Perspective isn't just a drawing exercise — it's how artists decide what a place feels like. This is the rung where you stop obeying the rules and start using them on purpose, which is exactly what this term's "another world" sculpture and installation will ask of you.
One Vanishing Point, a Whole City
Once you can aim edges at a vanishing point, you're not limited to a single box. Line a street with buildings and send every receding edge — rooftops, window rows, the kerb, the footpath cracks — to the same vanishing point, and a believable city falls into place. Artists have done this for centuries: think of those Renaissance paintings of impossibly tidy piazzas, or a comic-book splash page of a hero's gleaming hometown. Drop a few buildings in the toy and watch them all bow to the one point — that's a world being built from a single rule.
Viewpoint Is Mood
Here's the grown-up part: where you put the horizon changes how the place makes us feel. Drag the horizon down low (a worm's-eye view) and the buildings tower over you — grand, intimidating, heroic. Drag it up high (a bird's-eye view) and everything spreads out small and exposed below you — lonely, vulnerable, watched. Keep it in the middle and the scene feels calm and ordinary. Same buildings, same vanishing point — but the eye level you chose tells the viewer how to feel before they've read a single thing. That's the bridge into Point of view.
Bending It on Purpose
The masters break these rules knowingly. Escher stitches several impossible vanishing points into one staircase that climbs forever. Surrealists stretch perspective until a room feels like a bad dream. Once you truly own the rule, breaking it becomes a tool — a way to make your "another world" feel uncanny, dizzy, or vast. The point was never perfect boxes. The point is making someone believe in a place that was only ever lines on a page.
Why This Is the Real Finish Line
Discovering the vanishing point was the "aha". Building a box made it solid. Dodging the traps made it reliable. Staging a whole world with it — and choosing a viewpoint that makes someone feel something — that's mastery, and it's exactly what the rest of this unit, right through to the collaborative installation, is going to ask you to do.