When searching "Black, White, and Red" on Google Images, I noticed that the first related search was "black white and red weddings". Apparently this is a thing. Red, I guess I understood, but black? Caivano and Lopez in "The Rhetoric of black, white, and red" offer one explanation; that is, that the combination of red and black has an elegant feel. 




Scanning through the images the search brought up, there were also quite a few images of flowers - like roses - and "black white and red flowers" was also listed as a related search. Besides these, there were some ads that were certainly using "the seduction of color advertising". 



A main theme I noticed in between these other themes was rather dark, artsy pictures. The women with white faces, black hair and red lips, the man in a white shirt and black suit with blood on his arm and a red tie, or even a black bunny zipping into a bloody white bunny costume (?!?). This mix of red dresses, guns, blood, and peonies on achromatic backgrounds is unsettling, to say the least. Definitely more of a Dracula feel than a Jesus Christ feel. I have to say that these things always bring me back to the cover design of Stephanie Meyer's "Twilight": pale arms, black background, and that one red, red apple. Vampires.










The color scheme for vampires is really too perfect. You think of a vampire and there is red blood, white skin, and black clothes. But you also think elegant, don't you? Seductive? They've got their methods for drawing in the women. And the portrayal of vampires with these colors adds to the seductiveness and elegance of them, does it not?


Maybe it's just what teen pop culture is in to right now, but this whole vampire craze affects more than just the sales of pointy fake teeth. It also affects how we might be viewing a color combination.
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In class, we discussed Scott McCloud's "Understanding Comics," which is really the seminal work in well, understanding comics.  McCloud discusses just about every, and any aspect of comics that can be conceived, and our discussion on 'gutters' was interesting, as I hadn't read "Understanding Comics" in some ten years.

As an avid comics fan (buff?), I had always been told that Neal Adams was one of the genre-defining comics-book artists of his day (which happened to precede me by some 15 years).  As you can see in the examples to the right, his use of panel arrangement was completely "outside-the-box," to coin a phrase that came up in class.  That is not the interesting part, however.

What is interesting about the two examples presented here is that they do not conform to the most-often-used transition cited by McCloud, the "Action-to-Action."  Instead, these particular panels, and their arrangement, necessitate a "Moment-to-Moment" reading.  This is interesting, because there is no shortage of action in these panels.  And in McCloud's admittedly small sampling of Western comics, "Action-to-Action" panels dominate.

There is an underlying philosophy in the way stories are told, which is probably all the more exacerbated by the comics medium (65% "Action-to-Action!"), and it is the concept of agency.  McCloud touches on this a little bit in his book, but I prefer Lera Boroditsky's thought that Western (particularly American) readers are much more likely to "assign agency" when describing events.  "John hit Bob," as opposed to "Bob was hit by John."  Or "David broke the glass," as opposed to "the glass was broken." This way of constructing narratives and describing events comes out in our visual language as well, and those artists who break free of that paradigm (like Neal Adams) are to be commended.
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