Monday, September 29, 2008

Atlas of Colour

My achromatic tonal key is seen here and I composed it on my blue leather paper to create texture and create a 3d quality - this is also via the buildings which were painted and then cutout out and stuck on. Each building shows each of the 7 aspects of the achromatic tonal scale with various patterns on each facade.

This image shows my 49 veils creation for our classroom's window. I wanted my window creation to reflect the synagogue we visited in relation to the colour combinations possible by laying different coloured glass over each other. Thus I used my chosen colour blue as well as red to create purple windows. Each strip can lift out however, and thus the window can be just red, just blue or a mix with the purple. I also cut out some of the back 'windows' so the celephane can be held up to the light and appreciated.


This is the wall therapy exercise prior to being stuck in the atlas. The strokes are uni-directional and my three colours are used in a ratio of 2:1:1.


My colour therapy exercise is presented on this page of my atlas and the background shows the colour trick via the tiny blue squares. Each square is a photographed image of my abstract image of the toilet. When tessellated like so, and viewed by someone, the eye creates little blue hazy areas at each corner which I thought was a nice graphical effect. On top of this I placed my image, and one can again see my manifesto at the bottom.


This is the first page before my notes and is a cutout of the number 3. I ordered my notes so that that they relate to a different part of colour theory and wrote them so they fit into 6 pages. This is so that I could do a cutout of each number/letter in my pantone colour and put it on top of each page for a nice graphical effect. Thus before each page of notes is a cutout of 3, then 0, then 0 again, etc. Just to clarify, the MC in my pantone number stands for Matte Coat, the way the colour is finished inside the pantone book itself. The cutout worked well for you were able to see the silver notes on blue background behind the number and it looked effective.
One can also see part of my manifesto written at the bottom of the page. All white pages and some blue pages in my atlas have a line of the manifesto at the bottom, and when read from start to end creates one complete writing.


This is the front of the atlas from a different angle, showing the pages inside that present my chosen colour, patone 3005MC (deep blue).


This is the front cover of my atlas. It is actually the colour theory exercise 1, my 5 colour themes. On it is written 'Atlas of Colour' in graffiti, which is my passion that I attempted to use in a creative design sense. Around the characters are quotes from the protagonists as well as what each colour represents (for instance in the orange area is written 'spatial' for my spatial colour is orange). The binding that can be seen is a simple 4 bind weave using fishing wire, bound as tightly as possible.


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