The picture begins at the bottom left with a circle that has grown from about half an inch from the page out of a curved mass of black. The circle is layered in a set of three outer rims that seem to separate from themselves with a set of inner circles of different thickness and one of a gray scale. Along the outside border of the major circle in a solid black background a swarm of slightly different shaped white circles cluster together starting thin, then fattening, and then thinning out again upwards. Above is a gray shape that extends directly above and ends at the right side of the page. Dipping into this are two lines that curve inwards; one is white and the other is black. These lines curve up towards the left and become one as the delicately blend upwards forming one solid black band that then curves left in a wave that falls slowly down. The black band becomes intertwined with a gray ribbon and both then curves upwards in a small wave at the tip. From the circle there is a layer of solid color and bubbles that grow within. Out of this a wave of delicate ribbons grow upwards forming waves that dip down and then twist up. This drawing is overly pleasing to me. The compositional design is rendered well and very articulate. I like how the drawing begins in the left of the page continuing over to the right and comes in towards the right side then brake away and move out to the left. The composition has a great deal of movement with the placement of the design. The value scale is used well, so that we can tell the difference between the shapes and there becomes a movement and life of their own.
The picture is made of many organic, curling lines, and several of the same geometric shape. It has a light, dark, and medium shading, and it takes up most of the paper. From the complicated way that this picture is drawn, I would say that this picture was planned. The clean lines show that the drawer knew what they wanted to do, and shows a great deal of organization in the drawing. This is a good picture, because even though the drawing looks geometric and somewhat pattern-like, there's also the idead of being fluid. Going with the flow, so to speak, of the ability to change the direction of the picture.
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The picture begins at the bottom left with a circle that has grown from about half an inch from the page out of a curved mass of black. The circle is layered in a set of three outer rims that seem to separate from themselves with a set of inner circles of different thickness and one of a gray scale. Along the outside border of the major circle in a solid black background a swarm of slightly different shaped white circles cluster together starting thin, then fattening, and then thinning out again upwards. Above is a gray shape that extends directly above and ends at the right side of the page. Dipping into this are two lines that curve inwards; one is white and the other is black. These lines curve up towards the left and become one as the delicately blend upwards forming one solid black band that then curves left in a wave that falls slowly down. The black band becomes intertwined with a gray ribbon and both then curves upwards in a small wave at the tip. From the circle there is a layer of solid color and bubbles that grow within. Out of this a wave of delicate ribbons grow upwards forming waves that dip down and then twist up. This drawing is overly pleasing to me. The compositional design is rendered well and very articulate. I like how the drawing begins in the left of the page continuing over to the right and comes in towards the right side then brake away and move out to the left. The composition has a great deal of movement with the placement of the design. The value scale is used well, so that we can tell the difference between the shapes and there becomes a movement and life of their own.
The picture is made of many organic, curling lines, and several of the same geometric shape. It has a light, dark, and medium shading, and it takes up most of the paper. From the complicated way that this picture is drawn, I would say that this picture was planned. The clean lines show that the drawer knew what they wanted to do, and shows a great deal of organization in the drawing. This is a good picture, because even though the drawing looks geometric and somewhat pattern-like, there's also the idead of being fluid. Going with the flow, so to speak, of the ability to change the direction of the picture.
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