RHYTHM
50 questions available
Questions
What is the term for the effect when a visual experience, such as the rhythmic patterns in a painting, stimulates one of the other senses like sound or touch?
View answer and explanationAccording to the text, what senses are evoked by Charles Burchfield’s painting, The Insect Chorus, through its use of repeated curves, zig-zags, and linear elements?
View answer and explanationKasimir Malevich's drawing 'Sensation of Movement and Resistance' simulates physical experiences by repeating which elements?
View answer and explanationVisual rhythm, as a design principle, is primarily based on what element of visual unity?
View answer and explanationIn the context of visual rhythm, what does the term 'legato' describe?
View answer and explanationWhich artwork is used as an example of a 'legato' or flowing rhythm, characterized by undulating, horizontal curves?
View answer and explanationWhat type of rhythm involves motifs alternating consistently with one another to produce a regular and anticipated sequence?
View answer and explanationThe text uses the musical term 'spiccato,' meaning 'bouncing bow,' to describe the alternating rhythm in which artwork?
View answer and explanationWhich of the following is an example of alternating rhythm found in architecture, as mentioned in the chapter?
View answer and explanationWhat is the defining characteristic of progressive rhythm?
View answer and explanationEdward Weston's photograph 'Artichoke, Halved' is used as an example of progressive rhythm found in what source?
View answer and explanationThe abstract sculpture 'Partial Recall' by Louise Bourgeois is said to have a progression similar to which other artwork mentioned in the chapter?
View answer and explanationWhat is the most complex rhythmic structure discussed in the chapter, which involves an overlay of several rhythmic patterns?
View answer and explanationIn the analysis of Jean-Léon Gérôme's painting 'The Duel after the Masquerade', how is the concept of polyrhythmic structure illustrated?
View answer and explanationHow does Picasso's painting 'Harlequin' demonstrate a polyrhythmic structure?
View answer and explanationWhat artistic movement is associated with Kasimir Malevich's drawings that attempted to convey sensations of 'metallic' sounds or movement?
View answer and explanationThe text suggests that visual rhythm is closely related to what concept?
View answer and explanationHow does the chair designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh create a 'dramatic, more complex rhythm'?
View answer and explanationIn the 'RHYTHM AND MOTION' section, what is the key difference between the rhythms in Niklaus Troxler's jazz posters and Alan Crockett's painting 'Doodle de Do'?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary reason that alternating rhythm requires the repetition to be 'fairly obvious'?
View answer and explanationIn Robert Delaunay's painting 'Rhythm without End', the text states that the description of alternating themes is similar to the description of what architectural feature?
View answer and explanationWhat is the common, everyday experience of progressive rhythm mentioned in the text?
View answer and explanationIn Ed Ruscha's photograph of a parking lot, what creates the 'more subtle progressive rhythm'?
View answer and explanationThe text compares the contrasting rhythms in Picasso's 'Harlequin' to what kind of interaction?
View answer and explanationWhat is the title of Charles Burchfield's 1917 painting that is said to evoke the sensation of heat and the sound of cicadas?
View answer and explanationThe drawing 'Sensation of Metallic Sounds' by Kasimir Malevich, created between 1916 and 1918, is described as having a 'jumpy arrangement of shapes' that echoes the sounds of what?
View answer and explanationIn the photograph 'Buchenwald in Herbst' by Albert Renger-Patzsch, what elements are said to produce a 'sinuous rhythm'?
View answer and explanationHow is the rhythm in the sixteenth-century illuminated manuscript by Hoefnagel described in the text?
View answer and explanationWhat is the title of Robert Delaunay's 1934 gouache painting that is used as an example of alternating rhythm?
View answer and explanationProgressive rhythm is most often achieved with a progressive variation of what element of a shape?
View answer and explanationWhat artistic principle is demonstrated by the rhythm of wavering lines above the rooftop in Charles Burchfield's 'The Insect Chorus'?
View answer and explanationBridget Riley's painting 'Series 35' is used as an example of visual rhythm created by what elements?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary difference in the rhythms produced by the tree trunks in Renger-Patzsch's photograph and the vertical slats in Mackintosh's chair?
View answer and explanationThe text analogizes the rhythm in Alan Crockett's painting 'Doodle de Do' to what musical concept?
View answer and explanationWhat is the key characteristic of the patterns and sequences found in nature, such as the seasons or tides, that is used to define alternating rhythm?
View answer and explanationWhat two elements alternate to create rhythm in the lowest decorative band of the brick cornice shown in Chapter 6?
View answer and explanationBesides size, what other elements could be varied to create a progressive rhythm?
View answer and explanationIn the polyrhythmic structure of Gérôme's 'The Duel after the Masquerade', the background rhythm of the trees is compared to what musical element?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary theme reflected in the Russian Suprematist drawings by Malevich discussed in the chapter?
View answer and explanationThe chapter states that the senses of sight and hearing are so closely allied that we often interchange adjectives, using terms like what to describe colors?
View answer and explanationWhat is the title of the 1979 sculpture by Louise Bourgeois that exemplifies progressive rhythm through a growth-like pattern?
View answer and explanationWhat is the shared characteristic between the photograph 'Dune Ridges at Sunrise' and the Hoefnagel manuscript?
View answer and explanationThe text contrasts the 'jittery jazz rift' of one Niklaus Troxler poster with a 'more synthetic' expression of jazz rhythm in another. What years were these two posters for the Jazz Festival Willisau created?
View answer and explanationWhich type of rhythm is explicitly linked to patterns that are 'anticipated' by the viewer?
View answer and explanationWhat does the text suggest is the main purpose of visual rhythm in art?
View answer and explanationThe feeling of 'undulation' in Bridget Riley's 'Series 35' is enhanced by what element, in addition to the curved stripes?
View answer and explanationWhich artwork is said to demonstrate how 'a few simple design elements work together to make a dramatic, more complex rhythm'?
View answer and explanationThe text explains that the rhythm in Joris Hoefnagel's illuminated manuscript marks the beginning and end of the passage with what visual device?
View answer and explanationIn the comparison between Gérôme's and Picasso's paintings, which concept do they both exemplify?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary visual element that creates the progressive rhythm in the photograph 'Artichoke, Halved' by Edward Weston?
View answer and explanation