Square

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1.1 Design Litreracy Tadporn Wudhinan (WUD11319508) MA Graphic Branding and Identity


Research Method 1 The objectives of this project is to let me investigate fundamental principle of form and their function in terms of visual communication, focussing on the process of de-learning and re-learning. I got square shape as my brief. First step I did was finding square definitions from dictionary and book and it was described that “square is a flat shape with four sides of equal length and four angles of 90°” and “it has the horizontal and vertical direction representing balance and stability”. Next, I started doing some experiments which were: Drawing square I drew square as I saw in the environment and patterns of it. Then, I used translucent paper to draw squares, investigating how the shape appear within itself in different layers. Two patterns passed, the square ended up being diamond shape. Then, I changed the method by using positive and negative square to produce a pattern.

From this, I got a conclusion that positive can be negative and negative can be positive. Changing 2D to 3D By questioning myself how to make 3D square by using only strip paper, I folded paper to form a cube and the continuing squares. Photograph a square indirectly After I took photographs of the 3D squares, I found an interesting point about unfocused or uncleared squares, so I explored this by using different kinds of texture as an obstacle between camera and square. The results were some of the pictures were blur and some of them had been distorted to rectangle. I also observed the shape by photographing pictures from the shadow on background which brought the same result. By looking at its unclear state and distortions, I saw relationship between the pictures and architecture. 1


Square and rectangle (two square placing together) appeared in almost every part of architecture as its volume and void an when the light hit its surface it will be glared and blurred. We can see this from windows at day and night, from interior and exterior especially when the light is in high level. Since city consists with buildings, this can be said that squares shape the city. Eventually, I decided to leave this topic because it did not lead me to explore new experience. I did more research in various topics such as square in mathematics (the perfect square), japanese room measurement (tatami), the golden ratio. I found a definition of square by Donis A. Dondis described as “The square has associated to it dullness, honesty, straightness, and workmanlike meaning�. Later, I realized that square is mentioned most about its stability, rigidness, and with no movement, therefore I had an intention to search 2

for other meaning from different point of view then I found square dancing which changed my thought about the shape to a new way. Even though the dance begin and end with square but every time dancers move, the formation will be changes. This changed emotions of square to lively, enjoyable, moveable, changeable and unpredictable. Square dancing is a folk dance, first introduced in England, 18th century, with the number of 8 people (4 couple) dancing in 4 sides of the square and the caller is the one who conduct dance movement. Square dance are from 2 country, England and France. In England, 14th century, square dancing inherited movements from Morris and Country Dance. In the mean time, France received influences from English Country Dance and developed it to Contradanse (Contra Dance). When the English immigrated to the United State they passed this dance to


the next generation and after World War 2, as the United State policy to close their relationship with England, France took place. Then the dance was combined and improved to today’s square dancing.

plotted space between people and observed formation of the square. As a result, the group with odd number changed in square formation than the even number group that sometimes changed to triangle.

From the research, the dances have 3 basic elements: dancers, rhythm and music, and formation. This led me to had a question about square dancing: What makes square dancing?. I tried to deconstruct the dance by using mind mapping. I achieved the answer and found the relationship between dance formation and dancers.

Finally, the experiment was developed to my output with dance instruction manual and visual information video for people who want to learn the movement in unusual ways and show some examples of an up-to-date music genre to refresh the feeling of an old fashioned dance.

After this, I produced visual information of dancing group by using animation technique projecting dancers position from video to investigate how the transformation will be when the number of people changed in unusual way. I started to take people off the group by one, two and a couple at a time in every position. From this, I 3


OBJECT

Pattern

JOURNEY

6

Square drawing 7

10

Positive/ Negative 2D > 3D

12 14

Right hand drawing/ Left hand drawing Blurred square

15

No movement

18

With movement

CONTEXT

22

Architecture & City

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Golden Ratio Perfect Square

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Other Meanings Square Dancing

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Overall Evolution Movement

OUTPUT 4

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33 35 37


OBJECT Square Definition

A flat shape with four sides of equal length and four angles of 90°. Cambridge Dictionary

A rectangle having all four sides of equal length. http://dictionary.reference.com/

The square has associated to it dullness, honesty, straightness, and workmanlike meaning. A square is a four-sided figure with exactly equal right angles at each corner and sides of exactly the same length. Every basic shape expresses three basic and meaningful visual directions: the square, the horizontal and vertical. The horizontal-vertical reference has been commented on already, but to review, it is man’s primary reference in terms of his well-being and maneuverability. Its most basic meaning has t do not only with the human organism’s relationship to the envirionment, but also to stability in all bisual matters. Not only does man have more ease in balance; so do all things constructed and designed. Donis A. Dondis, A Primer of Visual Literacy 5


