Wednesday, 8 February 2017

Conclusion to the question

My final piece to conclude my investigation on how emotions are visually conveyed through context and worlds. The context of my illustration is to visually tell the audience how complex the human brain is, particularly emotions, and how it can overwhelm the mental state of the individual. The tangling pipes represents the complexity of emotions and the little characters clinging on the pipes represents the moods and various attitudes each emotion can bring out. The head falling apart symbolises the overwhelming thoughts bursting out from our physical shell, representing the uncontrollable that we cannot contain when we experience each emotion. 


Final piece to conclude my investigation

My investigation in exploring how context and worlds conveys particular emotions has taught me that the importance of object placement, composition and colours are critical, although these are only useful to convey the emotions of sadness, loneliness or anxiety. To convey other emotions such as anger or depression, it is usually relied on various subject matters (characters, objects or ambiguous visuals) as metaphors, connotations or symbolism, to exaggerate or to indirectly convey the emotion within the visual outcome.  


One of the artworks from the series, “The weight of Silence”. Eric Lacombe

My investigation in exploring how context and worlds conveys particular emotions has taught me that the importance of object placement, composition and colours are critical, although these are only useful to convey the emotions of sadness, loneliness or anxiety. To convey other emotions such as anger or depression, it is usually relied on various subject matters (characters, objects or ambiguous visuals) as metaphors, connotations or symbolism, to exaggerate or to indirectly convey the emotion within the visual outcome.  

Sunday, 5 February 2017

Painter - Edward Hopper (Sadness)

In the next experiment on how context and worlds conveys particular emotions, the emotion I will be focusing on will be sadness and I will be looking into the illustrations of Edward Hopper, particularly his illustrations of open rooms, to explore the use of colours, space, composition and subject matters on how it can convey the emotion of sadness. 


Rooms by the Sea (1951)


Office in a Small City (1953)


Room in Brookyln (1932)


Stairway (1949)


Sun in an Empty Room (1963)

His illustrations of open rooms which focuses on the use of colour, as well as incorporating reoccurring visual subject matters such as windows, chairs and a person, conveys the sense of grief, helplessness and loss. Unlike loneliness, when people experience sadness, they tend to shut themselves away in a room, excluding themselves from social settings and society. These particular illustrations of open rooms, which looks like rooms in a home environment, relates to the idea of exclusion, where the windows/doors reflects as the door to a social setting, or an escape from the struggle of sadness, while the room itself reflects on the exclusion the person is shutting themselves in. The empty environment in which the illustration is set, reflects on the grief and/or loss, where nothing but emptiness fills the room, representing the hollow state of the person who is experiencing nothing but sadness. 






Breaking down on the compositions of Edward Hoppers’ illustrations. In most if his ‘open room’ illustrations the perspective is very simple and I think the use of careful use of space, object placement and the use of various colours helps to capture the sense of ‘hollowness’ in the rooms. 





Manipulating and removing subject matters on some of his work to explore the impact it may have as well to exaggerate more on the ‘empty’ feel of exclusion. 









Experimenting on colours and different environments to see if it would have the same feel/approach to Hoppers’ work.




Conclusion piece on the exploration of Edward Hopper’s illustrations that conveys the sense of sadness. Instead of approaching the idea of using the ‘open room’ to visually convey the empty space as a representation of sadness and exclusion, I use visual elements such as the windows or doors to communicate the idea of hiding away from the social setting. The idea of a single window not lit as the others is to represent the exclusion of one shutting away from the others, while the other lit windows acts as a collective to represent that ‘lively’ social setting. When one experience sadness, they rather be left alone, cutting themselves off from society, hence the window not being lit like the others, metaphorically shows that they would rather be left alone, feeling hollow and lifeless due to helplessness, grief, or being in another negative emotional state (depression, anxiety, loneliness) that prevents them from moving forward. 

