Study dramatic literature and playscript analysis in order to understand that your director's language(s) is different.
Study fine art Study music Study! ...
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'If you don't see, you can't stage it.' Anatoly
Broadway tickets at TickCo. Get the best available Mary Poppins tickets as well as tickets to Wicked and Disney's High School Musical tickets.
Film-North *Film Directing* Visual composition is an established field in Fine Art (see links in 200X). Use the basic geometrical figures to analyze it -- circle, square, triangle... their combination. Use vertical, horizontal lines. There is always is the special hidden composition in each masterpiece. I would even recommend to "steal" -- yes, in your pre-production period search for each scene's static representation in paintings... the rest of mise-en-scene is the way to get there. In fact, this is "blocking" -- arranging masses, colors, directions. Called "blocking" because early directors conveyed staging instructions by drawing a grid on stage floor and labeling each stage position, or "block." Also, it helps your designers -- set, light, costumes. And actors. This is SPECTACLE (remember Aristotle #6). Directing is processing the rest 5 principles through this one! Ideas have physical expressions... It's theatre. You have to STAGE it.
Film Directing 101 Method for Directors? Directing ONLINE Showcase: Part V
GeoAlaska: Theatre & Film KEY TERMS: Glossary DVD: Drama & Art House, Studio Specials & Classics, New & Future Releases, Cult Movies
THR121 Fundamentals of Acting or permission of instructor -- requred for THR331!
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If there are "compositions" on stage (visual), director must be a composer. He follows the dramatic "composer" -- playwright. The great paintings of the past are the great source of learning about composing for stage.Repetition can be used on all of the Visual Elements. If things are repeated without any change they can quickly get boring. However, repetition with variation can be both interesting and comfortably familiar. Repetition gives motion.Most of the pages on the subject are in Film Directing (above navigation) directory, but I wish that my students in THR331 Fundamentals of Directions could spend more time in our video shooting sessions and develop the camera-mind attitude. Of course, we do not stage live shows for the camera, but the points of punctuations must be present in the stream of live action. The floor plan exercises are similar in nature with the lighting areas planning and we get really close to the fixed primary motion. A good prompt book does resemble a shooting script. The shot technique asks for a strong visual discipline.
There are some basic rules in positioning actors on stage:
Full front \/ is the strongest.
Next is the full back /\
Third -- three-quoters front and 4th -- three-quoaters back.
Finally, fifth, the weakest -- profile
... Here is a lesson from Michelangelo:
a walk around it.
VERTICAL:
There are also FIVE basic levels: Standing, Sitting, Kneeling, Sitting on floor, Lying on floor. Emphasis by relation to height. Again, what is "strongest" and "weakest" depends on your mise-en-scene.
Now, the distances. Between actors, actors and audience, actors and the center of action and so on. And of course, it all depends on the stage, number of actors and the set (including lighting).
The "grouping" takes place even if you have one actor on stage. You still balance the positions against the set and furniture. It's easy to check you set by examining the exits and entrances. And again, I advise you to think in geometrical terms. Remember the Golden Triangle Rule? There are "triangles on stage. Try to see them before your actors enter. And, please, add the time dimension (duration) into your equations.
The stage laws (some) and "mood values":
"The visual center of interest is where the lightest light meets the darkest dark."
You have to train yourself to have this "frozen-frame" skill: to see you show "frame-by-frame"...
[ storybording ]
Gesture and poses[ analysis ]
Did you notice that I broke this word "composition" in two: Com-Position (title)? You "position" actors on stage to get the combine effect. You move from one composition to another. There must be "tableau" pictures at some critical points. If you do it right they will be memorable and invisible.
"Center" is a dynamic target. You have to train yourself (and actors) to go from one fixed position to another. The transitions are another matter...
[ I recommend to read Part II in David Kaplan's book "Five Approaches to Acting" -- Playing Episodes. Pay attention to "Caption" and the "Tableaux" ideas. "Transitions" in Epic Theatre. ]
YES, THINK IN STATIC PICTURES! There must be an image (symbol) we can remember. Almost as if you would stage a (dramatic) group photo.
See? Bad acting, but a great composition.
[ What is difference between "picture" - "image" - "symbol"? see Semio Page ]
Acting Intro * Balanceis -- the consideration of visual weight and importance. It is a way to compare the right and left side of a composition. * formal (symmetrical) balance * Radial balance *Focus, directions, grouping. ...
Macro and micro compositions:
"Segmentation"
[ analysis: main direction, vectors, focal point, stages of concentration ]"Variety" - You create variety when elements are changed. Repeating a similar shape but changing the size can give variety and unity at the same time. Keeping the same size, but changing the color can also give variety and unity at the same time. In visual composition, there are many ways you can change something while simultaneously keeping it the same.
