Non-orderliness in Image and Design
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.54097/9h73ve14Keywords:
Non-orderliness, Images, Visual DesignAbstract
‘Non-order’ is a general term for an order of image organisation that aims to break the routine and subvert people's visual perception habits, and its goal is to highlight visual characteristics and attract the audience's eyeballs. In the information age, in order to satisfy people's visual needs, order-breaking design is an ‘alternative’ form, and this paper examines the characteristics and relationship between order and disorder through the discussion of visual complexity, diversity of imagery, and innovation of visual communication design. The two are only different forms of imagery composition, and both of them construct the visual order in order to achieve the purpose of expression.
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References
[1] E.H. Gombrich: Sense of Order (Translation by S. Yang, Y. Xu, J. Fan) (Guangxi Fine Arts Publishing House, Nanning 2015).
[2] W.J.T. Mitchell: Image Theory (Translation by Y.G. Chen) (Peking University Press, Beijing 2012), p. 7.
[3] Rudolf Arnheim: Art and Visual Perception (Translation by S. Teng) (Sichuan People's Publishing House, Chengdu 2019), p. 71.
[4] Clive Bell: Art (Translation by J.H. Zhou, Z.Y. Ma) (China Federation of Literary and Art Circles Publishing House, Beijing 1984), p. 4.
[5] Rudolf Arnheim: Visual Thinking (Translation by S. Teng) (Sichuan People's Publishing House, Chengdu 2019), p. 32.
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