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Aleksandra Korinnaja

Abstraction, Dimensional Space & Phenomenology

Updated: Mar 18, 2019


For further concept development the following concepts must be thoroughly analysed as groundwork for the project's direction:

The following are a deeper look at the meanings and representations of abstraction, dimensional space and phenomenology.


Abstraction both in traditional and 3D art is used to highlight materiality, composition, form and colour; all non-conceptual components of a piece of art. Thus, a successful work of abstraction is one that strips back all symbols, indicators and subject matter and lets the tools at hand speak on their own terms.


Dimensional space refers to the experience of 3D, either physical or virtual, space within the project's delivery. This either entails an installation or 360 video to communicate

three-dimensional space. Although most of the dimensions outlined by modern science cannot be easily translated into a visual experience or even conceptually fathomed, the fourth-dimension, time, is an integral part of human perception and has been communicated through art in the following examples:


There are countless phenomenology methodologies and branches of thought, however, the following four are the most common and widely discussed lenses:


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