Adapted from The Palette Magazine
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A successful painting is not simply a well-designed depiction of a pleasant subject any more than a successful novel is a grammatically correct description of an interesting event.
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Good art requires more than that. The artist must convey his personal response to the subject and direct attention to the important elements. One way to do this in painting is by planning the placement and degree of contrast. This would be much easier if the three kinds of color contrast - value, intensity, and hue - were equally attractive to the eye. But they're not.
Applying this information
All very interesting, but how do you use this in a painting? You employ these contrasts (but rarely all three in the same painting) to attract and hold the viewer's attention, to direct it to areas of importance throughout your design, and to express a personal emotional quality. Understanding the effect of these qualities will help you envision the effect you want.
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