If your painting have a horizon orientation,then they would not be
 considered totally abstract designs. The horizon produces Gravity,
wouldn't you agree?
mando

On May 10, 2009, at 7:30 AM, [email protected] wrote:

In a message dated 5/9/2009 11:51:06 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
[email protected] writes:

Yep! Luis is right. But architecture has a master it must always heed:
Gravity.  What natural law/s  limits all the other arts?
WC



True William, that is why structural engineering is essential to
architecture.

Gravity in other arts:
Dancing is also limited by gravity, and in classical styles the appearance of effortless leaping and lifting is a sign of expertise. Modern dance can
accentuate the heavy move or throw in body harnesses to simulate
weightlessness. This latter technique is quite often also used in cinema (kung fu
movies) such as "Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon" ;-)

Sculpture, the larger the scale the more gravity affects it requiring
structural engineering as in architecture.

Paintings and drawings are also influenced by gravity. Your abstractions have an up and down that is reference to the horizon line that exists because of our body's perception of the ground plane - we stand on the earth -
gravity.
Mando, I also do non-objective paintings and they always have a definitive orientation - I get extremely annoyed if I see one of them rotated wrongly.



Luis Fontanills

Architect
Miami/Dade Counties, Florida



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