Concept
Multiple Focal Points (Freely Arranged)
An arrangement configuration with several freely distributed centres of visual interest, suggesting an organic rather than structured distribution of emphasis.
“Freely arranged focal points suggest natural growth - coherence comes not from a clear hierarchy but from the naturalistic unity of the design's habitat logic.”
Several freely arranged focal points distribute visual interest organically across the design, without the deliberate structural positioning of multiple structured focal points. This configuration suggests natural growth and is most closely associated with vegetative design, where plant logic rather than compositional hierarchy determines the distribution of interest. The absence of a single dominant focal point requires that visual coherence be achieved through the naturalistic unity of the habitat being evoked. Source: Lersch (300).
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