Composition

    A series of exercises in art structure for the use of students and
                                teachers




                          By Arthur Wesley Dow
 Professor of Fine Arts in Teachers College, Columbia University New York
                                  City
            Formerly Instructor in Art at the Pratt Institute
  Author of Theory and Practice of Teaching Art and The Ipswich Prints


NINTH EDITION—REVISED AND ENLARGED WITH NEW ILLUSTRATIONS AND COLOR PLATES
                               [Synthesis]
Garden City, New York
DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY

1914





CONTENTS


BEGINNINGS
THE THREE ELEMENTS
   I. LINE—NOTAN—COLOR
LINE DRAWING
   II.—JAPANESE MATERIALS AND BRUSH PRACTICE
PRINCIPLES OF COMPOSITION
   III.—WAYS OF CREATING HARMONY
LINE
   IV.—COMPOSITION IN SQUARES AND CIRCLES
   V.—COMPOSITION IN RECTANGLES—VARIATION
   VI.—LANDSCAPE COMPOSITION
   VII.—COMPOSITION IN REPRESENTATION
NOTAN
   VIII.—HARMONY‐BUILDING WITH DARK‐AND‐LIGHT
   IX.—TWO VALUES—VARIATIONS—DESIGN
   X.—TWO VALUES—LANDSCAPE AND PICTURES
   XI.—TWO VALUES—GOTHIC SCULPTURE JAPANESE DESIGN BOOKS. APPLICATIONS OF
   TWO VALUES
   XII.—THREE VALUES
   XIII.—MORE THAN THREE VALUES
COLOR
   XIV.—COLOR THEORY
   XV.—COLOR DERIVED FROM NOTAN
   XVI.—COLOR SCHEMES FROM JAPANESE PRINTS AND FROM TEXTILES
COMPOSITION
   XVII.—IN DESIGN AND PAINTING
CONCLUSION





ACKNOWLEDGMENTS


Note.—The author gratefully acknowledges the courtesy of those named below
in according him permission to use photographs of certain paintings and
objects of art as illustrations for this book.

      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
      Metropolitan Museum, New York
      The National Gallery, London
      Musée de Cluny. Paris (J. Leroy, photographer)
      Musée de Sculpture Comparée. Paris
      Dr. William Sturgis Bigelow, Boston (permission to photograph
      Japanese paintings)
      Mr. Frederick W. Gookin (use of photographs from Kenzan and Kano
      Gyokuraku, made specially for Mr. Gookin, Boston M. F. A.
      Giacomo Brogi, Florence
      Fratelli Alinari. Florence
      D. Anderson, Rome
      W. A. Mansell & Co., London
      F. Rothier, Reims, France, and
      Kaltenbacher, Amiens, France (the Ruskin photographer)

License to use photographs was also obtained from the Autotype Fine Art
Company, Limited, London (the Michelangelo drawing, page 51), and from
Baldwin Coolidge, Boston.





                       [Landscape After Titlepage]






BEGINNINGS


In writing this book my main purpose is to set forth a way of thinking
about art. The most that such a book can do is to direct the thoughts,
awaken a sense of power and point to ways of controlling it.

The principles of art teaching here outlined might be illustrated in other
ways and with better examples. I hope the reader will see how each chapter
can be developed into many sets of lessons. The progressions can be
varied, materials changed, lessons amplified and different designs chosen,
providing there is no sacrifice of essentials. The book is based upon my
experience in painting and teaching for more than twenty years. The first
edition of Composition was published in 1899. In this revision I have made
many additions and used new illustrations without departing from theory or
principles. Composition was chosen as a title because that word expresses
the idea upon which the method here presented is founded—the “putting
together” of lines, masses and colors to make a harmony. Design,
understood in its broad sense, is a better word, but popular usage has
restricted it to decoration.

Composition, building up of harmony, is the fundamental process in all the
fine arts. I hold that art should be approached through composition rather
than through imitative drawing. The many different acts and processes
combined in a work of art may be attacked and mastered one by one, and
thereby a power gained to handle them unconsciously when they must be used
together. If a few elements can be united harmoniously, a step has been
taken toward further creation. Only through the appreciations does the
composer recognize a harmony. Hence the effort to find art‐structure
resolves itself into a development of appreciation. This faculty is a
common human possession but may remain inactive. A way must be found to
lay hold upon it and cause it to grow. A natural method is that of
exercises in progressive order, first building up very simple harmonies,
then proceeding on to the highest forms of composition. Such a method of
study includes all kinds of drawing, design and painting. It offers a
means of training for the creative artist, for the teacher or for one who
studies art for the sake of culture.

This approach to art through Structure is absolutely opposed to the time‐
honored approach through Imitation. For a great while we have been
teaching art through imitation—of nature and the “historic styles”—leaving
structure to take care of itself; gathering knowledge of facts but
acquiring little power to use them. This is why so much modern painting is
but picture‐writing; only story‐telling, not art; and so much architecture
and decoration only dead copies of conventional motives. Good drawing
results from trained judgment, not from the making of fac‐similes or maps.
Train the judgment, and ability to draw grows naturally. Schools that
follow the imitative or academic way regard drawing as a preparation for
design, whereas the very opposite is the logical order—design a
preparation for drawing.

Soon after the time of Leonardo da Vinci art education was classified into
Representative (imitative), and Decorative, with separate schools for
each—a serious mistake which has resulted in loss of public appreciation.
Painting, which is essentially a rhythmic harmony of colored spaces,
became sculptural, an imitation of modelling. Decoration became trivial, a
lifeless copying of styles. The true relation between design and
representation was lost.

This error is long‐lived. An infinite amount of time is wasted in
misdirected effort because tradition has a strong hold, and because
artists who have never made a study of education keep to old ruts when
they teach.

This academic system of art‐study ignores fundamental structure, hence the
young pupil understands but few phases of art. Confronted with a Japanese
ink painting, a fresco by Giotto or a Gothic statue he is unable to
recognize their art value. Indeed he may prefer modern clever nature‐
imitation to imaginative work of any period.

Study of composition of Line, Mass and Color leads to appreciation of all
forms of art and of the beauty of nature. Drawing of natural objects then
becomes a language of expression. They are drawn because they are
beautiful or because they are to be used in some art work. Facility in
drawing will come more quickly in this way than by a dull routine of
imitation with no definite end in view.

The history of this structural system of art teaching may be stated in a
few words; and here I am given the opportunity to express my indebtedness
to one whose voice is now silent. An experience of five years in the
French schools left me thoroughly dissatisfied with academic theory. In a
search for something more vital I began a comparative study of the art of
all nations and epochs. While pursuing an investigation of Oriental
painting and design at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts I met the late
Professor Ernest F. Fenollosa. He was then in charge of the Japanese
collections, a considerable portion of which had been gathered by him in
Japan. He was a philosopher and logician gifted with a brilliant mind of
great analytical power. This, with rare appreciation, gave him an insight
into the nature of fine art such as few ever attain.

As imperial art commissioner for the Japanese government he had
exceptional opportunities for a critical knowledge of both Eastern and
Western art. He at once gave me his cordial support in my quest, for he
also felt the inadequacy of modern art teaching. He vigorously advocated a
radically different idea, based as in music, upon synthetic principles. He
believed music to be, in a sense, the key to the other fine arts, since
its essence is pure beauty; that space art may be called “visual music”,
and may be studied and criticised from this point of view. Convinced that
this new conception was a more reasonable approach to art, I gave much
time to preparing with Professor Fenollosa a progressive series of
synthetic exercises. My first experiment in applying these in teaching was
made in 1889 in my Boston classes, with Professor Fenollosa as lecturer on
the philosophy and history of art. The results of the work thus begun
attracted the attention of some educators, notably Mr. Frederic B. Pratt,
of that great institution where a father’s vision has been given form by
the sons. Through his personal interest and confidence in these structural
principles, a larger opportunity was offered in the art department of
Pratt Institute, Brooklyn. Here during various periods, I had charge of
classes in life drawing, painting, design and normal art; also of a course
for Kindergarten teachers. Professor Fenollosa continued his lectures
during the first year.

The growth of the work and its influence upon art teaching are now well
known.

In 1900 I established the Summer School at Ipswich, Massachusetts, for the
purpose of obtaining a better knowledge of the relation of art to
handicraft and manual training. Composition of line, mass and color was
applied to design, landscape and very simple hand work in metal, wood‐
block printing and textiles. Parts of 1903 and ’04 were spent in Japan,
India and Egypt observing the native crafts and gathering illustrative
material.

In 1904 I became director of fine arts in Teachers College, Columbia
University, New York. The art courses are now arranged in progressive
series of synthetic exercises in line, dark‐and‐light and color.
Composition is made the basis of all work in drawing, painting, designing
and modelling—of house decoration and industrial arts—of normal courses
and of art training for children, After twenty years’ experience in
teaching I find that the principles hold good under varying conditions,
and produce results justifying full confidence. They bring to the student,
whether designer, craftsman, sculptor or painter an increase of creative
power; to the teacher, all this and an educational theory capable of the
widest application. To all whose loyal support has given impetus and
advancement to this work—to the pupils and friends who have so generously
furnished examples for illustration—I offer most grateful acknowledgments.

                                                         ARTHUR WESLEY DOW
New York, 1912





THE THREE ELEMENTS




I. LINE—NOTAN—COLOR


Architecture, Sculpture, Painting, Music and Poetry are the principal fine
arts. Of these the first three are called Space arts, and take the various
forms of arranging, building, constructing, designing, modelling and
picture‐painting. In the space arts there are three structural elements
with which harmonies may be built up:

   1. LINE. The chief element of beauty in architecture, sculpture, metal
      work, etching, line design and line drawings. Nos. 1, 2, 3, 6, 23,
      38.
   2. NOTAN. The chief element in illustration, charcoal drawing,
      mezzotint, Oriental ink painting and architectural light and shade.
      Nos. 5, 59, 60, 61.
   3. COLOR. The chief element in painting, Japanese prints, textile
      design, stained glass, embroidery, enamelling and pottery
      decoration. Nos. 8, 9, and Chap. XIV.

                     [No. 1. LINE. Iron, XV Century]
           [No. 2. LINE—Flying Buttresses, Chartres Cathedral]

The term LINE refers to boundaries of shapes and the interrelations of
lines and spaces. Line‐beauty means harmony of combined lines or the
peculiar quality imparted by special treatment. The term NOTAN, a Japanese
word meaning “dark, light”, refers to the quantity of light reflected, or
the massing of tones of different values. Notan‐beauty means the harmony
resulting from the combination of dark and light spaces—whether colored or
not—whether in buildings, in pictures, or in nature.

 [No. 3 LINE. Harmony of rhythmic curves. From book of prints by Okumura
                    Masanobu, Japanese, 18th century.]

  No. 3 LINE. Harmony of rhythmic curves. From book of prints by Okumura
                    Masanobu, Japanese, 18th century.


Careful distinction should be made between NOTAN, an element of universal
beauty, and LIGHT AND SHADOW, a single fact of external nature. The term
COLOR refers to quality of light.

These three structural elements are intimately related. Good color is
dependent upon good notan, and that in turn is dependent upon good
spacing. It seems reasonable then that a study of art should begin with
line. One should learn to think in terms of line, and be somewhat familiar
with simple spacing before attempting notan or color. There is danger,
however, of losing interest by dwelling upon one subject too long. Dark‐
and‐light massing will reveal the mistakes in spacing and stimulate to
renewed effort. Color will reveal the weakness of dark‐and‐light. Very
young pupils should begin with color but the instructor will take pains to
include spacing and notan in each lesson. In general, however, the best
plan is to take up exercises in each element in turn; then go back to them
separately and make more detailed studies; then combine them, proceeding
toward advanced compositions. Whatever be the choice of progression, there
must be a thorough grounding in the elementary relations of space cutting
and simple massings of dark‐and‐light. This is essential to successful
work in designing, drawing, modelling, painting, architecture and the
crafts.

              [No. 4. LINE. Priest, from Rheims Cathedral.]
  [No. 5. Venetian Lace 2 values. Three values.  Peruvian, Four values.]
  [No. 6. Examples of Line Harmony. Greek Sculpture, Aphrodite.  Gothic
                            Sculpture, Mary.]

   No. 6. Examples of Line Harmony. Greek Sculpture, Aphrodite.  Gothic
                             Sculpture, Mary.


  [No. 7. Examples of Line and Notan Harmony. Michelangelo.  Botticelli.
                      Gothic Finial. Rhodian Ware.]
   [No. 8. Examples of Color Harmony. HIROSHIGE. “Taki no gawa at Oji”]

    No. 8. Examples of Color Harmony. HIROSHIGE. “Taki no gawa at Oji”


       [No. 9. Examples of Color Harmony. Persian Woolen, ancient]

        No. 9. Examples of Color Harmony. Persian Woolen, ancient





LINE DRAWING




II.—JAPANESE MATERIALS AND BRUSH PRACTICE


Japanese brushes, ink and paper are to be preferred for exercises  in line
drawing, tracing, notan massing and washes in grays. Long brushes are best
for long continuous lines, short brushes for sharp corners and broken
lines.   For lettering, clip the point of a long line‐brush, (see p. 55)

                            [Japanese Brushes]

Japanese paper for artists’ use is made of the bark of the mulberry tree,
and is prepared with a sizing of glue and alum. Unprinted wall paper
(lining paper) is serviceable for practice work. “Bogus” paper and cover
papers can also be used for line or mass.

Japanese ink must be ground upon the ink‐stone, a slab of slate. Intense
blackness can be secured immediately by using only a few drops of water.
Dry the ink stick, and wrap in paper; never leave it soaking. Ink of good
quality, and a clean stone are essential. Tools perfected by ages of
practice in line drawing and brush work, afford the best training for hand
and eye. Painting with the Japanese brush leads directly to oil painting.
If Japanese materials are not to be obtained or are not desired, the
exercises can be carried on with pencil, charcoal, water colors, crayons,
and even oil paint.

                      [Japanese ink and ink‐stone.]

For line drawing the brush is held in a perpendicular position, that it
may move freely in all directions, much like the etcher’s needle. The
brush should be well charged with ink, then pressed firmly down upon the
paper till it spreads to the width desired for the line. Draw with the
whole hand and arm in one sweep, not with the fingers. Steady the hand if
necessary by resting the wrist or end of the little finger on the paper.
Draw very slowly. Expressive line is not made by mere momentum, but by
force of will controlling the hand. By drawing slowly the line can be
watched and guided as it grows under the brush point. Slight waverings are
not objectionable; in fact they often give character to the line.

                      [Manner of Holding the Brush.]



EXERCISE


Begin with straight lines, remembering that straightness of direction is
the essential thing, not mere geometric straightness. After some practice
with straight lines, try curves; then irregular lines. Copy brush drawings
from Japanese books, for a study of control of the hand and quality of
touch, No. 11, p. 19. This practice work can be done upon ordinary paper.
The aim of such an exercise is to put the hand under control of the will,
but too much time should not be given to mere practice, apart from design.
Quality and power of line are illustrated in the drawings of masters, No.
10 and p. 18. These may be copied later on, for a study of advanced
drawing.

