Particularity and Proliferation of Stroboscopic Elements in the Visual, Performing and Cinematographic Arts Cover Image

Particularity and Proliferation of Stroboscopic Elements in the Visual, Performing and Cinematographic Arts
Particularity and Proliferation of Stroboscopic Elements in the Visual, Performing and Cinematographic Arts

Author(s): Răzvan Constantin Caratănase, Răzvan Petrișor Dragoș
Subject(s): Theatre, Dance, Performing Arts, Fine Arts / Performing Arts, Visual Arts
Published by: Editura ARTES
Keywords: visual arts; performing cinematographic arts; effect; dynamics;

Summary/Abstract: In the work "Art and Visual Perception. A Psychology of the Author's Creative Vision” by Rudolf Arnheim, following some researches/studies of Gestalt psychology applied in the field of visual arts and/or cinematography, the author states: "It is unlikely that any stroboscopic "short-circuit" will occur as long as objects appear on the screen at a sufficient distance from each other." An observer-spectator only pays attention to what he/she receives. A speedy stream indicates unity. It is precisely for that reason that the vehement and effective ways are indispensable in order to render indisputably the intermittency-discontinuity. The stroboscopic dynamics overlooks the physical source of the visual tangible material. In that case, the visual identity does not start to be problematic as long as an element-object keeps staying in the same place without any inversion or transposition of its appearance - for example: the video camera that does not change its position but registers the building. For the same reason, we have the actor/actress who crosses the screen keeping his/her con-similarity (just walking down the path) without substantially changing his/her size or shape. The nature of the issues only appears under visual circumstances when they invoke/guide where it does not exist or vice versa. Alexander Archipenko (1887-1964): "In order to perform the movement, static painting must resort to symbols and conventions. It did not go beyond fixing a single "moment" in the sequence of moments that make up a movement; all other "moments" before and beyond the fixed movement are left to the imagination and fantasy of the spectator."

  • Issue Year: 2020
  • Issue No: 29
  • Page Range: 135-146
  • Page Count: 12
  • Language: English