ORDER IN CHAOS: OUTLOOK ON SELF IDENTITY THROUGH THE SIGNIFICANT FORMS OF MINANGKABAU DECORATIVE ART
This final project work began with the author's interest in understanding personal identity. Despite being raised with a deep respect for traditional culture, urban living caused the author to feel alienated from those values. The author's desire to comprehend personal identity led to t...
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Main Author: | |
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Format: | Final Project |
Language: | Indonesia |
Online Access: | https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/80160 |
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Institution: | Institut Teknologi Bandung |
Language: | Indonesia |
Summary: | This final project work began with the author's interest in understanding personal
identity. Despite being raised with a deep respect for traditional culture, urban
living caused the author to feel alienated from those values. The author's desire to
comprehend personal identity led to the selection of Minangkabau ornamentation
as the conceptual foundation for the visual forms to be realized.
The author formulated visuals based on the significant forms found in
Minangkabau ornamentation. These forms evoke aesthetic feelings within the
observer. The creation process is grounded in Clive Bell's theory of significant form
within the realm of art, supplemented by the ideas of artists like Kandinsky and the
insights of Susanne Langer. The artistic process began by creating modules as the
basic motifs for repetitive forms, then selecting directions and modifying shapes
based on fractal principles and grid methods. Both understandings also assisted
the author in composing visual works that play with the density and spacing of
forms.
The author crafted the work by making marks, drawing lines, and stacking modules
obtained. The author utilized color values to harmonize the work. Watercolor was
chosen as the drawing medium for its transparent nature, allowing for layering
strokes to achieve the desired darkness of values. The result is a collection of
geometric shapes that structurally interact, cross, and intersect. Each encounter
produces a new form in the obtained visuals.
In the end, the series "Silih Menyilih" is the outcome of the author's process of
understanding the dynamics of personal identity. With this work, the author
attempts to convey visually what was discovered from the pieces of shapes, then
presented back to the observers.
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