Figure/Ground Relationship
The figure/Ground relationship is the most basic of all relationships in design. It refers to the relationship between positive and negative shapes, and is used as an aid in 2-D composition.In art/design, one way we define space is by placing objects in it. This creates a relationship (object-in-space). Something and nothing. Placing an object IN space, defines that space, and CREATES a Figure/Ground Relationship. The object becomes the figure, and the space becomes the ground.
Here is another way to think about it: The part of a composition that we pay attention to is called figure. Everything that is not figure is ground. As attention shifts an object can go from figure to ground and back. Positive/Negative shape are analogous terms for Figure/Ground.
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Types of Figure/Ground Relationships
The figure and ground are inseparable. The figure always defines the ground, and the ground defines the figure. If you draw the figure in a composition, you are drawing the ground at the same time.Stable- Unchanging. You know what the figure is, and what the ground is. The focus of our attention does not change.
Reversible- The positive and negative space/elements attract our attention equally. Our attention is drawn back and forth between the two.
Ambiguous: The positive and negative space/elements challenge the viewer to find a focal point. What is the figure? What is the ground? Figure is entangled with ground without dominance. Ambiguous f/g relationships are usually abstract. See example below.
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The viewer shifts from one figure to the other but do not to see both as figure at the same time.
Composition in F/G relationship
Active- group elements off-center (asymmetrical) to create visual movement.
Neutral- centered compositions are stable, not dynamic.
Bleeding - dynamic (it bleeds of the page, and can’t be contained)
Cropping- creates abstraction
Balance in F/G relationship
In Stable relationship- balance (size/shape) = unified design.
In Reversible relationship- balance (size/shape) = tension. which is which?
In Ambiguous relationship- balance (size/shape) = action. all space is active.
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Tips on working with figure/ground
- Balancing figure and ground make the composition more clear.
- Using unusual figure/ground relationships can add interest.
- Spaces whit convex (a), symmetric (b), smaller in area (c) or enclosed (d) shapes are “seen” as figure.
- An expressive use of white space requires an asymmetrical design. Centering kills the white space (dividing it into unusable emptiness). Asymmetrical design creates a NEED for interestingly shaped white space.
- A deliberate use of white space creates + and - space that are equally important.