Fun to see the mysterious lighting again - I am not sure where all the colors and glows come from; they look fun. It's interesting that the spheres are the most textured and sharp pieces in the picture - they pull your attention and give the image a focus.
While the floaty surreal quality is fun, it makes me a little dizzy / disoriented. How about if you think about the pieces as being in a setting. I could imagine for example, the vertical hyperbolic curves could be self-supporting partition walls in a dress shop and the glass aqua cone with the spheres could be a display if you resized it smaller. If you could add a few elements like a floor, a scale figure and a piece of furniture, it could anchor your experiments and give them a particular meaning.
Did you do this all in FormZ? It's really neat!! I like the interaction of the curved planes, and the spheres emerging from the turqoise bulb. It's a really fun composition. I also like the way you've positioned the light to cast shadows on the planes.
I agree with Nancy's comment, though, that it would be even more interesting to have it grounded with some kind of background setting.
2 comments:
Irie,
Fun to see the mysterious lighting again - I am not sure where all the colors and glows come from; they look fun. It's interesting that the spheres are the most textured and sharp pieces in the picture - they pull your attention and give the image a focus.
While the floaty surreal quality is fun, it makes me a little dizzy / disoriented. How about if you think about the pieces as being in a setting. I could imagine for example, the vertical hyperbolic curves could be self-supporting partition walls in a dress shop and the glass aqua cone with the spheres could be a display if you resized it smaller. If you could add a few elements like a floor, a scale figure and a piece of furniture, it could anchor your experiments and give them a particular meaning.
Nancy
Did you do this all in FormZ? It's really neat!! I like the interaction of the curved planes, and the spheres emerging from the turqoise bulb. It's a really fun composition. I also like the way you've positioned the light to cast shadows on the planes.
I agree with Nancy's comment, though, that it would be even more interesting to have it grounded with some kind of background setting.
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