Investigation: Square Drawing

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Investgation: Pattern

7


8


9


Experiment: Positive/ Negative

10


11


Experiment: 2D > 3D

12


13


Investigation: Right hand drawing/ Left hand drawing

14


Experiment: Blurred square (without movement)

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16


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Experiment: Blurred square (with movement)

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19


20


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CONTEXT

Architecture & City Square and rectangle (two square placing together) appeared in almost every part of architecture as its volume and void an when the light hit its surface it will be glared and blurred. We can see this from windows at day and night, from interior and exterior especially when the light is in high level. Since city consists with buildings, this can be said that squares shape the city. 22


23


24


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Golden Ratio

In mathematics and the arts, two quantities are in the golden ratio if the ratio of the sum of the quantities to the larger quantity is equal to the ratio of the larger quantity to the smaller one. The golden ratio is an irrational mathematical constant, approximately 1.6180339887. 26


The golden section is a line segment divided according to the golden ratio: The total length a + b is to the length of the longer segment a as the length of a is to the length of the shorter segment b.

A golden rectangle with longer side a and shorter side b, when placed adjacent to a square with sides of length a, will produce a similar golden rectangle with longer side a + b and shorter side a. This illustrates the relationship

Construction of a golden rectangle: 1. Construct a unit square (red). 2. Draw a line from the midpoint of one side to an opposite corner. 3. Use that line as the radius to draw an arc that defines the long dimension of the rectangle.

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Proportions of the facade of the Parthenon.

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Beginning in the Renaissance, a body of literature on the aesthetics of the golden ratio was developed. As a result, architects, artists, book designers, and others have been encouraged to use the golden ratio in the dimensional relationships of their works.

Left: Depiction of the proportions in a medieval manuscript. According to Jan Tschichold: "Page proportion 2:3. Margin proportions 1:1:2:3. Text area proportioned in the Golden Section Right: Illustration from Luca Pacioli’s De Divina Proportione applies geometric proportions to the human face.

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Human figure set within a square, for a study of proportions. It is assumed that proportions of the circle and square reflect Golden Division.

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Le Corbusier explicitly used the golden ratio in his Modulor system for the scale of architectural proportion. He saw this system as a continuation of the long tradition of Leonardo da Vinci’s “Vitruvian Man”.


Perfect Square A square which can be dissected into a number of smaller squares with no two equal is called a perfect square dissection (or a squared square).

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Other Meanings

Japanese Poetry: white square of inside the white square of inside the white square of inside the white square of inside the white square

Tatami: Japanese thick mat measures two squares in size and it serves as a basic unit of measurement in the design of Japanese house.

A line of music written in the elenventh century. 32


Square Dancing Square dance is a folk dance with four couples (eight dancers) arranged in a square, with one couple on each side. Each dance begins and ends each sequence with “sets-in-order� in the square formation. The dance was first described in 17th century England but was also quite common in France and throughout Europe and bears a marked similarity to Scottish Country Dancing. It has become associated with the United States of America due to its historic development in that country. Nineteen US states have designated it as their official state dance.

The various square dance movements are based on the steps and figures used in traditional folk dances and social dances of the various people who migrated to the USA. Some of these traditional dances include Morris dance, English Country Dance, Caledonians and the quadrille. Square dancing is enjoyed by people around the world, and people around the world are involved in the continuing development of this dance. Square dancers are prompted or cued through a sequence of steps (square dance choreography) by a square dance caller to the beat of music. The caller leads, but usually does not participate in the dance.

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Square Dancing : Who is who in the square head boy/ man

1

corner

partner

partner

2

partner

partner

corner

4

side

corner

girl/ lady

corner

3

Begin with Couple 1 facing away from the music and going counter- clockwise until getting to Couple 4. Couples 1 and 3 are known as the head couples, while Couples 2 and 4 are the side couples. Each dance begins and ends each sequence with “sets-inorder� in the square formation. 34


Square Dancing : Evolution From the Greens and Fields of England

From the Royal Ballrooms of France

Morris Dance

Ballroom Dance

English Country Dance

Court Ballet

14th The Minuet

16th Scoth Reels/ Irish Jigs Mescolanze

Circular Choral

Round for Eight

Square of Eight

Round for as many as will

Longways Dance

Ballad Dance

Contredanse Cotillon The Great Quadrille

The Quadrille

17th Polka Quadrille

Waltz Quadrille

Mazurka Quadrille

18th 18th

Progressive Square

Appalachian Mountian Dance

Play Circle Party Mixers

Running Set

Singing Quadrille

New England Court Dance

18th Big Set

Contra Western Square Dance

Eastern Contra Quadrille Circle Play Suqare Mixers Party Dance 19th Today’s Square Dance 35


Country

Dancers

Cued by

Morris Dance

England

6 men

dance leader

English Country Dance

England

4 people or not fixed

dancers

Contredanse

France

not fixed

Cuer

France

4 couple

Prompter (start: mid of 19th century)

United State of America

4 couple

Caller

The Great Quadrille

Today’s Square Dance

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Formation


Square Dancing : Movement A square dance program or square dance list is a set of defined square dance calls or dance steps which are associated with a level of difficulty. Programs and program lists are managed and universally recognized in modern Western square dance.