Thursday, 2 February 2017

Poetry - Dante Alighieri's "Inferno" (Anger)

For the next experiment in exploring how emotions are conveyed through imaginative worlds and context, I will be looking into literature, specifically poems, to interpret how the power of words and phrases communicate such emotion. After exploring Anxiety/Fear, Nostalgia and Loneliness, the next emotion I will interpret, now within poetry, will be Anger. The poem I will look into as my primary source will be the poem known as “Divine Comedy” by Dante Alighieri, where I will be focusing on the first act, titled “Inferno”. I will be exploring some of the poem’s phrases and deconstruct it to produce visual illustrations and experiments that will convey the sense of rage or silent anger.


“ONE night, when half my life behind me lay,
 I wandered from the straight lost path afar.
 
 Through the great dark was no releasing way;
 Above that dark was no relieving star.
 
 If yet that terrored night I think or say,
 As death's cold hands its fears resuming are.”



Visual interpretation to “ONE night, when half my life behind me lay,
I wandered from the straight lost path afar.” Using traditional medium (pencils) and using various mark making to convey the sense of chaos. The two face shaking back and forth represents “half my life behind me lay” conveying the two faces trying to separate (one leaving life behind and the other lost in chaos).


Visual interpretation to “Through the great dark was no releasing way;
 Above that dark was no relieving star.” The star (or the moon) represents the no relieving star with a face of evil, conveying the side of evil, which connects to hate, and hate connects to anger.



Visual representation to “If yet that terrored night I think or say,
 As death's cold hands its fears resuming are.”  The hand representing death, and fear is the mouth and teeth, representing the “terror”.


“THE day was falling, and the darkening air
 Released earth's creatures from their toils, while I,
 I only, faced the bitter road and bare
 My Master led.
 I only, must defy
 The powers of pity, and the night to be.”



Experimentation of “THE day was falling, and the darkening air. Released earth's creatures from their toils, while I, I only, faced the bitter road and bare.” The creatures with the expression of hate, anger and rage underneath the “bitter road”.



Another take on the sentence, though focusing on the other words such as “earth’s creatures from their toils”. A visual representation of earth and underneath is the release of facial expressions of hate and anger from “earth’s creatures”, aka humans of earth.

After the initial experiments I will continue to explore mark making with traditional mediums and will now incorporate colours that associates with anger (dark red is the most common colour to associate with this emotion). I will also look into visual illustrations by various artists who has depicted Hell in many forms to get a sense of what subject matters were used as visual metaphors for anger.

Subject matters within the depiction of hell that conveys the sense of anger and hatred are of: monsters, demons and fire. Other visual metaphors include eating (devouring), destruction and pain (both physical and emotional pain).



Cerberus (1824-7). William Blake


The Lovers Whirlwind (1827). William Blake



The Inferno (1410). Giovanni da Modena 



The Inferno, Canto 9 (1857). Gustave Dore



“THE gateway to the city of Doom.
Through me
The entrance to the Everlasting Pain.”





Visual interpretations of “THE gateway to the city of Doom.” The screaming mouth representing the gateway and the tongue is the road leading to the pumping organs (the city of doom and everlasting pain).


“Then the demon Charon rose
To herd them in, with eyes that furnace-hot
Glowed at the task, and lifted oar to smite
Who lingered.”



Visual interpretation.


“ARISING thunder from the vast Abyss
First roused me, not as he that rested wakes
From slumbrous hours, but one rude fury shakes
Untimely, and around I gazed to know
The place of my confining.”





Visual interpretations. 




Conclusion to the visual representation of anger based on the context of the poem “Divine Comedy”, by Dante Alighieri, Act 1 titled “Inferno”. The humanoid being, immobilised and merged with the ground, tears its head open, representing the sheer anger, with the inner emotions being released, screaming the pain of hate. The limited colours ranging from red, orange and pink are the colours that associates with anger, also indirectly conveying the dangers (the colour red representing ‘danger’) of what the damage anger emotion can emotionally inflict on your mind. 



Bibliography
Poetry Soup, Inferno, Alighieri, D [Online] [Accessed: 23th Jan 2016] Available from: http://www.poetrysoup.com/famous/poem/inferno_english_2383