I promise, we’ll move on to other topics besides cropping, but the power of cropping cannot be underestimated.
This face was one of four studies on the same page. The model was a magazine add with strong shadows, selling jewelry of all things. In setting up the exercise, I stressed that we were not after a likeness of this beautiful woman, but were using her as a point of departure for expressive studies of the face. We already know that beauty and expressiveness are incompatible, a major thread in these conversations.
The page as a whole did not work because the faces were too similarly drawn and were all the same size. What to do? CROP! You can see the edges of the strips of paper we used in cropping. The result is an expressive face.
But wait, there’s more. What if we crop even more radically! What if we slice the image through the eye on the right edge. That’s the image at the top of this post. It’s far removed from literalness, from illustration. Now we have a provocative image. It’s truly an image, in the sense that it is more than what it represents.
Let me point out just three things that make this image so rich.
*The left half of the page is all texture.
*The contour of the face is varied, so that as we trace it we travel over three different “landscapes.”
* One eye is in the middle of the page. Uncanny! There’s a study of this phenomenon (I can’t remember the author’s name now) that shows that portrait artists will compose their subject in such a way that one eye of the sitter is in the middle of the canvas.
—————————————————————— Velazquez(1599-1663), Portrait of Juan de Pareja
All contents copyright (C) 2010 Katherine Hilden. All rights reserved.
Leave a Reply