               [Practice‐lines drawn with Japanese Brush.]

                Practice‐lines drawn with Japanese Brush.





 [LINE DRAWING II. LINES BY MASTERS. SOGA SHUBUN. RHODIAN PLATES. KENZAN.
                               REMBRANDT.]
[LINE DRAWING II. LINES BY MASTERS. Leonardo da Vinci. Michelangelo. Kano
                          Tanyu. Kano Naonobu.]
          [LINE DRAWING II. Brush drawings from Japanese Books.]
                             [Brush Drawing]





PRINCIPLES OF COMPOSITION




III.—WAYS OF CREATING HARMONY


Fine art, by its very name, implies fine relations. Art study is the
attempt to perceive and to create fine relations of line, mass and color.
This is done by original effort stimulated by the influence of good
examples. As fine relations (that is, harmony, beauty) can be understood
only through the appreciations, the whole fabric of art education should
be based upon a training in appreciation. This power cannot the imparted
like information. Artistic skill cannot be given by dictation or acquired
by reading. It does not come by merely learning to draw, by imitating
nature, or by any process of storing the mind with facts.

The power is within—the question is how to reach it and use it.

Increase of power always comes with exercise. If one uses a little of his
appreciative faculty in simple ways, proceeding on gradually to the more
difficult problems, he is in the line of natural growth. To put together a
few straight lines, creating a harmony of movement and spacing, calls for
exercise of good judgment and appreciation. Even in this seemingly limited
field great things are possible; the proportions of the Parthenon and
Giotto’s Tower can be reduced to a few straight lines finely related and
spaced.

Effective progress in composition depends upon working with an organized
and definite series of exercises, building one experience upon another,
calling for cultivated judgment to discern and decide upon finer and finer
relations. Little can be expressed until lines are arranged in a Space.
Spacing is the very groundwork of Design. Ways of arranging and spacing I
shall call



PRINCIPLES OF COMPOSITION


In my experience these five have been sufficient:

   1. OPPOSITION
   2. TRANSITION
   3. SUBORDINATION
   4. REPETITION
   5. SYMMETRY

These names are given to five ways of creating harmony, all being
dependent upon a great general principle, PROPORTION or GOOD SPACING.

1. OPPOSITION. Two lines meeting form a simple and severe harmony.
Examples will be found in Greek door‐ways, Egyptian temples and early
Renaissance architecture; in plaid design; also in landscape where
vertical lines cut the horizon (see pp. 21, 45, 46.) This principle is
used in the straight line work in squares and rectangles, pp. 32, 33, 39,
and in combination with other principles, pp. 25, 29.

                           [No 12. Opposition]
                           [No 13. Opposition]

2. TRANSITION. The arrangement thus designated involves a step beyond
Opposition. Two straight lines meeting in opposing directions give an
impression of abruptness, severity, or even violence; the difference of
movement being emphasized. If a third line is added, as in the sketches
below, the opposition is softened and an effect of unity and completeness
produced.

This combination typifies beauty itself which has been defined as
consisting of elements of difference harmonized by elements of unity.

A very common example of Transition is the bracket, No. 15. The straight
line is modified into curves and may be elaborated with great complexity
of modelling.

                           [No 14. Transition]
                           [No 15. Transition]

Instead of a drawn line of transition there may be only a suggestion of
one, but the effect is the same; a softening of the corner angle, No. 14
and pp. 58,60. In pictorial art the vignette, in architecture the capital,
are examples of the transition principle. In design an effect of
Transition may be produced by radiation. (Illustrations below.) Accidental
transitions occur in nature in the branching of old trees, where the
rhythmic lines are thus unified.

For convenience the suggestions for class work are grouped together in the
following



EXERCISE


Opposition. Copy the sketches and illustrations, enlarged. Design
straight‐line arrangements of mouldings, plaids and rectangular
panellings, Nos. 13, 18, 24. Find examples in nature, and draw in line,
with brush, pen or pencil without a border.

Transition. Copy the sketches, as before. Draw a bracket in straight line,
modifying into curved. Design corner ornaments for panels and book covers;
metal work for cabinet. No. 18. Find examples in nature and draw in line.
No. 18.

It is important in all such work to make a number of sketches from which
the best may be chosen.

3. SUBORDINATION. Neither of the foregoing principles is often found alone
as the basis of a single work. Transition in particular, usually serves to
harmonize the parts of a composition. The principle Subordination is a
great constructive idea not only in the space arts but in all the fine
arts:

To form a complete group the parts are attached or related to a single
dominating element which determines the character of the whole. A tree
trunk with its branches is a good type of this kind of harmony; unity
secured through the relation of principal and subordinate, even down to
the veinings of leaves—a multitude of parts organized into a simple whole.
This way of creating beauty is conspicuous in the perfect spacing and
line‐rhythm of Salisbury cathedral, St. Maclou of Rouen and the Taj Mahal;
in Piero della Francesca’s “Resurrection” and Millet’s “Goose‐girl”; in
some Byzantine design and Persian rugs (see pp. 58, 65, 98.)

                      [No 16. Subordination by Size]

It governs the distribution of masses in Dark‐and‐Light composition, and
of hues in Color schemes. It appears in poetry (the Odyssey for example)
in the subordination of all parts to the main idea of the subject. It is
used constructively in musical composition. Whenever unity is to be
evolved from complexity, confusion reduced to order, power felt—through
concentration, organization, leadership—then will be applied the creative
principle called here Subordination.

In Line Composition the arrangement by principal and subordinate may be
made in three ways, No. 16:

   1. By grouping about an axis, as leaf relates to stem, branches to
      trunk.
   2. By radiation, as in flowers, the rosette, vault ribs, the anthemion.
   3. By size, as in a group of mountain peaks, a cathedral with its spire
      and pinnacles, tree clusters, or Oriental rug with centre and
      border; p. 65.

Art‐interest in any of these lies in the fineness of relation. A throwing
together of large and small; mere geometric radiation; or conventional
branching can never be other than commonplace. A work of fine art
constructed upon the principle of Subordination has all its parts related
by delicate adjustments and balance of proportions, tone and color. A
change in one member changes the whole. No. 22.

To discover the meaning and the possibility of expression in this form of
corn‐position the student may work out a series of problems as suggested
in this



EXERCISE


The instructor draws flower or fruit with stem and leaves. The pupil
arranges this motif in various rectangular spaces (page 25), combining the
1st and 3rd forms of subordination, and using his critical judgment in a
way that is of great value to the beginner in composition. The pupil now
draws the same or similar subjects from nature, acquainting himself with
their form and character; then composes them in decorative or pictorial
panels—an art‐use of representative drawing as well as exercise in
appreciation. Copy the examples of the 2nd kind of Subordination, and
design original rosettes, anthemions, palmettes, thinking chiefly of the
spacing and rhythm. Find examples in nature; chimneys and roofs, boats
with masts and sails, or tree groups. Draw and arrange in spaces. Nos. 16,
18, 26, 28, 37, 61.

After choosing the best out of many trial sketches, draw in line with the
Japanese brush. Then, for further improvement in arrangement, and
refinement of line‐quality, trace with brush and ink upon thin Japanese
paper.

4. REPETITION. This name is give to the opposite of Subordination—the
production of beauty by repeating the same lines in rhythmical order. The
intervals may be equal, as in pattern, or unequal, as in landscape, see
below and No. 20.

                           [No 17. Repetition]
 [No 18. Opposition, Transition, Opposition and Symmetry, Subordination]

Of all ways of creating harmony this is the most common, being probably
the oldest form of design. It seems almost instinctive, perhaps derived
from the rhythms of breathing and walking, or the movement of ripples and
rolling waves. Marching is but orderly walking, and the dance, in its
primitive form, is a development of marching. Children make rows and
patterns of sticks or bits of colored paper, thinking of them as in
animated motion. In early forms of art the figures march or dance around
the vases, pots and baskets.

                       [No. 19  Peruvian Tapestry]

This principle of Repetition is the basis of all music and poetry. The
sacred dance of the savage is associated with the drum and other primitive
instruments for marking rhythm; with the chant and mystic song. From such
rude beginnings, from the tomtoms, trumpets and Pan‐pipes of old, music
has developed to the masterpieces of modern times through the building of
harmony upon harmony,—composition.

From the crude rhythm of the savage, like the Australian song “Eat; eat;
eat,” from the battle cries and folk poems of barbaric peoples, there has
been refinement upon refinement of word‐music ever moving towards the
supreme. This gave the world the verse of Sappho which Swinburne thought
the most beautiful sounds ever produced in language. From the rude
patterns marked with sticks on Indian bowls and pots, or painted in earth
colors on wigwam and belt, or woven on blanket, this form of space art has
grown, through the complexities of Egyptian and Peruvian textile design to
the splendor of Byzantine mosaic, the jewel patterns of the Moguls, and
Gothic sculpture; from rock‐cut pillars of cave temples to the colonnade
of the Parthenon. (For examples of primitive design see the works of
William H. Holmes.)

Repetition, be it remembered, is only a way of putting lines and spaces
together, and does not in itself produce beauty. A mere row of things has
no art‐value. Railroads, fences, blocks of buildings, and all bad
patterns, are, like doggerel rhyme, examples of repetition without art.

Repetition in fine spacing, with the intention of creating a harmony,
becomes a builder of art fabric.



EXERCISE


1. Borders. Divide a long space by vertical or oblique lines at regular
intervals. By connecting the ends of these with straight lines, develope
many series of meanders, frets and zigzags. Waves and scrolls are evolved
from these by changing straight to curved line, No. 20a, and p. 56. 26

2. Surface pattern. Subdivide a space (freehand) into squares, diamonds or
triangles, determining the size of the unit desired. This will give a
general plan for the distribution of figures. In one of these spaces
compose a simple group in straight lines, line and dot, or straight and
curved, if only geometric pattern be desired; or a floral form for a sprig
pattern. In the composition of this unit the principle of Subordination
will be remembered.

As soon as the unit is repeated a new set of relations will be created,
dependent upon the spacing. A secondary pattern forms itself out of the
background spaces. Hence the designer must decide whether the unit is to
fill the skeleton square completely, have a wide margin, or overrun the
square. Repeating the figure in these various ways will determine the best
size. The main effort should be given to producing a fine relation between
one unit and its neighbors and between pattern and background. All the
best work in Repetition has this refined harmony of spacing. No. 20b below
and pp. 13, 65, 66, 85. Copy the illustrations of Repetition in this book,
and make original variations of them. Copy, in line, the units of early
Italian textiles, Oriental rugs or any of the best examples to be found in
museums or in illustrated art‐books. See “Egg and Dart” from the
Parthenon, p. 30, also pp. 67, 121. For anatomy and planning of pattern,
see the works of Lewis F. Day.

                         [No 20. Surface Pattern]

SYMMETRY. The most common and obvious way of satisfying the desire for
order is to place two equal lines or shapes in exact balance, as in a
gable, windows each side of a door, or objects on a shelf. The term
Symmetry applies to three‐and four‐part groups, or others where even
balance is made, but here it refers mainly to a two‐part arrangement.

Sometimes construction produces Symmetry, as in the human body; ships;
Greek and Rennaissance architecture; furniture; pottery; books. Partly
from this cause and partly through imitation, Symmetry, like Repetition,
has come to be used in cheap and mean design where no regard is paid to
beauty of form. Japanese art, when influenced by Zen philosophy, as
Okakura Kakuzo tells us in “The Book of Tea”, avoids symmetry as
uninteresting. In Gothic art, the product of richly inventive and
imaginative minds, symmetry was never used in a commonplace way.

This Principle of Composition—when united to fine spacing,—produces, in
architecture an effect of repose and completeness; in design a type of
severely beautiful form, as seen in a Greek vase or the treasures of the
Sho‐so‐in at Nara where so much of the older Japanese art has been
preserved.

              [No 21. Symmetry.  Gemini, Amiens Cathedral.]

A few examples of Symmetry are given here; the student will readily find
others. Exercises can be easily devised, following the steps suggested
under other principles. See opposite, and Nos. 42, 43.

PROPORTION or GOOD SPACING. Principles of Composition, I must repeat, are
only ways of arranging lines and shapes; art is not produced by them
unless they are used in combination with this general principle,—Good
Spacing. They are by no means recipes for art, and their names are of
little consequence. Appreciation of fineness of relations must always
govern the method and form of composition. It is possible to use all the
principles here discussed, and to complete all the exercises, without
gaining much, if any, art experience. The main thing is the striving for
the best, the most harmonious, result that can be obtained. One way to
accomplish this is to compare and choose continually—making many designs
under one subject and selecting the best. The great general principle of
Proportion needs no special illustration or exercise, because it is so
intimate a part of all other principles and exercises. It may be studied
in every example of supreme art. It is the foundation of all the finest
work in line and mass. The mystery of Spacing will be revealed to the mind
that has developed Appreciation.

[No. 22. Subordination, Symmetry, Subordination and Repetition, Opposiion
      and Subordination, Repetition, Repetition and Subordination.]

SYMMETRY. The most common and obvious way of satisfying the desire for
order is to place two equal lines or shapes in exact balance, as in a
gable, windows each side of a door, or objects on a shelf. The term
Symmetry applies to three‐and four‐part groups, or others where even
balance is made, but here it refers mainly to a two‐part arrangement.
Sometimes construction produces Symmetry, as in the human body; ships;
Greek and Rennaissance architecture; furniture; pottery; books. Partly
from this cause and partly through imitation, Symmetry, like Repetition,
has come to be used in cheap and mean design where no regard is paid to
beauty of form. Japanese art, when influenced by Zen philosophy, as
Okakura Kakuzo tells us in “The Book of Tea”, avoids symmetry as
uninteresting. In Gothic art, the product of richly inventive and
imaginative minds, symmetry was never used in a commonplace way.

                                 [No. 23]
                         [Geometric, Variations.]





LINE




IV.—COMPOSITION IN SQUARES AND CIRCLES


After working with the principles long enough to understand their nature,
and to see what can be done with them, the student is ready for problems
in composition. Practice in line arrangement is a preparation for all
kinds of art work, be it design, painting, sculpture or architecture.
Choose an enclosed area of definite and regular shape, and break it up
into a harmonious group of smaller areas by drawing lines. For these
elementary exercises in composition the square and circle are best because
their boundaries are unchangeable, and attention must be fixed upon
interior lines. Take first the square, using straight lines of equal
thickness drawn with the brush as suggested in chapter II. The result
should be a harmony of well‐cut space, a little musical theme in straight
lines and grouped areas. Make many trial arrangements, sketching lightly
with charcoal on “bogus” or lining paper. Select the best, correct them,
and draw with brush and ink over the charcoal lines. From these choose the
most satisfactory, place thin Japanese paper over them and trace in firm
black lines, freehand, with the Japanese brush. Avoid hard wiry lines and
all that savors of rule and compass or laborious pains‐taking. Use no
measure of any kind; sizes, shapes and directions must be decided upon
without mechanical aids.

