Cornish composition
One of the things one mightn’t have expected to learn from Joe Cornish on Friday was interesting stuff about composition. As a consequence, everything static in the landscape is appearing to have three basic geometric shapes within: a globe or domed circle, a cube or rectangle, and a triangle or zigzag. This one has its circle too large for the space, and it’s too big: the dome would need to take up about a third of the frame with a comfortable space around it. And the zigzag is hardly present, but the warehouse window provides the right kind of solid cuboid of cliff-like darkness.
How many of these can be squeezed out of Greenwich and surrounds in a week, do you think? And there was this:
Posting very intermittently this week, but there might well be more Cornishing.
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