Principles:
MakingDesignWork
balancedor
unbalanced.Onepartmayappeartobedominantandtheothers
subordinate.Theirrelativeamounts—
theproportions—ofcolor,bulkorany
othercharacteristicmayseemfamiliaror
surprising.Theseparatepartsofthe
imagemightappeartogroupthemselvesintoasingle
configuration,suchasa
triangleor
circle.Ortheymightsetupavisualcounterpartofthe
rhythmthatis
associatedwithmotionand
sound.Andeveniftherewereonlyone
elementin
thephotograph,itssize,toneandposition
intheframewouldstirsomeassoci-
ationsandcomparisonsintheviewerandevoke
mentalrelationships.
Whyarehumanbeingssoresponsivetosuchvisualforcesandrelation-
ships?Manyexplanationshavebeenoffered.Theimpulsetointerconnectvi-
sualingredientssothat
theywillhavemeaningis,perhaps,abasicfunction
ofintelligence.Wesurvivebyconstantlytryingtoorganizeand
makesense
outofwhatwesee,identifyingandassessingvisualdatafordangers,foodor
whatever.Whenweseeamanrunninginthestreetwemaymerelybecu-
rious;
but
ifwerelatehimtoafollowingrunnerdressedinablueuniform,the
visualdataacquirenewmeaning,andcuriositymay
change
to
alarm.Why
weseekcertainmeanings,searchingapictureforparticularrelationships
suchasbalanceorrhythm,hasbeenexplainedtoadegreeinphysiological
terms.Astwo-footedcreatureswhohavetogothroughatrickyperiodof
learning
tostanduprightandwalk,humansmight
well
be
expected
to
react
tobalance,feelingcomfortablewhenitispresentanddisturbedwhen
itis
absent.Peopleappreciateregularrhythm,perhapsbecauseoftheinspiration
ofthecountlessrhythmsthatappearinnature—theheartbeat,thealternation
ofnightand
day,
thepulseofthewaves
and
thephasesofthemoon.Butthese
physiological
preferencesmaybelessexplanatory,many
psychologists
be-
lieve,thanthegeneralmethodofoperationofthehumanbrain,whichseems
alwaystoseektoorganizevisualdataintothemostsimple,regularandsym-
metricalconfigurationspossible.
Allthesetheoriesmay
possessameasure
oftruth.Andthey
pose
anin-
triguingpossibilityinthematterofdesign.Ifthebrain,forwhateverreasons,
likesunity,regularity,goodbalanceandsteadyrhythms,whynotarrange
theingredientsineverypictureinawaythatprovides theserelationships
andnothing else?Theanswerusuallygivenisobvious:Inaddition
to
the
need
forclarity,
orderandbalance,thereisalsoaneedforstimulation
—which
canbesuppliedinpicturesbyelementsofvarietyandtension.By
thisreasoning,theidealdesignisonethatisclear,orderlyandbalanced
—
butnotintooobviousaway.Itshouldbeprecariousandvaried
enoughto
beinteresting,butnot
so
precarious
astobe
irritating.
Yeteventhismore
complexformulafailson
closeinspection.Itwouldsacrificeagreatdealof
the
expressivepowerofdesign.Forinstance,anunbalancedstructuremight
wellbethebestdesignforapicturewhoseintentistodisturb.Strangepro-