              [No. 24. Composition in Squares and Circles.]
              [No. 25. Compositions in Squares and Circles]

Never try to erase an ink line,—if a mistake occurs begin again. Tracing,
for the art‐purpose of improving proportions and acquiring an expressive
brush‐touch, is a most valuable help to the production of good work.
Architects use tracing‐paper for changes in plans. Japanese artists trace
again and again until satisfied with the quality of touch and strength of
drawing. Straight line is chosen for elementary practice because of its
simplicity, and because it prepares for work with curves. The finest curve
is measured by a series of straight lines in harmonic relations of rhythm
and proportion (p. 42). After some experience with straight line, cut
areas with curved,—geometric, flower, fruit, landscape or figure.

Equal thickness of line is advisable now, to fix attention upon direction,
touch and spacing. Variation in width will come later in notan of line
(page 54) and in representative drawing (page 51) where texture and
modelling are to be indicated. The main purpose of this and all exercises
in this book is the creation of harmony, hence if the result has but a
slight degree of line‐beauty it can be considered a first step in Art.

The examples are chosen from students’ work, from Japanese books, from
design, craft and architecture. They illustrate various ways of treating
squares and circles according to principles of composition.

   1. Copy these enlarged, with brush.
   2. Select one, as a theme, and make many variations.
   3. Originate new line‐schemes in squares and circles.

              [No. 26. Compositions in Squares and Circles.]
 [No. 27.  Units for wood‐block printing, stencilling and hand‐coloring.]



APPLICATIONS


   1. Ginghams, plaids, embroidery, stencil.
   2. Panelling, window sashes, leading for glass, inlaid wood, mosaic,
      enamel on metal.
   3. Incised lines in wood, clay or metal, low relief modelling.

Study of the principle precedes application in all cases. It is true that
the limitations of material must be recognized in making designs for
special purposes. The substance or surface for which the design is
intended will itself suggest the handling; but material teaches us nothing
about the finer relationships. First study the art of design; develop
capacity by exercise of the inventive and appreciative faculties; then
consider the applications in craft or profession.

                           [No. 28. Japanese.]




V.—COMPOSITION IN RECTANGLES—VARIATION



In the search for finer relations there must be every opportunity for
choice; the better the choice, the finer the art. The square and circle
allow choice only as to interior divisions, but the rectangle is capable
of infinite variation in its boundary lines.

The scientific mind has sought, by analysis of many masterpieces, to
discover a set of perfect proportions, and to reduce them to mathematical
form, for example, 3:5, or 4:7. The secret of spacing in Greek art has
been looked for in the “golden mean”, viz: height is to length as length
is to the sum of height and length. Doubtless such formulae were useful
for ordinary work, but the finest things were certainly the product of
feeling and trained judgment, not of mathematics. Art resists everything
that interferes with free choice and personal decision; art knows no
limits.

Poverty of ideas is no characteristic of the artist; his mind is ever
striving to express itself in new ways.

The personal choice of proportions, tones and colors stamps the work with
individuality. A master in art is always intensely individual, and what he
does is an expression of his own peculiar choices.

The beauty of proportion in your rectangle is measured by your feeling for
fine relations, not by any formula what ever. No work has art‐value unless
it reflects the personality of its author, What everybody can do easily,
or by rule, cannot be art.

The study of Variation tends to lead the mind away from the conventional
and humdrum, toward original and individual expression. Variation has no
place in academic courses of art teaching, but in composition it is a most
important element.

The masters of music have shown that infinite possibilities of
variation—the same theme appearing again and again with new beauty,
different quality and complex accompaniment. Even so can lines, masses and
colors be wrought into musical harmonies and endlessly varied. The
Japanese color print exemplifies this, each copy of the same subject being
varied in shade or hue or disposition of masses to suit the restless
inventive energy of its author. In old Italian textiles the same pattern
appears repeatedly, but varied in size, proportion, dark‐and‐light and
color. In times when art is decadent, the designers and painters lack
inventive power and merely imitate nature or the creations of others. Then
comes Realism, conventionality, and the death of art.

Some experience in choice of proportions and the cutting of rectangular
spaces may be gained from the following

                [No. 29. Examples of Rectangular Design.]



EXERCISE


   1. Design some simple theme in vertical and horizontal lines and
      arrange it in several rectangles of the same size, varying the
      spacing in each, No. 29a.
   2. Compose a straight‐line theme in several rectangles of different
      proportions, No. 29b.
   3. Choose the best and trace with brush and ink.

In the first case there is variation of interior lines only; in the second
all lines are changed. This exercise admits of great expansion, according
to age of pupils and limits of time.



EXAMPLES OF RECTANGULAR DESIGN.


Contact with the best works of art is an essential part of art education,
for from them comes power and the stimulus to create. The student hears
and reads much that passes for art criticism but is only talk about the
subject of a picture, the derivation and meaning of a design, or the
accuracy of a drawing. These minor points have their place in discussing
the literary and scientific sides of a masterpiece; they relate to art
only superficially, and give no key to the perception of fine quality.

The most important fact about a great creative work is that it is
beautiful; and the best way to see this is to study the art‐structure of
it,—the way it is built up as Line, Notan, Color,—the principle of
composition which it exemplifies. See what a master has done with the very
problem you are trying to work out.

This method of approach will involve a new classification of the world’s
art, cutting across the historical, topical and geographical lines of
development. The instructor in composition will illustrate each step with
many examples differing as to time, locality, material and subject, but
alike in art‐structure.

Museum collections might be used for a series of progressive studies based
upon composition; taking up one principle at a time and seeking
illustrations in a group of wide range,—a picture, sculpture,
architecture, Gothic carving, metal work, old textile, bit of pottery,
Japanese print.

The beauty of simple spacing is found in things great and small, from a
cathedral tower to a cupboard shelf.

The campanile of the Duomo of Florence (No. 30) designed by that master of
architecture and painting, Giotto, is a rectangular composition of
exceeding beauty. Its charm lies chiefly in its delicately harmonized
proportions on a straight‐line scheme. It is visual music in terms of line
and space. The areas are largest at the top, growing gradually smaller in
each of the stories downward. The graceful mouldings, the window tracery,
the many colors of marble and porphyry are but enrichments of the splendid
main lines.

           [No. 30. Giotto’s Tower (traced from a photograph).]

The Ca’ d’Oro of Venice (No. 31, A) presents this rectangular beauty in an
entirely different way. First, a vertical line divides the facade into two
unequal but balanced proportions; each of these is again divided by
horizontal lines and by windows and balconies into smaller spaces, the
whole making a perfect harmony—each part related to, and affected by every
other part.

The tokonoma of a Japanese room (No. 31, B) is arranged in a similar
rectangular scheme. A vertical line, as in the Venetian palace facade,
divides the whole space into two; one of these is divided again into
recesses with shelves or sliding doors; the other is for pictures
(kakemono), not more than three of which a hung at a time. No. 31, C shows
three of these sets of shelves. The Japanese publish books with hundreds
of designs for this little recess. The fertility of invention combined
with feeling for good spacing, even in such a simple bit of craft, is
characteristic of the Japanese. Their design books, from which I have
copied many examples for this volume, are very useful to the student of
art.

Style, in furniture, is a matter of good spacing, rather than of period or
person. The best designs are very simple, finely balanced compositions of
a few straight lines (No. 31, D).

Book covers with their lettering and decorations, and book pages with or
without illustrations are examples of space cutting,—good or commonplace
according to the designer’s feeling for line‐beauty, In the early days of
printing the two pages of an open book were consider together as a single
rectangular space. Into this the type was to be set with the utmost care
as to proportion and margin.



EXERCISE


The few examples given here show how varied are the applications of a
single principle. The study of these will suggest a field for research. If
possible the student should work from the objects themselves or from large
 photographs; and from the original Japanese design books. These [No. 31.
                       Compositions in Rectangles.]
tracings are given for purposes of comparison.

   1. Copy the examples, without measuring. An attempt to copy brings the
      pupil’s mind into contact with that of a superior, and lets him see
      how difficult it is to reach the master’s perfection. Copying as a
      means of improving one’s style is the opposite of copying as a
      substitute for original work.
   2. After making the best possible copies, invent original variations of
      these themes,—keeping the same general plan but changing the sizes.



COMPOSITION OF POTTERY FORMS. Makers of modern commercial ware usually
leave beauty of line out of account, thinking only of utility,—of the
piece of pottery as a feeding‐dish, or as a costly and showy object. The
glaring white glaze, harsh colors and clumsy shapes of common table‐ware
must be endured until there is sufficient public appreciation to demand
something better; yet even this is less offensive than the kind that
pretends to be art,—bad in line and glittering with false decoration.

Pottery, like other craft‐products, is truly useful when it represents the
best workmanship, combined with feeling for shape, tone, texture and
color,—in a word, fine art.

Such quality is found, to mention only a few cases, in some of the
“peasant wares”; in the best Japanese pottery, ancient and modern; in
Chinese, especially of the Sung period (A. D. 960‐1280) in Moorish,
Persian, Rhodian and Greek. When each maker tried to improve up older
models, and had the taste and inventive genius to do it, the art grew to
supreme excellence; even fragments such handicraft are now precious. The
difference between the contours a really great piece of pottery and
ordinary one may seem very slight, but in just this little difference lies
the art.



EXERCISE


One good way to stimulate invention in composing pottery shapes is to
evolve them from rectangles. In the straight line there is strength; a
curve is measured by a series of straight lines connected in rhythm. No.
32a. This principle is recognized in blocking out a freehand drawing,—a
process often misunderstood and exaggerated.

Curved profiles are only variations of rectangular forms, for example the
bowl in No. 32b.

                         [No. 32. Pottery Forms.]

Change the height and a series of new shapes will result. As the top and
bottom lines remain the same we have to compare the curved sides only.
Another effect (c) comes from varying the width; and still another (d) by
changing both height and width. In No. 33 are students’ drawings of
pottery profiles evolved from rectangles. For brushwork, in this exercise,
it is well to indicate the lines of the rectangle in pale red, the pottery
in black. Make many sketches, select the best profiles, improve them by
tracing in ink, and compare with historic pieces. Drawing from the finest
examples of pottery, and making original variations of the forms, will aid
in drawing from the cast or the nude, because of the intimate study of the
character of curves.

             [No 33. Pottery Forms Derived from Rectangles.]



FLOWERS and other forms as LINE‐MOTIVES. The rectangular space may be
subdivided, as was the square, by a simple line‐motif,—flower, fruit,
still life, animal or figure,—following some Principle of Composition. In
chapter III, under Subordination, an exercise was suggested and
illustrated; it could be taken up again at this point, with new subjects,
for a study of Variation. As rectangular compositions will be found under
Notan and Color, it is not necessary to consider them further here as pure
line, except in the case of Landscape, to which a special chapter is
given.




VI.—LANDSCAPE COMPOSITION


The modern arbitrary division of Painting into Representative and
Decorative has put composition into the background and brought forward
nature‐imitation as a substitute. The picture‐painter is led to think of
likeness to nature as to the most desirable quality for his work, and the
designer talks of “conventionalizing”; both judging their art by a
standard of Realism rather than of Beauty.

In the world’s art epochs there was no such division. Every work of space‐
art was regarded as primarily an arrangement, with Beauty as its raison
d’etre. Even a portrait was first of all a composition, with the facts and
the truth subordinate to the greater idea of aesthetic structure. Training
in the fundamental principles of Composition gave the artists a wide
field—they were at once architects, sculptors, decorators and picture‐
painters.

Following this thought of the oneness of art, we find that the picture,
the plan, and the pattern are alike in the sense that each is a group of
synthetically related spaces. Abstract design is, as it were, the primer
of painting, in which principles of Composition appear in a clear and
definite form. In the picture they are not so obvious, being found in
complex interrelations and concealed under detail.

The designer and picture‐painter start in the same way. Each has before
him a blank space on which he sketches out the main lines of his
composition. This may be called his Line‐idea, and on it hinges the
excellence of the whole, for no delicacy of tone, or harmony of color can
remedy a bad proportion. A picture, then, may be said to be in its
beginning actually a pattern of lines. Could the art student have this
fact in view at the outset, it would save him much time and anxiety.
Nature will not teach him composition. The sphinx is not more silent than
she on this point. He must learn the secret as Giotto and della Francesca
and Kanawoka and Turner learned it, by the study of art itself in the
works of the masters, and by continual creative effort. If students could
have a thorough training in the elements of their profession they would
not fall into the error of supposing that such a universal idea as Beauty
of Line could be compressed into a few cases like the “triangle,” “bird’s‐
wing,” “line of beauty,” or “scroll ornament,” nor would they take these
notions as a kind of receipt for composing the lines of pictures.

Insistence upon the placing of Composition above Representation must not
be considered as any undervaluation of the latter. The art student must
learn to represent nature’s forms, colors and effects; must know the
properties of pigments and how to handle brushes and materials. He may
have to study the sciences of perspective and anatomy. More or less of
this knowledge and skill will be required in his career, but they are only
helps to art, not substitutes for it, and I believe that if he begins with
Composition, that is, with a study of art itself, he will acquire these
naturally, as he feels the need of them.

Returning now to the thought that the picture and the abstract design are
much alike in structure, let us see how some of the simple spacings may be
illustrated by landscape.

Looking out from a grove we notice that the trees, vertical straight
lines, cut horizontal lines,—an arrangement in Opposition and Repetition
making a pattern in rectangular spaces. Compare the gingham and landscape
on page 22. This is a common effect in nature, to be translated into terms
of art as suggested in the following exercise.

              [No. 34. Landscape Reduced to its Main Lines.]



EXERCISE


No. 34 is a landscape reduced to its main lines, all detail being omitted.

Make an enlarged copy of this, or design a similar one. Then, in the
attempt to find the best proportion and the best way of setting the
subject upon canvas or paper, arrange this in rectangles of varying shape,
some nearly square, others tall, others long and narrow horizontally as in
No. 35. To bring the whole landscape into all these will not, of course,
be possible, but in each the essential lines must be retained.

           [No. 35. Landscape in Rectangles of Various Shape.]

Draw in ink after preliminary studies with pencil or charcoal, correcting
errors by tracing.

Then find in nature other similar subjects; sketch and vary in the same
way.



                 [No. 36. Pictures on Rectangular Lines.]

The art of landscape painting is a special subject, not to be treated at
length here, but I believe that the true way to approach it is through
these or similar exercises.

First study the art, then apply it, whether to landscape or any other kind
of expression.



PICTURES COMPOSED ON RECTANGULAR LINES.


Great architects and designers were not the only ones to use this simple
line‐idea; the masters of pictorial art have based upon it some of their
best work; (opposite page).

These tracings from a variety of compositions, old and new (No. 36), show
that this combination was chosen either to express certain qualities and
emotions,—majesty, solemnity, peace, repose, (Puvis de Chavannes)—or
because such a space division was suited to tone‐effects (Whistler’s
Battersea Bridge), or to color schemes (Hiroshige). These should be copied
exactly in pencil, then drawn enlarged. Find other examples in museums,
illustrated books, or photographs, and draw in the same way.

The student must, however, be warned against mistaking a mere geometric
combination of lines for an aesthetic combination. There is no special
virtue in a rectangular scheme or any other in itself; it is the treatment
of it that makes it art or not art. Many a commonplace architect has
designed a tower similar to Giotto’s, and many a dauber of oil paint has
constructed a wood interior on a line‐plan resembling that of Puvis. So
the mere doing of the work recommended here will be of little value if the
only thought is to get over the ground, or if the mind is intent upon
names rather than principles. The doing of it well, with an artistic
purpose in mind, is the true way to develop the creative faculties.



