the top the s of the face co n Asour viewing angle becomes lower.the facial is dominant
As we observe the head from a high position, from the top the crania vault dominates the narrow, con stricted mass of the face coming from under the projecting brow arch. As our viewing angle becomes lower, the facial mass tends to enlarge as the cranial mass recedes. Then, as our vantage point is raised once more, this time in a right-to-left turn, the cranial mass is once again dominant
nce in focaldeganeh
From a bottom view, the wedge of the face takes on a more important appearance in relation to the cranial structure. The features of the face reveal a new aspect: looking upward at the face from underneath, we see the undersurfaces of the jaw, lips, nose, ears, and brow, and these forms assert a commanding presence over the side and frontal planes. From the rear, the skull case and the facial wedge show their most characteristic differences in shape: the facial wedge, angular and hard-cornered, is small when contrasted with the larger, dome-shaped cranial mass. 11
%DUUHO6KDSHG5LE&DJH The barrel shaped rib cage belongs the class of RYRLG (rotund, egg, and ball shape) forms. It is the largest sin form structure of the entire bo Frontally, its curved surface terminates top and bottom in two horseshoe-like passages.
front to rear,isso great thats able to girdle the head within its encircling contour (below). within the hollow of the chest(left)
The descending collarbone depression of the upper chest (left). When the figure is tipped forward into a deep frontal view, the swelling curve of the rib cage, front to rear, is so great that it is able to girdle the head within its encircling contour (below). The cylindrical column of the neck emerges like a thick, short tree limb growing from within the triangulate hollow of the chest (left)
shoulders
In any view looking upward, the barreling chest mass dominates all other forms; like a curving landscape, the pectoral arch overlaps the neck. This torso, shown upview front, reveals how much larger the mass of the chest is compared with its attached members, the head and shoulders. 14