The 4th image has a really strong Stable figure/ground relationship. The positive space really dominates the negative space giving a clear image of the figure and the ground. I’m not quite sure if the first image is a good idea for an ambiguous figure/ground relationship because there’s is a lot of space causing me to focus on the dots. To fix this, you can probably enhance the size of the dots to create an equal and balanced space between the negative and positive space
The third image was the most interesting for us in class because of all the different ways we could rotate the .40 to make it look like oh or a person leaping across a hole. When you ink this you could do lots of things like shrinking it or rotating it. You can even move it from the center of the page to the left or right side.
The 4th image has a really strong Stable figure/ground relationship. The positive space really dominates the negative space giving a clear image of the figure and the ground. I’m not quite sure if the first image is a good idea for an ambiguous figure/ground relationship because there’s is a lot of space causing me to focus on the dots. To fix this, you can probably enhance the size of the dots to create an equal and balanced space between the negative and positive space
The third image was the most interesting for us in class because of all the different ways we could rotate the .40 to make it look like oh or a person leaping across a hole. When you ink this you could do lots of things like shrinking it or rotating it. You can even move it from the center of the page to the left or right side.