LANDSCAPE ARRANGEMENT,—VARIATION.


Leaving now the rectangular scheme, take any landscape that has good
elements, reduce it to a few main lines and strive to present it in the
most beautiful way—for example one from No. 61, or one drawn by the
instructor, or even a tracing from a photograph. Remember that the aim is
not to represent a place, nor to get good drawing now; put those thoughts
out of the mind and try only to cut a space finely by landscape shapes;
the various lines in your subject combine to enclose spaces, and the art
in your composition will lie in placing these spaces in good relations to
each other. Here must come in the personal influence of the instructor,
which is, after all, the very core of all art teaching. He can bring the
pupils up to the height of his own appreciation, and perhaps no farther.
The best of systems is valueless without this personal artistic guidance.

At this stage of landscape composition, the idea of Grouping
(Subordination) can be brought in, as a help in arranging sizes and
shapes. There is a certain beauty in a contrast of large and small. It is
the opposite of Monotony. For instance, compare a street where there is
variety in the sizes of buildings and trees, with another of rows of dull
ugly blocks. Ranges of hills, spires and pinnacles, clumps of large and
small trees, clusters of haystacks, illustrate this idea in landscape.

               [No. 37.  A Landscape in Three Proportions.]



EXERCISE


To discover the best arrangement, and to get the utmost experience in line
and space composition, the landscape should be set into several boundaries
of differing proportions, as in Chapter V, and as shown in the examples,
keeping the essential lines of the subject, but varying them to fit the
boundary. For instance, a tree may be made taller in a high vertical space
than in a low horizontal space, (No. 37 below). After working out this
exercise the pupil may draw a landscape from nature and treat it in the
same way. Let him rigorously exclude detail, drawing only the outlines of
objects.




VII.—COMPOSITION IN REPRESENTATION


In academic art teaching representation is the starting‐point. This means
that one must first of all “learn to draw”, as power in art is thought to
be based upon ability to represent accurately and truthfully either
nature’s facts or historic ornament. I use the word “academic” to define
all teaching founded upon representation. The theory may be summed up in
two points:

   1. Store the mind with facts, to be used in creative work later on.
   2. Technique is best acquired by the practice of object and figure
      drawing. The first is a purely scientific process, a gathering up of
      data, with no thought of harmony or originality; hence drawing with
      such an end in view is not strictly art‐work. Nor does the artist
      need to lumber up his mind; nature is his storehouse of facts. The
      second point has more reason, but when the aim is for mere accuracy,
      only a limited amount of skill is acquired and that often hardly
      more than nice workmanship—not art‐skill. The powerful drawing of
      the masters is largely derived from other masters, not from copying
      nature. It is an interpretation with the purpose of attaining a high
      standard. Such drawing aims to express character and quality in an
      individual way—a thing quite different from fact‐statement.

Nature‐drawing, wrongly placed and misunderstood, has become a fetich in
our modern teaching. Our art critics talk of “just” rendering, “true”
values, “conscientious” painting and the like; terms that belong to
morals, not art, and could not be applied to Architecture, Music or
Poetry. These stock‐phrases are a part of that tradition of the
elders—that eighteenth century academism still lingering. Representation
has but a small place in the art of the world. This is roughly shown in
the two lists below:



NON‐REPRESENTATIVE


      Architecture—Furniture.
      Wood carving.
      Pottery.
      Modelling,—mouldings and pattern.
      Metal work.
      Inlay,—mosaic, etc.
      Geometric design, including Egyptian, Peruvian and Savage.
      Ginghams, plaids and much textile pattern.
      Mohammedan art (one great division) etc.



REPRESENTATIVE


      Painting and Sculpture of Figures, Portraits, Animals, Flowers,
      Still Life, Landscape Painting.



The nature‐imitators hold that accurate representation is a virtue of
highest order and to be attained in the beginning. It is undeniably
serviceable, but to start with it is to begin at the wrong end. It is not
the province of the landscape painter, for example, to represent so much
topography, but to express an emotion; and this he must do by art. His art
will be manifest in his composition; in his placing of his trees, hills
and houses in synthetic relations to each other and to the space‐boundary.
Here is the strength of George Inness; to this he gave his chief effort.
He omits detail, and rarely does more than indicate forms.

This relation among the parts of a composition is what we call Beauty, and
it begins to exist with the first few lines drawn. Even the student may
express a little of it as he feels it, and the attempt to embody it in
lines on paper will surely lead to a desire to know more fully the
character and shapes of things, to seek a knowledge of drawing with
enthusiasm and pleasure.

These things are said, not against nature‐drawing—I should advise more
rather than less—but against putting it in the wrong place.

The main difference between Academic and Structural (Analytic and
Synthetic) is not in the things done, but in the reason for doing them,
and the time for them. All processes are good in their proper places.

The relation of representative drawing to a synthetic scheme is this: One
uses the facts of nature to express an idea or emotion. The figures,
animals, flowers or objects are chosen for the sake of presenting some
great historical or religious thought as in della Francesca’s Annunciation
(No. 36), for decoration of an architectural space (Reims capital, No.
38), because the landscape has special beauty as in Hiroshige’s print (No.
8), or because the objects have form and color suggesting a high order of
harmony, as in Chinese and Japanese paintings of flowers, or Leonardo’s
drawings of insects and reptiles.

Another reason for drawing is found in the use of the shapes or hues in
design. Desire to express an idea awakens interest in the means.
Observation is keen, close application is an easy task, every sense is
alert to accomplish the undertaking. This is quite different from drawing
anything and everything for practice only.

Mere accuracy has no art‐value whatever. Some of the most pathetic things
in the world are the pictures or statues whose only virtue is accuracy.
The bare truth may be a deadly commonplace. Pupils should look for
character; that includes all truth and all beauty. It leads one to seek
for the best handling and to value power in expression above success in
drawing.

Composition is the greatest aid to representation because it cultivates
judgment as to relations of space and mass. Composition does not invite
departure from nature’s truth, or encourage inaccuracies of any kind—it
helps one to draw in a finer way.





   [No. 38. Notan Plan, Rhythm of Line, Representation Composed into a
                                 Space.]
     [No. 39. Notan VIII. Dark and Light Harmonies from the Masters.]





NOTAN




VIII.—HARMONY‐BUILDING WITH DARK‐AND‐LIGHT


As there is no one word in English to express the idea contained in the
phrase “dark‐and‐light,” I have adopted the Japanese word “no‐tan” (dark,
light). It seems fitting that we should borrow this art‐term from a people
who have revealed to us so much of this kind of beauty. “Chiaroscuro” has
a similar but more limited meaning. Still narrower are the ordinary studio
terms “light‐and‐shade,” “shading,” “spotting,” “effect” that convey
little idea of special harmony‐building, but refer usually to
representation.

Notan, while including all that these words connote, has a fuller meaning
as a name for a great universal manifestation of beauty.

Darks and lights in harmonic relations—this is Notan the second structural
element of space‐art; p. 7.

The Orientals rarely represent shadows; they seem to regard them as of
slight interest—mere fleeting effects or accidents. They prefer to model
by line rather than by shading. They recognize notan as a vital and
distinct element of the art of painting.

The Buddhist priest‐painters of the Zen sect discarded color, and for ages
painted in ink, so mastering tone‐relations as to attract the admiration
and profoundly influence the art of the western world.

Our etching and book illustration have long felt the effect of contact
with Japanese classic painting, though the influence came indirectly
through the Ukiyoye color prints and books. Such names as Kakei, Chinese
of the Sung dynasty (p. 96), Soga Shubun, the Chinese who founded a school
in Japan in the fifteenth century (p. 17), Sesshu, one of the greatest
painters of all time (p. 97), Sotan, Soami, Motonobu, Tanyu are now placed
with Titian, Giorgione (p. 51), Rembrandt, Turner, Corot and Whistler. The
works of Oriental masters who felt the power and mystery of Notan are
becoming known through the reproductions that the Japanese are publishing,
and through precious examples in our own museums and collections. This in
one of the forces tending to uproot our traditional scientific art
teaching which does not recognize Dark‐and‐Light as worthy of special
attention.

Appreciation of Notan and power to create with it can be gained, as in the
case of Line, by definite study through progressive exercises. At the
outset a fundamental fact must be understood, that synthetically related
masses of dark and light convey an impression of beauty entirely
independent of meaning,—for example, geometric patterns or blotty ink
sketches by Dutch and Japanese.

When this occurs accidentally in nature,—say a grove of dark trees on a
light hillside, or a pile of buildings against the morning sky,—we at once
feel the charm and call the effect “picturesque.” The quality which makes
the natural scene a good subject for a picture is like musical harmony. It
is the “visual music” that the Japanese so love in the rough ink paintings
of their masters where there is but a hint of facts (pp. 97, 99)—a classic
style which is the outward expression of a fine appreciation, and whose
origin and practice are admirably set forth in “The Book of Tea.”
Recognition of Notan as an individual element will simplify the
difficulties of tone‐composition and open the way for growth in power.

NOTAN OF LINE. As long as the lines of a design are kept of uniform width,
the beauty is limited to proportion of areas and quality of touch, but
widen some of the lines, and at once appears a new grace, Dark‐and‐Light.
The textile designers who are restricted to straight lines, have recourse
to this principle. They widen lines, vary their depth of tone, glorify
them with color, and show that what seems a narrow field is really one of
wide range.

                         [No. 40. Notan of Line.]



EXERCISE


Choose some of the previous geometric line patterns, and widen certain of
the lines, as illustrated in the plate. Incidentally this will give good
brush practice, as the lines are to be drawn at one stroke. Push the point
of the brush down to the required width, then draw the line. Try a large
number of arrangements, set them up in a row and pick out the best. In
choosing and criticising, remember that every part of a work of art has
something to say. If one part is made so prominent that the others have no
reason for being there, the art is gone. So in this case; if one line
asserts itself to the detriment of the others, there is discord. There may
be many or few lines, but each must have its part in the whole. In a word,
wholeness is essential to beauty; it distinguishes Music from Noise.



LETTERING. When forming part of an artistic composition, in books,
posters, manuscripts, illuminations, etc., lettering should be classed as
Notan of Line. Obviously the spacing of masses of letters has first
consideration, and is usually a simple problem in rectangular composition.
The effect is a tone or group of tones more or less complicated according
to sizes of letters, thickness of their lines and width of spaces between
and around them. I have found the reed‐pen and the Japanese brush
(clipped) the best implements for students’ lettering (see below). Having
suggested that Lettering, including Printing, as an art, is a problem in
composition of line and notan, it seems hardly worth while to introduce
special exercises here. Johnston has treated this subject exhaustively;
the reader is referred to his book “Writing, Illuminating and Lettering,”
to Walter Crane’s and other good books on lettering. Compare fine
printing, old and new, Japanese, Chinese and Arabic writing, and ancient
manuscripts and inscriptions—Egyptian, Greek, and Mediaeval.

            [No. 41. Japanese brushes clipped for lettering.]




          [Notan VIII. Repetition and variation in two values.]
      [Notan VII. Landscape compositions by HOKUSAI, three values.]
                [Notan IX. Two Values, Historic Examples.]




IX.—TWO VALUES—VARIATIONS—DESIGN



Dark‐and‐light has not been considered in school curricula, except in its
limited application to representation. The study of “light and shade” has
for its aim, not the creation of a beautiful idea in terms of contrasting
masses of light and dark, but merely the accurate rendering of certain
facts of nature,—hence is a scientific rather than an artistic exercise.
The pupil who begins in this way will be embarrassed in advanced work by
lack of experience in arranging and differentiating tones. Worse than
that, it tends to cut him off from the appreciation of one whole class of
great works of art. As in the case of Line, so again in this is manifest
the narrowness and weakness of the scheme of nature‐imitating as a
foundation for art education. The Realistic standard always tends to the
decay of art. The student in an academic school, feeling the necessity for
a knowledge of Dark‐and‐Light when he begins to make original
compositions, has usually but one resource, that of sketching the
“spotting” as he calls it, of good designs and pictures—an excellent
practice if followed intelligently. His difficulties may be overcome (1)
by seeing that Notan is an element distinct from Line or Color; (2) by
attempting its mastery in progressive stages leading to appreciation.



METHOD OF STUDY.


Line melts into Tone through the clustering of many lines. Direct study of
tone‐intervals begins with composition in two values—the simplest form of
Notan. There may be several starting‐points; one might begin by blotting
ink or charcoal upon paper, by copying the darks and lights from
photographs of masterpieces, or by making scales. Experience has shown
that the straight‐line design and the flat black ink wash are most
satisfactory for earlier exercises in two values. Instead of black and
white, or black and gray, one might use two grays of different values, or
two values of one color (say light blue and dark blue) according to need.
The aim being to understand Notan as something by which harmony may be
created, it is best to avoid Representation at first. Notan must not be
confounded with Light and Shade, Modelling or anything that refers to
imitation of natural objects.

The beginner may imagine that not much can be done with flat black against
flat white, but let him examine the decorative design of the world. He
will find the black and white check and patterns derived from it, in old
velvets of Japan, in the woven and printed textiles of all nations, in
    marble floors, inlaid boxes and architectural [NOTAN IX. No. 43.]
ornament. The use of these two simple tones is as universal as Art itself.
They appear in the black vine on the white marble floor of the Church of
the Miracoli at Venice; on the wall of the Arabian Mosque, and the frieze
of the Chinese temple. They have come into favor on book covers and page
borders. Aubrey Beardsley went scarcely beyond them. R. Anning Bell and
other artists have boldly carried them into pictorial work in the
illustration of children’s books.

These facts will show the beginner that no terms are too simple for
artistic genius to use. Moreover a limited field often stimulates to
greater inventive activity.

                                [No. 44.]



EXERCISE


Choose a simple line‐design fine in proportion, and add to it this new
kind of beauty,—as much of it as can be expressed by the extremes of
Notan, black against white. It is apparent that we cannot reduce Dark‐and‐
Light to simpler terms than these two values. The principle of Variation
comes into this exercise with special force, for each line‐design admits
of several Notan arrangements. The student should be given at first a
subject with few lines. Let him use one of his own (chapter V), or draw
one from the instructor’s sketch, but the essential point is to have his
design as good as possible in space‐proportion before adding the ink.

Make several tracings, then darken certain spaces with black. A round
Japanese brush, short and thick, is best for this work. Nos. 43 and 44.
Pupils should be warned against mistaking mere inventive action for art.
The teacher must guide the young mind to perceive the difference between
creating beautiful patterns, and mere fantastic play.



Those gifted with little aesthetic perception may go far astray in
following the two‐tone idea. It is very easy and somewhat fascinating to
darken parts of designs with black ink. The late poster craze showed to
what depth of vulgarity this can be carried. The pupil must be taught that
all two‐tone arrangements  are not fine, and that the very purpose of this
exercise is so to develop his appreciation that he may be able to tell the
difference between the good, the commonplace, and the ugly. His only
guides must be his own innate taste, and his instructor’s experience.



