Color can change the way we perceive different objects and scenes. Distinct colors can bring out powerful emotions, like how bright colors tend to relate to hope and happiness, while darker colors can be more associated with sadness and isolation. However, my visual perceptions of color may not be the same as yours. I am colorblind (cue the irony).
As a result, I rely more on shape and contrast to visually communicate my artwork followed secondly by colors. This ideology helped me develop one of my favorite styles of working with a medley of geometric shapes. I begin by breaking down visuals into their simplistic geometric forms developing into a wireframe of sorts, then reintroducing color at the very end of the process after the exact shape is perfected. In addition to a geometric approach, I love incorporating the negative space into a piece to become involved with the design as a whole.
Sometimes I am attempting to invoke a specific feeling or deep emotion in my viewers, draw attention to a problem in society, or simply make art for the sake of beauty; its further meaning left to be decided by yourself. Either way, there is a purpose behind every shape, every line, every color. Although my observable perception of the world may differ from yours, the ideas within my art, anyone can observe … even if you too are colorblind.
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