de Vivre.”
Delaunay (1885 – 1941) was
originally a theater set painter who
later employed Cubist theories to
explore contrasting colors.
Cubists used geometric cubes and
shapes in their works.
Delaunay’s talent emerged
rapidly, and he began exhibiting
only a year after he started
painting. His unique style sparked
Orphism, which expressed an
object’s movement, light and
rhythm, rather than its physical
form.
Delaunay’s art also incorporated
wax, sand, mosaics and lacquered
stone, and powerfully influenced
the development of abstract art in
the 1920s.
• The City of Paris,
Robert Delaunay,
1913
• In The City of
Paris, you can
see the cubists
influence.
• Rhythms are
created with
colors and
shapes.
• The figure seems
to rotate on the
canvas.
• Eiffel Tower“,
Robert Delaunay,
1924.
• The use of lines,
colors and shapes
were used to create
flowing upward
rhythms in this
painting.
Progressive Rhythm
• Progressive rhythms are
those in which the
elements change sizes as
they progress or move
across space. This is seen
in looking at buildings or
a fence in perspective.
The windows and
architectural elements are
the same size, but
diminish as they progress
into space.
Marcel Duchamp &
Rhythm
• Marcel Duchamp (dooshanh) painted Nude
Descending A
Staircase to show the
rhythmic movement of
a figure coming down
stairs.
• The effect is like stopaction or strobe-light
photography, because
the repeated shapes and
angles of the abstracted
figure move diagonally
across the canvas.
• Try to feel the rhythm
the next time you walk
down some stairs.
Up Close
• Repeated
head
shapes are
not exactly
alike, but
the variety
provides
interest.
• Repeated hip
shapes
follow the
diagonal
movements
down the
stairs.
• Repeated leg
movements
dictate the
rhythm of an
abstract figure
descending
stairs. Both
shapes and
lines are used
by the artist to
develop the
rhythm.
• Value Contrast
between positive and
negative shapes
places emphasis on the
fractured, rhythmic
figure.
• We see the figure
because the
background is dark
and the figure is light
in value.
What we have learned
• Rhythm is the
• Movement and
repetition of visual
Rhythm work
movement using:
together to create the
colors, lines, or
visual equivalent of a
shapes.
musical beat.
• Variety is essential to • Developing rhythm
keep rhythms exciting
will help unify the
and active, and to
work and create a
avoid monotony.
feeling of planned
organization.
• Regular rhythms
may have variety and
need not be repeated
exactly.
• Variety provides
interest.
• Any planned
repetition will
produce regular
visual rhythm.
• Like pattern,
rhythms can be
regular or irregular.
• Progressive rhythms
have elements that
change sizes as they
go back in space.