FLOWER COMPOSITIONS TWO VALUES


          [Japanese design for “ramma” (frieze) Fret‐saw work.]

Flowers, having great variety of line and proportion, are valuable, as
well as convenient subjects for elementary composition. Their forms and
colors have furnished themes for painters and sculptors since the
beginning of Art, and the treatment has ranged from abstractions to
extreme realism; from refinements of lotus‐derived friezes to poppy and
rose wall papers of the present time. In the exercise here suggested,
there is no intention of making a design to apply to anything as
decoration, hence there need be no question as to the amount of nature’s
truth to be introduced. The flower may be rendered realistically, as in
some Japanese design, or reduced to an abstraction as in the Greek,
without in the least affecting the purpose in view, namely, the setting of
floral lines into a space in a fine way—forming a line‐scheme on which may
be played many notan‐variations.

It is essential that the space should be cut by the main lines.
(Subordination, page 23.) A small spray in the middle of a big oblong, or
disconnected groups of flowers, cannot be called compositions all the
lines and areas must be related one to another by connections and
placings, so as to form a beautiful whole. Not a picture of a flower is
sought,—that can be left to the botanist—but rather an irregular pattern
of lines and spaces, something far beyond the mere drawing of of a flower
from nature, and laying an oblong over it, or vice versa.



EXERCISE


The instructor chooses one of the best flower compositions done under
Line, or draws a flower in large firm outlines on the blackboard, avoiding
confusing detail, and giving the character as simply as possible. The
pupil first copies the instructor’s drawing, then he decides upon the
shape into which to compose this subject—a square or rectangle will be
best for the beginner. He makes several trial arrangements roughly, with
pencil or charcoal. Having chosen the best of these, he improves and
refines them, first on his trial paper, and later by tracing with brush
and ink on thin Japanese paper. Effort must be concentrated on the
arrangement, not on botanical correctness.

                          [Flower Compositions.]

Many line compositions can be derived from one flower subject, but each of
these can in turn be made the source of a great variety of designs by
carrying the exercise farther, into the field of Dark‐and‐Light. Paint
certain of the areas black, and at once a whole new series suggests
itself, from a single line design. To the beauty of the line is added the
beauty of opposing and intermingling masses of black and white; see below
and p. 64.

In this part of the exercise the arrangement of shapes of light with
shapes of dark, occupies the attention, rather than shading, or the
rendering of shadows. Hence the flowers and leaves and stems, or parts of
them, may be black or white, according to the feeling of the student. Let
him choose out of his several drawings those which he considers best. The
instructor can then criticise, pointing out the best and the worst, and
explaining why they are so. A mere aimless or mechanical blackening of
paper, without effort to arrange, will result in nothing of importance.

The examples show the variety of effects produced by flowers of different
shapes, and the beauty resulting from schemes of Dark‐and‐Light in two
values.

                          [Flower Compositions.]
   [Notan variations on lines of fine old textiles.  Rug designs in two
                                 values.]
                               [NOTAN IX.]



TEXTILE PATTERNS AND RUGS TWO VALUES


A line‐scheme underlies every notan composition, and a notan‐scheme
underlies every color composition. The three elements have the closest
relation one to another. For purposes of study, however, it is necessary
to isolate each element, and even the separate principles of each.

In the present instance, Notan can be separated from Line by taking a
line‐design of acknowledged excellence and making many Notan variations of
it; being sure of beauty of line, the only problem is to create beauty of
tone. As this brings in historic art, let me note that the works of the
past are best used, in teaching, as illustrations of composition, (p. 40).

While the knowledge of a “style” may have a commercial value, it has no
art‐value unless the designer can make original and fine variations of it,
not imitations.

The first essential is to appreciate the quality of historic examples,
hence the student should work from the objects themselves, from
photographic copies, from tracings, or from casts. The commonplace
lithographic plates and rude wood cuts in some books of design are useless
for our purpose. They give no hint of the original. If the actual painting
on an Egyptian mummy case is compared with a page of one of these books,
the poor quality of the latter is instantly apparent. Chinese and Japanese
“ornament” in most of such books is of a flamboyant and decadent sort. The
facsimile copies of Greek vases usually belong in this same category.



EXERCISE


Choose a textile of the best period, say Italian of the XVth or XVIth
century; copy or trace the line and play upon this several notan‐schemes
of two values. You will at once discover how superb the spacing is in
these designs, but your main thought is the creation of new dark‐and‐light
ideas upon the fine old pattern; p. 65.

The Oriental rug affords an excellent line‐scheme for practice in notan.
As composition it is a combination of two principles: Subordination and
Repetition. Copying a part or the whole of some good rug—in line and
color—is the best way to become aquainted with the spacing, motives and
quality. Then design a rug with border and centre, the shapes to be pure
inventions or symbols. Border and centre must differ, and there are many
ways of doing this even in two values, for instance: Border: Black figures
on white ground. Centre: White figures on black ground. Border: White
figures on black ground. Centre: Black figures on white ground. Border:
Small figures. Centre: One large figure. The illustrations, pp. 65, 66,
give some idea of the possibilities of tone‐composition in textiles and
rugs. The exercise points to one good way of using museum collections and
art books.




                                [No. 47.]




X.—TWO VALUES—LANDSCAPE AND PICTURES



Landscape is a good subject for notan‐composition, to be treated at first
as a design, afterward as a picture. Its irregular spacings contrast well
with the symmetries of pattern, and when tones are played over them the
effects are new and strange, stimulating to further research into the
mysteries of tone. Such an exercise leads to the appreciation of landscape
pictures, and is an introduction to pencil and charcoal sketching from
nature, to monotypes and etching.

Notan in landscape, a harmony of tone‐relations, must not be mistaken for
light‐and‐shadow which is only one effect or accident. Like all other
facts of external nature, light‐and‐shadow must be expressed in art‐form.
The student under the spell of the academic dictum “Paint what you see and
as you see it” feels that he must put down every accidental shadow “just
as it is in nature” or be false to himself and false to art. He finds
later that accurate record is good and right in studies or sketches but
may be wrong in a picture or illustration. No accidents enter into
pictures, but every line, light, and dark must be part of a deliberate
design.

Light‐and‐shade is a term referring to modelling or imitation of solidity;
the study of it by drawing white casts and still life tends to put
attention upon facts rather than upon experience in structure. It does not
help one to appreciate tone‐values in pictures. Such drawing is worth
while as pure representation and the discipline of it contributes to
mastery of technique, but it is absurd to prescribe this or life drawing
as a training for the landscape painter. Its influence is only indirect,
for modeling is of secondary importance in Painting, the art of two
dimensions.

When a painter works for roundness and solidity he enters the province of
his brother the sculptor. In typical paintings, like Giotto’s frescoes at
Assisi, Masaccio’s “Tribute Money,” Piero della Francesca’s work at
Arezzo, the compositions of the Vivarini, the Bellini and Titian, and even
the Strozzi portrait by Raphael, the modelling is subordinate to the
greater elements of proportion and dark‐and‐light.

In a mural painting extreme roundness is a fatal defect, as illustrated in
the Pantheon at Paris, where Puvis de Chavannes and his contemporaries
have put pictorial designs upon the walls. Puvis created a mosaic of
colored spaces intended to beautify the wall; charm of color and tone,
poetry and illusion of landscape possess the beholder long before he even
thinks of the special subjects. The other painters made their figures
stand out in solid modelling, replacing composition with sculpturesque
realities. From these you turn away unsatisfied. I am not arguing for the
entire omission of shadows and modelling—they have their place—but am
insisting that flat relations of tone and color are of first importance;
they are the structural frame, while gradation and shading are the finish.
To begin with rounding up forms in light and shade, especially in
landscape, is to reverse the natural order, ignore structure, and confuse
the mind. The academic system has adopted the word “decorate” for flat
tone relations and non‐sculpturesque effects, as if everything not
standing out in full relief must belong to decoration. This use of the
word is misleading to the student; we do not speak of music and poetry as
“decorative”. Lines, tones and colors may be used to decorate something,
but they may be simply beautiful in themselves, in which case they are no
more decorative than music. This word should be dropped from the art
vocabulary.



EXERCISE


Choose a landscape with a variety of large and small spaces.

1. Compose this within a border (see Chap. VI.) and when the spacing is
good trace with the brush on several sheets of Japanese paper.

Next try the effect of painting certain spaces black, or dark gray, or
some dark color like blue. The other spaces may be left white, or painted
light gray or with light color. Landscapes are capable of a great many
two‐value arrangements but not all such will be fine. Strive for harmony
rather than number, variety or strangeness. Compare your set and select
the best.

2. Compose the landscape into borders of different proportions; then vary
each of these in two values. The illustrations, No. 47, make clear these
two ways of working. The student may use the examples given here, then
sketch his own subjects from nature.



SPOTTING,—NOTAN OF PICTURES.


When the art student sketches the masses of dark‐and‐light in pictures,
the “Spotting” as he calls it, he is studying Notan of two values, but in
an aimless way. He is hunting for some rule or secret scheme of
shading,—an “ornament,” “bird’s wing,” a “line;” vain search, for no two
works can have the same plan, each has its own individual line and tone.

On the other hand much can be learned by studying the masters’ plans of
composition,—not to imitate but to appreciate the harmony. One good way to
accomplish this is to sketch in the massing, in two values. Choose a
number of masterpieces, ancient and modern, and blot in the darks in broad
flat tones. This will reveal the general notan‐scheme of each picture (pp.
71, 72).



ORIGINAL PICTORIAL COMPOSITION IN TWO VALUES.


 The student is now ready for original [NOTAN X. Compositions by various
               masters, reduced to two tones. “Spotting.”]
work with landscape, still life or figures. Sketching from nature with
brush and ink is a means of interpreting subjects in a very broad way,
obliging one to select and reject, to keep only the essentials. It
cultivates appreciation of texture and character and brings out the power
of doing much with little,—of making a few vigorous strokes convey
impressions of form and complexity. It leads to oil painting where the
brush‐touch must be charged with meaning; it is of direct practical value
in illustration as such sketches are effective and easily reproduced. It
is almost the only method for painting on pottery, as the absorbent glaze
admits of no gradation, emendation or erasure; the touch must be decisive
and characterful. Examples of brush‐sketching from nature are given in No.
48 on opposite page.

        [Massing in two values, from Corot, Daubigny and Hokusai.]
              [No. 48. Sketches from nature in two values.]
[Notan, two values, variations of a motif.  Subordination and Repetition.]




XI.—TWO VALUES—GOTHIC SCULPTURE JAPANESE DESIGN BOOKS. APPLICATIONS OF TWO
VALUES



Sculpture, a line‐art, when designed to enrich architectural spaces, may
have the aid of notan in the form of relief and shadow. The range of tone
is narrow and the field seems limited, but the masters have shown that the
creative imagination knows no bounds. They have expressed every emotion‐
divine calm, serenity, excitement, fury, horror; and effects of light,
atmosphere, distance.

The pediment and metopes of the Greek temple owed as much to notan as to
line; we can infer from the restorations what the original scheme was.
Greek architecture, however, did not admit of extensive enrichment with
sculpture; there were few spaces to fill, and those not advantageous as to
position, shape or lighting. As the temple evolved into the Christian
church, the new forms of building and the new story to tell called for
sculpture. Through Byzantine and Romanesque it took a fresh start, pushing
upward and outward until it flowered abundantly in Gothic. Although the
church selected the themes, the sculptor might interpret form and facial
expression as his imagination directed, and compose his groups as he
chose. Old conventions were abandoned; the artist might now seek motifs in
his own mind or in nature. The result of this liberation of individual
creative power was great art. The Gothic designer used notan with dramatic
invention and magical strangeness. The French cathedrals of the best
period (XI to XIV century) notably Paris, Chartres, Amiens and Reims, show
how sculptural traditions were boldly broken and the most daring effects
accomplished without forgetting the character of stone or the
architectural requirements. The stone‐cutter was an artist as long as his
restraint was self‐imposed—as long as he held to unity of the whole
composition and kept details in their own place—as long as he carved
harmonies, not mere stories; pp. 8, 11, 29, 51, 52.

The masterpieces of Gothic sculpture may be studied from photographs and
from reproductions published by the Musée de Sculpture Comparée, Paris.
Sketch in the masses with brush and ink in two values. Draw freely, at
arm’s length, on gray or low‐toned paper, observing the character of
shapes of dark; No. 49, opposite. New avenues of tone‐thought will now
open, through appreciation of the power and beauty of the stone cutter’s
art of the middle‐ages.


                          JAPANESE DESIGN BOOKS


                     [Japanese Ramma, Fret‐saw work.]

If time had preserved for us the sketches of Pheidias, of the architect of
St. Mark’s, of the great designers of the early ages, we should know how
these creators planned the line and mass, the simple structural schemes of
their immortal works. In later days when paper was common, artists’
drawings were in a less perishable form and many can now be seen in our
museums. Some have been published and are fairly within reach, though
often in costly editions. But Japanese art comes to the aid of the student
of composition with abundant material—sketch books, design books, drawings
and color prints. The learner should seek for genuine works of the best
periods, avoiding modern bad reproductions, imitations, carelessly re‐cut
blocks, crude colors, and all the hasty and commonplace stuff prepared by
dealers for the foreign market.

The Japanese knew no division into Representative and Decorative; they
thought of painting as the art of two dimensions, the art of rhythm and
harmony, in which modelling and nature‐imitation are subordinate. As in
pre‐Renaissance times in Europe, the education of the Japanese artist was
founded upon composition. Thorough grounding in fundamental principles of
spacing, rhythm and notan, gave him the utmost freedom in design. He loved
nature and went to her for his subjects, not to imitate. The winding brook
with wild iris (above) the wave and spray, the landscape, No. 51, were to
him themes for art to be translated into terms of line or dark‐and‐light
or color. They are so much material out of which may be fashioned a
harmonious line‐system or a sparkling web of black and white.



The Japanese books of most value to the student of composition are those
with collections of designs for lacquer, wood, metal and pottery, the
Ukiyo‐ye books of figures, birds, flowers and landscape, and the books by
Kano artists, with brush‐sketches of compositions by masters. It was a
common practice with the Japanese to divide a page into sections of equal
size and place a different design in each section, p. 55. This is of great
importance to the student for it illustrates at once the principles of
space‐filling and notan, and gives an idea of the infinite possibilities
of artistic invention. I have reproduced examples from the three classes
of books mentioned above, selected in this case for their brilliancy of
notan. Let the student copy them enlarged, then make original designs of
similar motives. Good reproductions of many Japanese design books can now
be obtained at low prices. They are very stimulating, for they point to
the best way of studying nature and of translating her beauty into the
language of art; pp. 57, 62, 64, 76—79.

  [No. 50. Japanese Ramma Fret‐saw Work. Japanese design for embroidered
                                 kimono.]
      [No. 51. Japanese landscape compositions for color printing.]
[No. 52. Japanese botanical work.  Each page a composition in two values.]



