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patial Effects of Colors.

Spatial Effects of Colors

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Spatial Effects of Colors. Does Donald Sultan create an illusion that some flowers are larger and some are smaller? Which colors seem close, and which seem to recede? . Donald Sultan, 28 Flowers. Colors that are warmer seem to be closer - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Spatial Effects of Colors

Spatial Effects of Colors.

Page 2: Spatial Effects of Colors

Donald Sultan, 28 Flowers

Does Donald Sultan create an illusion that some flowers are larger and some are smaller? Which colors seem close, and which seem to recede?

Page 3: Spatial Effects of Colors

• Colors that are warmer seem to be closer• Colors that are higher in value at full

saturation (yellows) seem to be closer• Warmer, more saturated colors seem larger• Cooler colors seem smaller• Desaturated colors (especially dark

desaturated colors) seem farther• Darker colors seem farther

Page 4: Spatial Effects of Colors

Hans Hoffman

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Page 7: Spatial Effects of Colors

Tony BavingtonNotice how some sections of bands seem closer and some seem farther from the viewer.

Page 8: Spatial Effects of Colors

Earlier, we discussed how lighter, brighter, more saturated colors tend to push toward the viewer while darker, less saturated colors recede.

Based on this idea, would you paint a small room that you want to seem more spacious

YELLOW or BLUE?

Page 9: Spatial Effects of Colors

Bridget Riley

Page 10: Spatial Effects of Colors

Russell Sharon

Page 11: Spatial Effects of Colors

Alfred Bierstadt, Merced River

Atmospheric perspective: A technique where shifts in value and color create an illusion of space. Forms in the foreground are larger, darker, and higher in contrast. In the distance the value gets lighter and has less contrast.

Page 12: Spatial Effects of Colors

Foreground: brighter, darker, more saturated. Background: lighter less saturated.

Page 13: Spatial Effects of Colors

Frederick Church

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Sanford Robinson Gifford

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Rules for atmospheric perspective:Closer objects are larger and more detailed

Nearer objects are darker and higher in contrast (dark and light are often paired together)

Nearer objects are more saturated

Objects become smaller and lose detail towards the distance

Farther objects are lower in value, lower in saturation, and lower in contrast (mountains may resemble the sky in value an color)

Page 17: Spatial Effects of Colors

Chiaroscuro is created by contrasting areas of light and dark. In this image, there are several distinct lighting areas: a highlight, quartertone, midtone, form shadow, reflected light, and cast shadow. By contrasting the light areas with dark, we see an illusion of a sphere curving in space, and light moving across the sphere.

Page 18: Spatial Effects of Colors

A similar three dimensional effect can be achieved using chromatic value, where variations of tonal color create an illusion of objects turning in space. Smooth forms like these spherical objects will display subtle gradations of color as the object turns away from the light source.

Page 19: Spatial Effects of Colors

Consider how similar forms, without tonal/color variations seem flat rather than spatial.

Page 20: Spatial Effects of Colors

More textured objects may display sharper tonal and color contrasts as light and shadow hit the form

Page 21: Spatial Effects of Colors

And very planar forms will have distinct, hard-edged shifts in color and tone.

Page 22: Spatial Effects of Colors

Color/tone contrasts create an illusion of three-dimensionality within two-dimensional forms

Page 23: Spatial Effects of Colors

Al Held

Page 24: Spatial Effects of Colors

Al Held

How does Al Held use the principles of atmospheric perspective and chiaroscuro to create an illusion of space with his abstract forms?