Negative Space by TwoPynts
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Description
B&W film print, levels/curves adjusted and tinted after scanning into Photoshop.
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Negative Space
The areas of an artwork that are NOT the primary subject or object. Negative Space defines the subject by implication. In a painting or sculpture, the areas where there are no forms (the "empty" areas). In a painting or photograph, this means the areas which have no forms or objects (sometimes also called the 'background' ). In sculpture, this means the "holes" between forms or within a form (e.g., Henry Moore sculptures). Negative space is the other side of the coin of positive space, which is space actually occupied by forms in a painting or sculpture (the figure in a portrait). The notions of positive and negative space were advanced during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, replacing the more traditional notion of a 'background' which was subordinate to and separate from the subject image - portrait, still life, etc. Since about 1950, the notions of positive and negative space have also been replaced by much contemporary art, which sees the picture surface not as positive and negative areas, but rather one continuous surface where every area is equally important, and at the same spatial depth.
Comments (34)
Davidy
This has a fabulous abstract quality, I like it alot :))))
Digimon
Yes this IS a fabulous example of the use of negative space, all the more powerful because of the monochrome scheme and the high contrast! Excellent!
jcv2
Fantastic work, a very good illustration and very unusual! Excellent performance, Kort!
blacq_nyght_vampyre
Looks like Ice frozen in the pond!! Very beautiful.