APPLICATIONS of NOTAN of TWO VALUES


The Structural method of art study places principle before application.
Much appreciation of notan could be gained from any one of the subjects
just considered,—for example, textiles,—but the tendency would be to think
of tone as belonging specially to textiles. The same can be said of Line
as it appears in casts, the human form, or historic ornament. Attention is
centred upon the particular case, and the larger view is lost. It is
better to gain a knowledge of line, mass and color as the material out of
which to create; and to become acquainted with principles of harmony‐
building, before undertaking definite applications. This gives fuller
control, and enhances the worker’s powers of invention. Applications of
two values are numberless; I will mention a few of them to give the
student some clues for original research and experiment.

PRINTING. Florets, seals, initial letters, page ornaments, illustrations,
posters, end papers,—drawn in black, gray or one color.

TEXTILES. Blue and white towels, quilts, etc., woven or printed, lace,
embroidery, rugs,—pages 9, 65, 66.

KERAMICS. One color on a ground of different value, as blue and white, No.
54; or black on gray.

METAL. Perforated sheet metal; metal for corners, fixtures, etc., pp. 25,
58.

WOOD. Fret saw work, inlay; pp. 62, 76, 77.

Examples of applications are given below, No. 53, and on opposite page.

                                [No. 53.]
                                [No. 54.]




XII.—THREE VALUES



Clear black against clear white is a strong contrast; even the best of
such work has some harshness, despite a sparkling brilliancy. A tone of
gray, midway between these two extremes, changes their relations and opens
up a whole new field for creative activity. Now we must think of different
degrees of Notan,—the “value” of one tone against another. This simple set
of three notes is the basis of the mezzotint, aquatint, charcoal sketch
and wash drawing. The old masters drew on gray paper with black and white.

From three, it is an easy step to many values, and in these refinements of
Notan lies the true meaning of the word “values.” That property of painted
shapes, whereby they “take their places” one beyond another in a picture,
is aerial perspective, not values. It is a desirable quality of
Representation, and often becomes a kind of deception most agreeable to
the mind unappreciative of art. Those who have little perception of
harmonies of tone and color, wish to see objects “stand out” in the
picture “as if they were real.”

Whistler protested against this, holding that the portrait painter is not
an artist unless he can give the opposite effect; that a portrait that
stands out beyond its frame is bad.

The word “values” refers to harmony of tone‐structure; the value of a mass
is its degree of light or dark in relation to its neighbors.



EXERCISE


The student comes now to a new exercise of judgment in determining the
middle value between black and white, or between light and dark gray. He
has to mix this tone, and decide when it is of the right depth; here, for
the first time, he begins to paint.

For this painting‐exercise will be needed white dishes in which to mix the
ink tones, and flat Japanese (ha‐ke) brushes. The best paper is Japanese,
well sized. The thin coating of glue keeps the edge of the wash from
drying before the brush can take it up.

The first difficulty is the laying of a flat wash; this requires dexterity
and much practice. Paper must be stretched or thumb‐tacked perfectly
smooth; ink‐stone, dishes and brushes must be clean. For a beginning take
a simple line pattern; decide which parts shall be white; then wash a
middle tone of gray over the rest. When dry, paint in the black spaces.

The reason for keeping a tone flat is that the value of a whole space can
be judged better; if it is sloppy and uneven it loses force and interest.
In beginners’ work, and in design, flatness is necessary, but in picture‐
painting purely flat tones would rarely be used.



THREE GRAYS, A SCALE


The next step is to mix three values, light, medium and dark, in three
white dishes. The intervals can be tested by painting the spaces of a
simple scale. This need not have an outline, as three brush‐strokes will
suffice. Apply these tones to a design; make several arrangements, for the
effect, and to discover the possibilities in three values. The subjects
might be the same as in notan of two values, pages 63—68. The examples
below illustrate the method and results. See scale, p. 88, also p. 9. In
addition to original composition, the student should copy from
masterpieces of design and pictorial art, translating them into three
values.

                      [White. Middle Gray.  Black.]



LANDSCAPE AND PICTURES


For three‐value studies one may use ink, charcoal or oil paint. The two
latter are particularly suitable for landscape designs and illustrative
work. Charcoal should be used lightly and very freely. It gives effects of
vibration, atmosphere, envelope and light, but the handling requires
special study and much practice.

The first few exercises in charcoal landscape may be in flat tones (see
No. 55, page 85), and the student may find it well to make a scale of
three values in this medium; he must learn however to feel outlines
without drawing them, and to handle charcoal firmly but loosely.

Cover the paper with a very sketchy tone of soft charcoal; pass over it
lightly with a paper stump or piece of cotton cloth. Be careful not to
grind the black into the paper, making an opaque smoky tone. Charcoal
paper is made rough, to let the warm white shine between the little
particles of black that lie upon the points of the surface.

                             [Flower design.]

When a luminous middle‐gray is obtained, sketch in the darks with soft
charcoal and take out the lights with bread or rubber; this effect is like
a mezzotint, Nos. 55, 57, and p. 57. After the principle of three values
has been demonstrated, and the student can appreciate definite intervals
of tone, the instructor should allow great freedom in execution, not even
limiting to three notes but adding one or two others if necessary to good
expression.

For oil painting, mix the three tones in quantity sufficient to paint
several studies. Ivory Black and Burnt Sienna will give a good neutral
gray. For the color of blue china or the Abruzzi towels, use Prussian
Blue, Black and White. Opinions differ as to the use of diluting mediums,
and sizes of brushes, for oil painting. I should advise thinning the color
with linseed oil and turpentine (half and half), and using large flat
bristle brushes. Canvas should be fairly rough in texture. If the surface
to be painted on is smooth,—either wood, pasteboard, or canvas,—prepare a
ground with thick paint, leaving brush‐marks.



APPLICATIONS, THREE VALUES


Use of the principle of three values in out‐door sketching and in
illustration, has been explained above. There is one application, among
others, that should be made by the student at this point—composition of a
book‐page.

The usual illustrated page is an arrangement in three tones,—white paper,
gray type, dark picture. The value to the publisher depends quite as much
upon the picturesque effect of the illustration as upon its drawing. Size
and placing, disposition of type, amount of margin, are matters of Line
Composition; but choice of type, and the tone of the illustration belong
to Notan Composition. Hence the student will gain much from designing
pages, in ink, charcoal or oil, using as pictures the copies from masters,
or original studies. Picture, title, initial letter, and body of type must
be so composed that the result will be effective and harmonious, No. 58.

Reference should be made to examples of early printing, to the works of
William Morris, and to the best modern printing.

               [Japanese drawing, effect of three values.]



                                 [No 55.]
 [“The World Afloat” by John Sell Cotman.  “St. John’s River” by William
                              Morris Hunt.]
                                 [No 55.]




XIII.—MORE THAN THREE VALUES



Line, Notan, Color—the elements by which the whole visible world is
apprehended,—may or may not be used as the language of art. Like speech,
this three‐fold language may voice noble emotions in poetic style, or may
subserve the vulgar and the humdrum. Art‐language must be in art‐form; a
number of facts, or an incident, accurately described in paint and color
may have no more connection with art than a similar set of written
statements just plain prose. There is no art unless the statements are
bound together in certain subtle relations which we call beauty. When
beauty enters, the parts cease to have separate existence, but are melted
together in a unit.

Advanced composition is only a working out of simple elements into more
complex and difficult interrelations. If the picture has figures and
landscape, the lines of each run in such directions, intersect and
interweave in such ways as to form a musical movement. The tones and
colors are arranged to enrich one another. A noble subject requires noble
pictorial style.

Experience of tone‐harmony in two and three values brings appreciation of
no‐tan‐structure and lays a solid foundation for advanced work.

SCALE. At this point construct a scale introducing more delicate relations
of tone, and involving finer judgment as to intervals.

A scale of white, black and three grays

  (a) will be best for beginning, to be followed by a scale of seven
      values
 (b). See page 88. These may be made with Japanese ink, water color,
      charcoal or oil; but not with pencil as it has not depth enough.

The values here are only approximate; perfect accuracy cannot be obtained
by the half‐tone process.



EXERCISE


Choose a textile, or any design with a variety of spaces, and try notan‐
effects with tones from the scale. The object is to discover a fine notan‐
scheme of values, and by using the scale one is assured of definite
intervals. If the notes are mixed in quantity, they may be tried upon a
half‐dozen tracings at once, from which the best should be chosen.
Remember that the scale‐work is only an exercise to help toward clarity of
tone, and to encourage invention. Harmony of dark‐and‐light does not
depend upon fixed intervals, nor will the composer adhere to any scale in
his original creative work.

Some results of this exercise are shown in No. 58, page 91.



ILLUSTRATION


After some experience in handling five or seven tones, the student can
undertake original composition. For a beginning pure landscape may be
best, taking some of the subjects previously used.

Follow this with landscape and figures; groups of figures with landscape
background; figures in interiors; and portrait sketches.

Compose for a book‐page, using one light gray value to represent the
effect of type, as in No. 58, opposite. Paint very freely, without too
much thought of scales and intervals. Let gradations enter where needed
for finer effect. Study the work of the best illustrators, noting the
tone‐scheme and the placing upon the page.



ETCHING


Etching, pen drawing and pencil sketching are line‐arts. The needle, pen
and lead pencil are tools for drawing lines, and there is much reason in
Whistler’s contention that tone and shading should not be attempted with
them. The tool always gives character to work, and the best results are
obtained when the possibilities of tools and materials are fully
appreciated. If a sharp point is used in drawing, it will produce pure
line, whose quality may reach any degree of excellence. Whistler, in his
etchings, worked for the highest type of line‐beauty; shadows and tones
were felt, but not expressed. On the other hand the artist is not subject
to restrictions and fixed laws. He cannot allow even a master to interfere
with his freedom; there is no “thou shalt” and “thou shalt not” in art.
Admitting the value of all the arguments for restricting the use of the
needle to line only, the artist observes that clustering of lines
inevitably produces tone and suggests massing (notan of line, page 54)
that this effect is developed in rich gradations by wiping the etching‐
plate in the process of printing. Etchers are thus tempted to use tone,
and many masters, from Rembrandt down, have worked in tone more often than
in line.



PEN DRAWING


is a dry, hard process but one of great value in modern illustration owing
to the ease with which it may be reproduced. It need not be as inartistic
as it usually appears; observation of pen work will show that, aside from
faults in composition, failure in interest lies largely in the handling.
Perhaps one pen only is used, and all textures treated alike, whereas
every texture should have its own characteristic handling; cross hatching
or any uniform system of shading with the pen is deadly. Study the
rendering; suggest surface‐quality rather than imitate or elaborate; use a
variety of pens. Johnston has shown with what art the reed pen may be
employed in lettering and illuminating. In comparison with the Japanese
brush, the ordinary pen is a clumsy tool, but nevertheless it is capable
   of much more than is usually gotten with [No 58.  Three, Four, Five
                                 values.]
 [Compositions in more than three values.  Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, New
                                  York.]
  [“The Pirate Ship”, Composition in four values, Teachers College, New
  York. “Harry Mayne’s House”, from nature, five values, Ipswich Summer
                              School of Art]
                                [No. 60.]
it; and the reed pen closely approaches the brush as a line‐implement. The
brush may be used as a pen, values and massing being obtained by blots and
clustering of lines. Two examples are given below; see also pp. 7, 9, 19.

    [Old house on Brook St. Ipswich.  Harry Mayne ye Pyrate hys house
                                Ipswich.]



PENCIL SKETCHING


Much that has been said of etching and pen drawing is equally true of the
hard lead pencil; but the soft pencil has many of the qualities of
charcoal. It may even be made to resemble the ink wash. The most
successful pencil work is that in which line is the main thing, shading
being only suggested. These darks, whether meant for shadows, local tone,
or color, will form a “spotting” to which is largely due the interest of
the sketch.

If shading is attempted, the tones, whether gray or dark, are made by
laying lines side by side, not by cross‐hatching or going over twice. A
pencil sketch must be off‐hand, premier coup, brilliant and characterful.
Two examples are given as hints for handling, No. 60. It is not possible
here to discuss pencil, pen or etching, at length; they are only touched
upon in their relation to composition of line and notan.



INK PAINTING


Supreme excellence in the use of ink was attained by the Chinese and
Japanese masters. Impressionism is by no means a modern art (except as to
color‐vibrations) for suggestiveness was highly prized in China a thousand
years ago. The painter expected the beholder to create with him, in a
sense, therefore he put upon paper the fewest possible lines and tones;
just enough to cause form, texture and effect to be felt. Every brush‐
touch must be full‐charged with meaning, and useless detail eliminated.
Put together all the good points in such a method, and you have the
qualities of the highest art; for what more do we require of the master
than simplicity, unity, powerful handling, and that mysterious force that
lays hold upon the imagination. Why the Buddhist priests of the Zen sect
became painters, and why they chose monochrome are questions involving a
knowledge of the doctrines of Buddhism and of the Zen philosophy. It is
sufficient to say here that contemplation of the powers and existences of
external nature, with a spiritual interpretation of them, was the main
occupation of Zen thought. Nature’s lessons could be learned by bringing
the soul to her, and letting it behold itself as in a mirror; the teaching
could be passed on to others by means of art—mainly the art of landscape
painting. Religious emotion was the spring of art‐power in the East, as it
was in the West. Landscape painting as religious art, has its parallel in
Greek and Gothic sculpture, in Italian painting of the world‐story, of the
Nativity, the Passion, and the joys of heaven. Some of these priest‐
artists of the Zen, Mokkei, Kakei, Bayen in China; Shubun, Sesshu in
Japan, rank with the great painters of all time. They, and such pupils as
Sesson, Soami, Motonobu and Tanyu, were classic leaders who have given us
the purest types of the art of ink‐painting. To them we look for the truly
artistic interpretation of nature; for dramatic, mysterious, elusive tone‐
harmony; for supreme skill in brush‐work.

     [Japanese sketch of the massing in a painting by an old master]

Ink‐painting is both an art and a craft; it has refinements and
possibilities that can be realized only by working with a Japanese artist.
He starts with a paper of low tone—it may be its natural state, or he may
  wash it over with thin ink [No. 61. Painting and detail of painting by
                                 SESSHU.]
                        [No 62. An Ipswich Hill.]
and color. Into this atmospheric undertone he plays gradations, sharp‐
edged strokes, drops of black, and vibrating washes,—only touching upon
forms, but clearly marking planes of aerial perspective. No. 61.

               [Sketch from a XVIIth century Japanese book]

For experiments in ink‐painting I recommend the Japanese paper called
“toshi.”

If this is not within reach, a good substitute may be made by sizing
manila paper with a thin solution of alum. Japanese paper should be wet,
and pasted, by the edges, upon a board. Manila paper, after wetting, may
be tacked upon a stretcher. Japanese ink and ink‐stone, (Chapter II) round
and flat brushes, soft charcoal, and a set of white dishes will be needed.
Sketch in the subject lightly with the charcoal, dust it off and draw the
main lines with pale thin vermilion water color. Wash in the broad masses,
relying upon strengthening by many overtones. Put in the darks last, being
very careful that they are not too sharp‐edged. No. 62.

It is not possible for us to attain perfect mastery of Japanese materials
and methods, but the study will train in appreciation of tone‐composition,
and in better handling of our own water color and oil. Good photogravures
may now be obtained; in some cases the student may copy from originals in
our museums.

