Skip to main content
Published articles

The Hidden Logic of Film Art

This audiovisual essay extends Rudolf Arnheim’s seminal work on the psychological significance of visual form into the realm of moving images. While Arnheim’s Art and Visual Perception (1954) applied Gestalt principles to static artworks, his analytical tools were less adaptable to film, where movement, editing, and shifting perspectives complicate static visual analysis. Leveraging the dynamic potential of the audiovisual essay format, this project introduces keyframe animation as a method to visualize and analyze formal patterns in cinema. Focusing on the seduction scene in Stanley Kubrick’s Barry Lyndon (1975), the essay overlays abstract animations based on cognitive primitives—such as containers, objects, and paths—to trace the evolving visual rhythm of the scene. These animations reveal shifts in framing, character positioning, and spatial dynamics that convey the emotional trajectory of Lady Lyndon’s seduction. By highlighting how perceptual forms—independent of narrative context—generate meaning, the essay offers a novel, cognitively informed approach to film analysis. It not only builds on Arnheim’s insights into the unity of form and content but also demonstrates how digital tools can uncover the hidden structures that shape our experience of film.