"Depth" - effects of depth, space, projection toward the viewer add interest. Linear perspective in the real world makes things look smaller in the distance. Some artists try to avoid depth by making large things duller and small things brighter, and so on, to make the objects contradict realism...[ ]
VECTORS
Vector = Way
* a quantity that has magnitude and direction and that is commonly represented by a directed line segment whose length represents the magnitude and whose orientation in space represents the direction; broadly : an element of a vector space.
to vector = to guide
Vectors in Biomechanics
[ ]
Stage space vertical direction has to have at least three levels as well (horizontal planes are discussed in floor plan). First - the stage floor. In class we do the basics: on the floor, sitting on the floor, standing. The three you can do without any set. On stage it's always multi-level arrangements: in directing class we use chair, table, boxes. This is "vertical reading" of the visual composition. Ask yourself how many vertical levels did you use in your scene. None? Do you realize that "none" is a choice? Does you scene ask for strict non-vertical composition?
Do you understand why our stadiums are designed in levels? -- The flat floor = focus! What do you think I have to do on stage with the flat auditorium? Do you see the three levels?
Read Mise-en-Scene Page to understand the need for visual EXPRESSION of drama (conflict).
[ "Mirror Effect" of stadium = symmetrical (of house and stage), a half. See forms of stages on designers page.
Sport = Game (circus)
Return to the Greeks but indoors + The Light of the Gothics (?).
"Cut" the world in two (stage as a mystery "wall" -- church tradition, the gates to the "other universe" = miracle, fantacy, dreams, inner world).
The invisible wall/curtain ("The 4th wall" reconsidered).
* What Is Scenography? by Pamela Howard; Routledge, 2002 ]
Check the Film WebSite for more on laws of Visual Composition shot, color, cut, images (also, semio pages).
Here is MS/CU from Rembrandt: Basics of Dramatic Composition (Action throu Character)
[ missing image, see St. Thomas below ]
He is famous for lighting effects.
Good one to study. Color dramatic composition -- later.
This is El Greco and as a teenager I spent several hours staring at it.
Reconstruction: diagonal (low left to top right), three ground planes + sky, the borderline ... and the focal point ("open heavens" -- window).
Another "triangle" ("looks") :
[ A - D -C -- directions of gazing + upside down triangle of Christ body ][ "Peter and Paul" -- missing. ]
Very "high modernity" deformation of forms.
[ slides ]
Color saturation, sometimes called "color intensity" or brightness can also give a feeling of depth and space.
FOCUS: Adoration of the Magi by Velazquez (1619), CLIMAX: The Madonna of the Rosary by Cavaggio (1605). (Free images from the Lycos Cyber Gallery)
projects: Oedipus 2005 new: Taming of the Shrew 2004 missing: film acting directing wish list (short):
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Four lines: the focus is "between" them: the question-answer.
Breakdown by "triangles" (how many?)
[ not the best ]
Other samples [ list ]
Read Eisenstein analysis of Pironezzi. Also, his color dynamic composition for Ivan the Terrible II.
"Film Form" (?)
...
...
[ two other directories could be used for this topic: film composition in FilmMaking 101 and 200X Aesthetics Files. ]
Anatoly, why do you call everything a "problem"?
Why?
Because we have to solve them. Like in math.
Hamlet, 1st scene (Bernardo - Francisco).
Vectors --> the invisible Ghost. Ideas?
....
Analysis of the text must lead to your search for visual expressions of the drama.
"12 shades": in class (assign the color to each character, theme, scene and etc.)
Opposite, conflicting, complimentary, similarity, color dynamics (motifs and through-lines).
Color intensity and acting areas.
Color and shapes of action... What is the "motion statement" in "radial" and "spiral" arrangements?
Achieving focus
By body position – the actor who is most "full front" will have the focus.
By stage area – central areas have most focus.
By level – actor on highest level.
By plane – farthest downstage.
By triangulation – actor at apex of a triangle.
By contrast – actor who is apart from group (sitting, while rest of cast is standing).
By movement – moving actor will have more focus.
Select one scene from Hamlet and come with the main visual concept for it (class presentation).
[ Guess the artist! ]
references:
color composition:
http://acept.la.asu.edu/PiN/rdg/color/composition.shtml
Color and Composition is concerned with properties and effects of light, color, composition and exploration of color contrast principles through color relationships. Applications are in two and three dimensions using a variety of media.
http://www.artlebedev.com/mandership/mandership.rdf RSS Art Lebedev -- design principles
(ru) http://www.artlebedev.ru/kovodstvo/137/ Àðòåìèé Ëåáåäåâ
§ 137. Ìàòðèöà ýìîöèé
12 îêò?áð? 2006 (sample)
my yahoo: theatre + Anatoly' blog RSS
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2007 An online course supplement * Film-North * Anatoly Antohin * eCitations
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