               [Sketch from a XVIIth century Japanese book]





COLOR




XIV.—COLOR THEORY



Color, with its infinity of relations, is baffling; its finer harmonies,
like those of music, can be grasped by the appreciations only, not by
reasoning or analysis. Color, in art, is a subject not well understood as
yet, and there are violent differences of opinion among artists, teachers
and critics, as to what constitutes good color‐instruction. The most that
I can do here is to outline a simple method of study. The usual advice of
the academic painter to “keep trying,” is discouraging to the beginner and
increases his confusion; it is not in accord with good sense either, for
the other arts are not attacked through timid and aimless experiment. An
artist may say that a certain group of colors is a harmony; the pupil
cannot see it, but he takes the master’s word for it. The artist is not
teaching successfully unless he points the way to appreciation, however
hard or long it may be.

A systematic study of line and tone is very profitable, as we have seen; I
believe that color may be approached in like manner, and I shall attempt
now to relate the treatment of the color‐element (chapter I) to that of
the other two, and to give some results of personal experience.

Those who have but little time for work in color, can spend it best in
copying, under guidance, examples of acknowledged excellence, like
Japanese prints, Oriental rugs, and reproductions of masterpieces. Contact
with these, even looking at them (if the pupil is taught what to look
for), will strengthen the powers of color perception. In schools where the
art periods are short and few, this may be the only method possible. (See
p. 13 and chap. XVI.) For those who intend to use color in creative work a
certain amount of theory is indispensable, as it simplifies the subject
and opens up a few definite lines of research. The word “theory” has
become a kind of academic bugbear, yet Leonardo da Vinci said that the
painter who works without a theory is like the sailor who goes to sea
without a compass. Well‐ordered thought is as necessary in art as in any
other field. Theory is a help to clear thinking and gives direction and
purpose to practice. Color, however complicated, may be reduced to three
simple elements:

      HUE,—as yellow, blue‐green,
      NOTAN (or Value),—as dark red, light red,
      INTENSITY (or Bright‐to‐gray‐ness)—as intense blue, dull blue.

Color harmony depends upon adjustments in this three‐fold nature. If a
color‐scheme is discordant, the fault may be discovered in,—wrong
selection of hues or weak values, or ill‐matched intensities, or all
three. This simple classification reduces the perplexities that beset the
student, by showing him where to look for the cause of failure. The words
“Value” and “Chroma” are used in this connection by Albert H. Munsell, to
whose book “A Color Notation” the reader is referred for a very convincing
exposition of color theory.

Mr. Munsell has invented a photometer to measure values of light and
color, and has prepared scales, spheres, charts and pigments for school
use. My own experiments in making circles of hues and scales of notan and
intensities, were based upon the old theory—Red, Blue and Yellow as
primaries, Green, Orange and Violet as secondaries, etc. At that time
(1890) the progression from bright to gray was not recognized as a
distinct element of color, but in art‐educational works difference of
intensity was confused with dark‐and‐light; spectra for school use
contained hues in violent contrast as to brilliancy and value.

Science determined long since that the fundamental color impressions are
not red, blue and yellow, but Red, Green and Violet‐blue. Mr. Munsell
adopts these and two secondaries, Yellow and Purple—five hues in all—as
the basis of all color expression in art. This seems very simple and quite
sufficient for working out all problems in color scheming. Note.
Experiments as outlined below, are intended only to set the student
thinking, in an orderly way, about the three dimensions of color.

                          [Dimensions of Color]



EXERCISES


HUE. To judge of the effect of one hue upon another, arrange the whole
five, Red, Yellow, Green, Blue, Purple, in a circle making them equal in
value and equal in degree of brightness, thus eliminating notan and
intensity. In the centre of the circle (N) paint a note of middle value,
chosen from the scale, p. 88. Then paint the other divisions R, Y, G, B, P
with the five hues. When this is well done if the circle were photographed
upon a color‐blind plate, the result would be a flat tone of middle gray.
No pigment is of the exact quality needed; red that is neither yellow‐red
nor purple‐red can be mixed from Vermilion and Crimson; Prussian Blue is
greenish, New Blue is reddish; some pigments are too light, others too
dark. This exercise requires study of great importance to the painter,
giving him a better acquaintance with his materials.

Next, make a circle of intermediates, No. 63, by mixing adjoining hues;
this gives five more notes—yellow‐red, green‐yellow, blue‐green, purple‐
blue, red‐purple. Bear in mind that these circles are only statements of
relations, of the same use as a scale. The question now is of the art‐use
of them, of composing a harmony with them.

APPLICATION. Choose a line‐design, and paint the spaces with colors from
the second circle. The effect will be peculiar because there are no
differences of dark‐and‐light or intensity; the only harmony possible
comes from interplay of hues, a kind of iridescence and vibration; see
opposite page.

Colors that stand opposite in circle—as blue, yellow‐red; or red, blue‐
green—will, if placed side by side, increase each other’s power and
produce violent contrast. Opposition of Color is analogous to Opposition
of Line (page 21) and Opposition of Notan (black and white). To unite
these extremes of difference, bring in a third hue related to each, for
example,—red, green‐yellow, blue‐green; yellow, yellow‐red, purple‐blue.
This is the principle of Transition (page 22); see also page 82, three
values.

Practice in composing with few and simple elements, of deciding when
contrasting colors are of equal value, or equal intensity, is of direct
use in art. The landscape painter opposes the whole sky to the whole
ground; he wants a vibration of color in each, without disturbing the
values; the designer in stained glass sometimes desires to fill a space
with iridescent color, perhaps as a background for figures.

The student may, if he likes, use black with these colors, producing a
very brilliant effect like a Cairo window; but here the hues are measured
against black, rather than against each other. In No. 63 are shown two
experiments in composing with HUE.

NOTAN of COLOR. Draw in outline six scales, as shown in the diagram. Paint
N in white, black and three grays (see page 88). In the spaces marked (a)
paint each of the five hues—red, yellow, green, blue and purple, middle
value and equal intensity.

                             [Notan of Color]

Next, paint a lighter value (b) and a darker (c) making a notan‐scale of
each hue,—light red, middle red, dark red, etc. Observe that intensity
diminishes toward light and dark. If the intermediates, yellow‐red, green‐
yellow and the rest, are also arranged in this way from light to dark, you
will have a set of notes for application in composition.

APPLICATION. A line design may now be colored from one of the scales, say
Blue. Hue and Intensity being eliminated, the whole effort is centred upon
notan of color. This is an exercise in three values (page 83) using color
instead of neutral gray. No. 64, p. 105.

                       [No. 63. Color Theory, HUE.]
                 [No. 64. Color Theory, NOTAN of Color.]
         [No. 64. Color Theory, INTENSITY, scales and exercises.]

More applications can be made than in the case of Hue; historic art is
full of them. Dutch tiles, Japanese prints and blue towels, Abruzzi
towels, American blue quilts, etc., are examples of harmony built up with
several values of one hue. With two hues innumerable variations are
possible. Japanese prints of the “red and green” period are compositions
in light yellow‐red, middle green, black, and white. Other examples can be
easily found in the world’s art. The student should apply the scale‐notes
to his own designs, not using, at this stage, more than two hues, with
perhaps black and white.

INTENSITY. Color varies not only in hue and value, but in
intensity,—ranging from bright to gray. Every painter knows that a
brilliant bit of color, set in grayer tones of the same or neighboring
hues, will illuminate the whole group,—a distinguished and elusive
harmony. The fire opal has a single point of intense scarlet, melting into
pearl; the clear evening sky is like this when from the sunken sun the
red‐orange light grades away through yellow and green to steel‐gray.

This rarely beautiful quality of color can be better understood by
isolating it and testing it in designs (as has been done with each
principle, from Line onward; see page 21).

Paint a scale with one hue, say Vermilion, keeping each space of the same
value, but grading the intensity down to neutral gray.

APPLICATION. Arrange these notes in a line design. As Hue and Notan are
eliminated, the only harmony will be that of bright points floating in
grayish tones (No.65). Other hues may be scaled and tested in like manner.
Combine two hues in one design, all values equal,—adding contrast of hue
to contrast of intensity. Examples abound in painting. To cite a few: the
element of intensity gives breadth and tonal harmonies in stained glass,
Persian rugs, Cazin’s foregrounds, the prints of Harunobu, Kiyonaga and
Shunsho.

COMPOSITIONS in HUE, NOTAN, INTENSITY. In all color‐schemes these three
will be found in combination. Analysis of a few compositions will be worth
while; for example, the print, No. 69, p. 124, and the print and textile,
page 13. Note (1) the number of hues; (2) the number of values of each
hue, whether dark, light or medium; (3) the degrees of intensity of each
hue, whether very bright, bright, medium or dull; (4) the quantity of each
color and its distribution in the design; (5) the amount and effect of
black, white and neutral gray. For a simple exercise in composition the
student might color a line design in several ways, using three hues,
varying the dark‐and‐light distribution and the quantity of bright and
gray tones. Follow this with other designs in color.—flower panels,
repeating patterns, figures in costume, and landscape. A little of this
kind of work will cultivate good judgment as to color relations, and will
stimulate invention. Color Theory does not ensure harmony but is a help
toward it, as it shows where balance and adjustment are needed.

Note. It is next to impossible to reproduce colors with perfect accuracy,
and even if the hues, values and intensities could be exactly copied, it
is doubtful if the inks would remain absolutely unchanged for a great
length of time. The plates of Color Theory here shown are intended only as
statements of the fundamental color‐relations. They are not scientifically
accurate, nor do they need to be,–they are to be used in art, not in
science. Their purpose is to show the pupil how to study color, how to
make scales and apply them in art, rather than to furnish a standard to be
copied.

                 [“The Gundalow”, study in three values.]
                   [No. 66. Color derived from NOTAN.]




XV.—COLOR DERIVED FROM NOTAN



One approach to Color may be through Notan, either before or after
studying color theory. By clustering lines tone is produced (page 54); by
tingeing neutral grays Color is produced. In monochrome itself fine
relations of notan will suggest color. Japanese ink painters enhance the
harmonies of tone‐composition by mingling slight quantities of hue with
the ink. Faint washes of yellow in foregrounds, of green in foliage, of
blue in sea and sky, of red and other colors in buildings and costumes,
convey impressions of full color‐keys.

Etchers and lithographers often add a few touches of color not only as a
contrast to the grays, but to cause the beholder to imagine the whole
color‐scheme. The effect of modifying neutrals with hue may be observed in
the following



EXERCISE


Prepare a set of three gray washes, light, medium, and dark (page 83) in
three white dishes. Japanese ink will not mix with our water colors; use
Ivory Black with a touch of Burnt Sienna to bring it to neutrality.

Having settled upon a color arrangement for some simple design, mix a
small quantity of color into each dish. Suppose the subject to be a tulip
panel in three values:

   1. Leaves—middle yellow‐green
   2. Flower—middle red‐yellow
   3. Background—light yellow

Add to 1st dish a yellow green (Prussian Blue and Gamboge); to the 2nd
Vermilion and Gamboge; to the 3rd Raw Sienna. Paint these notes upon the
design. (See opposite page.) Make a half dozen tracings of the same
design. As each one is painted add more color to the washes until the last
one has a very small quantity of gray. The result is a series in which
color grows gradually from neutrals. No. 66. Next, use bright and gray
tones of the same hue, an effect like faded rugs and age‐stained Japanese
prints. Dulling colors with gray may not harmonize them. One who
appreciates fine quality is not deceived by those who “antique” rugs or
prints with coffee and chemicals. A design poor in proportion, weak in
notan and harsh in color cannot be saved by toning—the faults are only a
little less apparent.



ONE HUE and NEUTRALS. Another approach to color, from notan, is through
substitution of hues for grays. This might (in a short course) follow
exercises in five or more values (page 89.) Referring now to the scales of
five and seven values, for application to a design, substitute a hue for
one of these grays, carefully keeping the value. If the subject be a
variation of a Coptic textile, a warm red or yellow‐green may be chosen;
for a flower panel, bright yellow, yellow‐red or emerald green. Excellence
in result will depend upon distribution of the one hue among neutral
tones.

Examples are many; two kinds only need be mentioned now,—American Indian
pottery, and landscapes in black, gray and vermilion red from Hokusai’s
“Mangwa,” (p. 57.)

ONE HUE in TWO and THREE VALUES. The next step would be to replace two
grays with two values of one hue, making scales like these:

      White White
      Light green
      Middle green
      Dark gray
      Black

      White
      Light purple
      Middle gray
      Dark purple
      Black

Follow by eliminating all the grays, and the scale might be like this:

      White
      Light blue‐green
      Middle blue‐green
      Dark blue‐green
      Black

Choice of color will depend upon the nature of the design. The medium may
be crayon, wash, opaque water color or oil paint.

TWO and THREE HUES. If two hues are introduced the complexity will be
greater, but there will be more chances for invention and variation. With
at least ten hues to choose from—R, YR, Y, GY, G, BG, B, PB, P, RP—each
one of which might have perhaps four degrees of intensity (from very
bright to dull) the student has material to compose in any key. Two
typical scales are given below:

Two hues—

      White
      Light yellow
      Middle gray
      Dark green
      Black

Three hues—

      White
      Light yellow
      Middle gray‐green
      Dark gray‐purple
      Black



HARMONY


Will the exercises in the foregoing chapters ensure a harmony? No, they
are only helps to a better understanding of color. Harmony depends upon
(a) good line design, (b) choice of hues, (c) quantity of each, (d) a
dominating color, (e) notan values, (f) fine relations of intensity, (g)
quality of surface, (h) handling. All these in perfect synthesis will be
found in the works of the greatest masters. It is also true that simple
harmonies are not difficult to realize, as is witnessed by primitive art
and the best work of students.

With practice in the ways suggested here, two other things are
necessary,—advice from an experienced and appreciative instructor, and
acquaintance with fine examples of color.

  [No. 67.  Color schemes from Japanese prints—Applications to Design.]




XVI.—COLOR SCHEMES FROM JAPANESE PRINTS AND FROM TEXTILES



In the quest for harmony, what better course could be taken than to copy
harmonies? Nothing so sharpens color perception as contact with the best
examples. The attempt to reach a master’s style, peculiar color‐feeling,
refinements of tone and methods of handling, brings both knowledge and
appreciation. For ordinary use Japanese prints are most convenient and
inspiring color‐models.

COPYING JAPANESE PRINTS. In the best of these the color has a peculiar
bloom due to the process of printing from wood blocks. The paper is
pressed upon forms cut on the flat side of a board; the grain of the wood,
the rough surface of the “baren” with which the paper is rubbed down, and
the fibrous texture of the paper combine to make a luminous vibrating
tone. Particles of color lie upon the tops of silken filaments, allowing
the undertone of the paper to shine through,—precisely the quality sought
by painters in using a rough canvas and thin washes, or thick color put on
with small brushes. In the print the vibration is not obvious, but the
effect is that of color over which floats a thin golden envelope.

