Design...

Design...

by Keighan Eaker -
Number of replies: 0

🎨 Two-Dimensional Work – Vija Celmins

Drawing on her description in “Building Surfaces”, we can consider Celmins’s paintings (e.g., her meticulously layered seascapes or night skies):

Objective Descriptions:

  1. The surface is densely built from many thin layers, creating a subtle texture across the flat field YouTube+2Art21+2Art21+2Art21.

  2. Edges are intentionally left rough, so the stretcher and grain of the panel remain visible Art21.

  3. The palette is restrained and neutral—mostly grays, blacks, whites—emphasizing tonal gradation.

  4. The composition is deeply symmetrical and uniform, with minimal variation in visual weight across the pictorial plane.

Subjective Reaction:
Looking at this work gives me a meditative stillness, like staring into an infinite, quiet space.


🗿 Three-Dimensional Work – El Anatsui

From his Art in the Twenty‑First Century segment “Change,” focusing on El Anatsui’s bottle-cap metal sculptures:

Objective Descriptions:

  1. The work is constructed from thousands of small, repeating metal elements (bottle caps) linked together.

  2. Color is varied across the surface, combining metallic tones with hints of red, gold, and rust to create visual rhythm Wikipedia+8Art21+8Art21+8.

  3. The form drapes and folds like fabric, creating undulating vertical and horizontal flows.

  4. The overall structure uses asymmetrical balance—one side may sag or bulge slightly, but the composition feels visually stable.

Subjective Reaction:
This sculpture feels richly textured and alive—with a sense of fluid movement and cultural resonance emanating from its shimmering folds.