Callerlab recognizes the first 53 calls of Mainstream as a separate program called “Basic”.

Basic Movement 1

From “Dancer Naming” to “Star Promenade”

Callerlab, the International Association of Square Dance Callers, the largest international square dance association manages the most universally recognized of these programs, and currently manages seven dance program lists. There are four main levels, some of which are divided into sublevels:

Basic Movement 2

From “Pass Thru” to “Grand Square”

Basic Movement 3

From “Star Thru” to “Shoot the Star”

Basic Movement 4

From “Slip the Clutch” to “Double Pass Thru”

Mainstream

69 calls

Basic Movement 5

Plus

31 calls

From “First Couple Left...” to “Ferris Wheel”

Advanced 1 (A-1)

46 calls

Mainstream 1

From “Cloverleaf” to “Centers in”

Advanced 2 (A-2)

35 calls

Challenge 1 (C1)

79 calls

Mainstream 2

Challenge 2 (C2)

86 calls

From “Cast Off 3/4” to “Dixie Style to an Ocean Wave”

Challenge 3A (C3A)

83 calls

Mainstream 3

From “Spin Chain Thru” to “Recycle”

Movements (Calls) in each level:

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Plus 1

From “Acey Deucey” to “Spin Chain the Gears”

Plus 2

From “Track ll” to “Trad the Wave”

Plus 3

From “Flip the Diamond” to “Spin Chain & Exchange the Gears”

Plus 4

“Off the List” movements for Plus Dancers

Advance 1 (1)

From “(Anything) and Cross” to “Double Star Thru”

Advance 1 (2)

From “Ends Bend” to “Lock It”

Advance 1 (3)

From “Mix” to “Scoot and Dodge”

Advance 1 (4)

From “Six-Two Acey Deucey” to “Wheel Thru”

Advance 2

From “All 4 Couples/ All 8 Couples” to “Zig Zag/ Zag Zig”

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Basic Movement Examples:


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OUTPUT Question: What makes square dance? Dancers

Number of dancers

Even number

Changes in square formation?

Odd number Movement

Square transformation

Dancer’s position in group

Moving Square

Other requirements Square Dance

Rhythm

Music

Costume

Caller

Experiment: Changes in square formation Taking people in different position off the square to investigate changes in space and formation.

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The experiment can be devided in 3 cases: taking one person off at a time, taking two people off at a time and taking a couple off at a time.


Case 1: Taking 1 dancer out at a time

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Case 2: Taking 2 dancers out at a time

Case 3: Taking 1 couple (partner) out at a time

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Space formation: Case 1

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Space formation: Case 2

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Space formation: Case 3


Diagram Colour The Unnamed Facility Club draws square dancing figures, couple 1 is blue, couple 2 is red, couple 3 is green and couple 4 is yellow and this has been used widely on square dancing websites.

50’s

Square dancing bacame “the thing to do” because of the development of electronic amplifier and the callers’ techniques.

50’s colour schemes

Justified colours

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Output: visual information video This video shows the experiments about square dance formation projected from real square dance group, the Traveling Hoedowners. I also change the music in different genres to explore new rhythm and feelings. Unusual square dance instruction manual As a result of the video, I create a dance instruction manual for people who wants to do square dancing in unusual way, suggesting different number of dancers, music genre and some example of dance steps.

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Bibliography A square dance. (Photograph from the Dance Division, New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations.), Dance Heritage Coalition. < http://www.danceheritage.org/publications/treas_blurbs10.html > Agnes De Mille, America Dances. New York, Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., 1980 Bruno Munari, The Square. Mantova, Maurizio Corraini s.r.l., 2006. CALLERLAB International Association of Square Dance Callers. < http://www.callerlab.org/ > Donis A. Dondis, A Primer of Visual Literacy. Massachusetts, The MIT Press, 1974. Elflad, Square Dance Formation. < http://everything2.com/title/Square+dance+formation > Joan Lawson, European Folk Dance. London, Pitman Publishing, 1970. Medha Godbole, Square Dance Steps. < http://www.buzzle.com/articles/square-dance-steps.html > Noriko Takahashi, Square Dance. < http://noriks.tripod.com/ENGLISH/English-Index2.html > Square Dance Magazine. < http://squaredancemagazine.com/> Square Dance, Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square_dance> Vic and Debbie Ceder’s, Square Dance Resource Net. <http://www.ceder.net/> Western Square Dancing. < http://www.dosado.com/ > 49


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