Ordinary charcoal paper is good for copies, as it has a roughness that
aids in producing atmospheric tones. Rub a slight quantity of charcoal
over the surface, very lightly; wipe it off with chamois or cotton rag,
leaving little points of black in the hollows of the paper.

Isolate the desired color‐passage, by cutting an opening in a sheet of
white paper and laying it upon the face of the print. Copy with washes of
water color. If the print is age‐stained, tone your charcoal paper with
Raw Sienna and Ivory Black.

AUTHORS. Good color‐schemes can be found anywhere in the range of Japanese
color‐printing, from Okumura Masanobu in the middle of the XVIIIth century
to modern days, but the rarity and great value of early prints puts them
out of reach of those who have not access to museum collections. I can
mention here but a few names, with which the student is most likely to
meet:

Torii Kiyonobu and his fellows of the “red‐and‐green period” (first half
of the XVIIIth century); Harunobu, Koriusai, Kiyonaga and Shunsho, who
worked in sunny yellows and reds, pearly greens and pale purples, often
most cleverly opposed with transparent black and cool silvery grays; then
Utamaro and Toyokuni I., strong but less fine.

Among XLXth century men Hiroshige (page 13) and Hokusai are preëminent as
colorists. Both have strongly influenced Occidental painters. Hiroshige
designed series after series of prints,—scenes famous for their beauty or
historic interest; stations on the two great highways, the Tokaido and the
Kisokaido; effects of wind, rain, snow and twilight; flowers, birds, and a
few figures. He would recompose the same series again and again in
different size and color‐scheme. His design is full of delightful
surprises; his artistic power and inventiveness are astonishing. A
prodigious amount of work is signed by his name; some critics hold that
there was a second, and even a third Hiroshige, but Fenollosa believed in
one only, whose manner naturally varied during a long life (1790—1858).

Hokusai’s color is strange and imaginative; sometimes delicate almost to
neutrality, sometimes startling and daring. His pupils Hokkei, Hokuju and
the rest are more gentle.

The figure prints most commonly seen are by Kunisada (Toyokuni II),
Kuniyoshi and other pupils of Toyokuni I., and Keisai Yeisen. Here, as in
most Japanese figure prints, color effects are produced by skilful
combinations of patterns upon costumes. Every kind of color‐key is
possible, by this means, with infinite variations;—impressionist painting
with wood blocks. The student is warned that poor prints
abound,—impressions from worn‐out blocks, cheap modern reprints, and
imitations. Bright, fresh color, however, need not be taken to mean
imitation; some of the early editions have been kept in albums in store
houses, and the color has not changed. Experience and appreciation are
after all the only safeguards.

APPLICATION. Having made the copy of the color‐scheme, apply the same
colors to several tracings of one design, (No. 67). One of the things
taught by this exercise is that distribution and proportion of color
affect harmonic relations. Colors that harmonize as they stand in the
print may seem discordant when used in different quantities; they will
surely be so if the design is badly spaced. With a good design, and
correct judgment as to hue, notan and intensity, the chances are that each
variation will be satisfactory.

Copies from Hiroshige are of special value to the landscape painter. These
may be made in oil as a study of quality and vibration. The procedure is a
little different from the preceding. It is better, in oil painting, to
copy whole prints. Over the surface of a large rough canvas scrub a thin
gray, of the color of the paper of the print. Draw the design in a few
vigorous lines, omitting all details. Paint in, at arm’s length, the
principal color notes, not covering the whole surface or filling in
outlines. Mix colors beforehand, taking time to copy each hue and value
exactly. The painting, with each color ready upon the palette, should be
swift and vigorous. Place the print above the canvas; stand while
painting; make comparisons at a distance.

Copying Japanese prints is recommended for practice in color; it does not
replace nature‐painting or original design, though it will be a help to
both.

COPYING COLOR from TEXTILES. The exercises described above may be taken
with textiles. Beauty of color in the finest of these is due to good
composition, the softening of dust and age‐stain, and the atmospheric
envelope caused by reflection of light from the minute points of the web.
For some kinds of textile the charcoal paper, as above, may be useful; for
others, gray paper and wax crayons.

The latter are excellent for copying rugs and can be used in original
designs for rugs.

As to models, work from originals in museums,—Persian carpets and rugs,
Coptic and Peruvian tapestries, mediaeval tapestries, Italian, Spanish and
French textiles XIIIth to XVIIIth centuries, etc. In the “rag‐fairs” of
Europe, and in antique shops, one may find scraps of the woven and printed
stuffs of the best periods. The South Kensington Museum has published
colored reproductions of textiles. Art libraries will have Fischbach’s,
Mumford’s, the Kelekian Collection and others in full color.





COMPOSITION




XVII.—IN DESIGN AND PAINTING



The test of any system of art‐study lies in what you can do with it.
Harmony‐building has been the theme of the foregoing pages, with
progressive exercises in structural line, dark‐and‐light and color. The
product should be power,—power to appreciate, power to do something worth
while. Practice in simple harmonies gives control of the more complex
relations, and enables one to create with freedom in any field of art.
Such training is the best foundation for work in design, architecture, the
crafts, painting, sculpture and teaching. After this should come special
training; for the designer, architect, craftsman, study of historic
styles, severe drill in drawing (freehand and mechanical), knowledge of
materials; for the painter and sculptor, long practice in drawing and
modelling, acquirement of technique; for the teacher, drill in drawing,
painting, designing and modelling, study of educational principles,
knowledge of school conditions and public needs, practice teaching. In a
word, first cultivate the mind, set the thoughts in order, utilize the
power within; then the eye and the hand can be trained effectively, with a
definite end in view. The usual way, in our systems of art‐instruction, is
to put drill first, leaving thought and appreciation out of account.

Applications of structural principles are many; I can mention and
illustrate but a few:



WOOD BLOCK PRINTING


FOR STUDY OF PATTERN AND COLOR. The art of wood block printing has been
practised for ages in Oriental countries. Our word “calico” is from the
name of an Indian town, Calicut, whence printed patterns were brought to
England. The older Indian designs, now very rare, had great beauty of line
and color. These ancient cotton prints are used by the Japanese for outer
coverings of pieces of precious pottery,—first a silk brocade bag, then
one of Indian calico enveloping a wooden box in which is the bowl wrapped
in plain cotton cloth. The process of wood block printing is very simple,
and in my opinion of special educational value. After observation of the
craft in India in 1904 I determined to introduce it into art courses—both
for adults and children. The method is outlined below:

   1. Design the pattern in pencil or ink.
   2. Draw the unit, with attention to its shape and proportions and the
      effect when repeated.
   3. Paste this face down upon a wood block; pine, gum wood, or a hard
      wood of close grain.
             [No. 68. COMPOSITION XVII—Wood Block Printing.]
      [No. 69. The Marsh Creek.  Wood block print by Arthur W. Dow.]
   4. Cut away the white spaces, clearing with a gouge. As the block is to
      be used as a stamp, the corners and all outside the design, must be
      removed.
   5. Printing. Lay a piece of felt upon a slate, or upon a glass, pour a
      few drops of mucilage upon the felt, and mix with it either common
      water color, or dry color. Distribute this evenly with a flat
      bristle brush. Make a large pad, say 22 x 28 or 14 x 20, by tacking
      cambric upon a drawing board. Under the cambric should be one
      thickness of felt.

PRINTING on PAPER. A slightly rough absorbent surface prints well.
Wrapping paper can be found in many colors, tones and textures, and is
inexpensive. Damp paper will give clear‐cut impressions.

Lay the paper upon the large pad; charge the block upon the small pad, and
stamp the pattern. If the impression is poor, the cause may be:—(a) Face
of block is not level; rub it upon a sheet of fine sand‐paper; (b) large
pad is uneven; (c) paper is wrinkled or is too glossy; (d) color is too
thick or too wet. Practice will overcome these small difficulties.

PRINTING on CLOTH. The best effects are obtained with dyes, but their
manipulation is not easy, and their permanence is doubtful unless one has
expert knowledge of the processes of dyeing. The most convenient medium
for the student is oil color thinned with turpentine (to which may be
added a very little acetic acid and oil of wintergreen). This, when dry,
is permanent and can be washed,—but not with hot water or strong soap.

With the design in fixed form upon the block, effort can be concentrated
upon the make‐up of the pattern, and the color‐harmony. By cutting a block
for each color the designer may vary the schemes almost to infinity. Where
choices are many and corrections easy, invention can have free play.

Examples of students’ printing on paper are given on page 121.

PICTURE PRINTING is a more difficult, but fascinating form of this art‐
craft. Here must be gradation, transparent and vibrating color,
atmospheric over‐tone binding all together. For these qualities the
Japanese process is best, with its perfected tools and methods. In theory
it is very simple: The outline is drawn in ink upon thin paper, and the
sheet pasted face down upon the flat side of a board; the block is then
engraved with a knife and gouges, the drawing being left in relief; the
paper is removed from the lines with a damp cloth, and the block charged
with ink. Dry black mixed with mucilage and water, or any black water
color will answer. For charging, the Japanese use a thick short brush,—a
round bristle brush will serve the purpose. When ink is scrubbed evenly
over the whole surface, the block is ready for printing. A sheet of
Japanese paper, slightly dampened, is laid upon the block and rubbed
gently with a circular pad called a “baren.” This wonderful instrument
draws the ink up into the paper, giving a clear rich soft line. The baren
is made of a leaf of bamboo stretched over a saucer‐like disk of
pasteboard, within which is coiled a braided fibre‐mat.

If the block has been properly cleared, and the baren is moved in level
sweeps, the paper will not be soiled by ink between the lines. After
printing a number of outlines the colors are painted upon them and color‐
blocks engraved. It is possible to have several colors upon the same
board, if widely separated. Accurate registry is obtained by two marks at
the top of the board and one at the side. The paper must be kept of the
same degree of moisture, otherwise it will shrink and the last impressions
will be out of register.

Dry colors mixed with water and a little mucilage, or better still, common
water colors, may be used. No. 69 is a reproduction of a print made in the
Japanese way. (In 1895 I exhibited at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts a
collection of my wood block prints. Professor Fenollosa wrote the
introduction to the catalogue, discussing the possibilities, for color and
design, of this method, then new to America. In “Modern Art” for July,
1896, I described the process in full, with illustrations, one in color.)

STENCILLING, like wood block printing, invites variation of rhythm and
color combination. Stencilling is often done without sufficient knowledge
of the craft. The student should understand that a stencil is simply a
piece of perforated water proof paper or metal to be laid upon paper or
cloth and scrubbed over with a thick brush charged with color; long
openings must be bridged with “ties,” and all openings must be so shaped
that their edges will remain flat when the brush passes over them.

                           [Japanese Stencil.]

Stencil units are usually large, offering good opportunities for
Subordination (page 23), Symmetry, and Proportion (page 28). A unit must
not only be complete in itself but must harmonize with itself in
Repetition (pp. 36, 66). Stencils may be cut upon thick manila paper which
is then coated with shellac; or upon oiled paper. If stencil brushes
cannot be obtained one may use a common, round, house‐painter’s brush,
wound with string to within an inch of the end.

Colors may be,—oil thinned with turpentine; dyes; or dry colors ground on
a slab with water and mucilage. Charge the brush with thin, thoroughly
mixed pigment; if there is too much it will scrape off under the edges of
the stencil and spoil the print. Unprinted wall paper (“lining paper”) is
cheap and very satisfactory for stencilling. It should be tinted with a
thin solution of color to which a little mucilage has been added. Use a
large flat brush about four inches wide, applying the color with rapid
vertical and horizontal strokes.

COLORED CHARCOAL. This is a further development of the method described in
Chapter XIII (see also page 113). Lay in the picture in light values of
charcoal, remembering that the colorwashes will darken every tone. Too
much rubbing with the stump gives muddiness, too little charcoal may
weaken the values and you will have a “washout.” When the notan‐scheme is
right, the drawing may be fixed. It can be colored without fixing if the
stump has been used.

Color is applied in thin washes allowing the charcoal texture to shine
through. Notan plays the larger part, furnishing the structure of the
composition and giving a harmonic basis for the color. If the hues are
well‐chosen, the result should be a harmony of atmospheric depth, with
soft but glowing colors.

PAINTING in FULL COLOR. In a book devoted to the study of art‐structure
not much space can be given to comparison of mediums, or to professional
problems of technique in advanced painting. They will be mentioned to show
the unity of the progressive series, to suggest to the student some lines
of research and experiment, and to help him in choosing his field of art‐
work.

WATER COLOR. This medium is used in many different ways: as a thin
transparent stain, like the work of David Cox, Cotman, De Wint; as a
combination of opaque color and wash, with which J. M. W. Turner painted
air, distance, infinity, the play of light over the world; as flat wash
filling in outlines, like the drawings of Millet and Boutet de Monvel; as
the modern Dutch use it, in opaque pastel‐like strokes on gray paper, or
scrubbed in with a bristle brush; as premier coup painting with no outline
(both drawing and painting) like much Japanese work.

In all these, line is the basis, whether actually drawn, as by Millet and
Rembrandt, or felt, as by the Japanese and Turner. The best painting has
form and character in every brush‐touch.

OIL COLOR. Instruction in oil painting is usually limited to what might be
called drawing in paint. Of course the student must know his pigments, how
to obtain hues and values by mixing, how to use brushes, how to sketch in,
and all the elementary details,—but this is but a beginning. Expression of
an idea or emotion depends upon appreciation of art structure; the point
is not so much how to paint, as how to paint well. Artists often say that
it matters not how you get an effect, if you only get it. This is
misleading; it does matter,—the greatest painters get their effects in a
fine way.

Methods of handling oil color may be reduced to two general classes: (a)
the paint is used thin, as a wash, on a prepared canvas, or (b) it is put
on in thick opaque touches. In either case the aim is the same—to paint
for depth, vibration, illusion of light and color. If brush strokes are to
be left intact, each of them must have shape and meaning,—that is, line;
if color is put on in a thin wash, then its value, gradation, hue and
texture are the main points,—and these belong to structural harmony. Mural
painting is the highest form of the art, demanding perfect mastery of
Composition. The subject takes visible form in terms of Line; then is
added the mystery, the dramatic counter‐play of Notan, and the
illumination of Color. The creative spirit moves onward absorbing in its
march all drawing, perspective, anatomy, principles of design, color
theory—everything contributing to Power.





CONCLUSION


I have not attempted to overthrow old systems, but have pointed out their
faults while trying to present a consistent scheme of art study. The
intention has been to reveal the sources of power; to show the student how
to look within for the greatest help; to teach him not to depend on
externals, not to lean too much on anything or anybody. Each subject has
been treated suggestively rather than exhaustively, pointing out ways of
enlargement and wide application. If some subjects have seemed to receive
rather scant attention it is not because I am indifferent to them, but
because I did not wish to depart from the special theme of the book; some
of these will be considered in future writings. The book will have
accomplished its purpose if I have made clear the character and meaning of
art structure—if the student can see that out of a harmony of two lines
may grow a Parthenon pediment or a Sorbonne hemicycle; out of the rude
dish of the Zuni a Sung tea‐bowl, out of the totem‐pole a Michelangelo’s
“Moses”; that anything in art is possible when freedom is given to the
divine gift APPRECIATION.




THE END