COMPOSITION
THREE GENERAL RULES
185. It is quite impossible for me, in this discussion of terms and principles, to indicate, in any measure, the possibilities of composition, in lines and spots of paint, in tones, measures, and shapes. This is in no sense a Book of Designs. All I have undertaken to do is to give a few very simple examples and to indicate the kind of reasoning to be followed, recommending the same kind of reasoning in all cases. There are three general rules, however, which I must state.
First. Given a certain outline and certain tones, measures, and shapes to be put into it, it is the Problem of Pure Design to do the best we can, getting as many connections making unity as possible. The process is one of experimenting, observing, comparing, judging, arranging and rearranging, taking no end of time and pains to achieve Order, the utmost possible Order, if possible the Beautiful.
Second. When only an outline is given and we can put into it lines and spots of paint,—tones, measures, and shapes,—ad libitum, we must be sure that in the addition and multiplication of features we do not get less Order than we had in the simple outline with which we started, when it had nothing in it. As we proceed to add features we must be sure that we are not diminishing the order of the composition as a whole. If the composition as a whole is orderly, we do not want to make it less so by cutting it up and introducing additional attractions which may be disorderly and confusing. It may be harder to achieve Order with a greater number and variety of terms. We may deserve credit for overcoming this difficulty, but it is a difficulty which confronts us only when the terms are given and we have to make the best of them. When no terms are given, only a perfectly orderly outline, we should hesitate before we put anything into it. If we add anything we must be sure that it does not diminish, in the slightest degree, the order we had before, when we had nothing but the outline. The order of the whole must never be diminished.
Third. When we have an outline with certain tones, measures, and shapes in it, the question is: whether we can increase the order by adding other tones, other measures, or other shapes.
a
b