61. A line attracts attention in the measure of the tone-contrast which it makes with the ground-tone upon which it is drawn. It attracts attention, also, according to its length, which is an extension of the tone-contrast. It attracts more attention the longer it is, provided it lies, all of it, well within the field of vision. It attracts attention also in the measure of its concentration.
Fig. 63
Line “a” would attract less attention than it does if the tone-contrast, black on a ground of white paper, were diminished, if the line were gray, not black. In line “b” there is twice the extension of tone-contrast there is in “a.” For that reason “b” is more attractive. If, however, “a” were black and “b” were gray, “a” might be more attractive than “b,” because of the greater tone-contrast.
Fig. 64
In this illustration the curved line is more attractive than the straight line because it is more concentrated, therefore more definite. The extent of tone-contrast is the same, the lines being of the same length.
Fig. 65
In this line there is no doubt as to the greater attraction of the twisted end, on account of the greater concentration it exhibits. The extent of tone-contrast is the same at both ends. The force of attraction in the twisted end of the line would be diminished if the twisted end were made gray instead of black. The pull of concentration at one end might, conceivably, be perfectly neutralized by the pull of a greater tone-contrast at the other.