Form constants have a relationship to some forms of
abstract art, especially the
visual music tradition, as
William Wees noted in his book
Light Moving in Time about research done by German psychologist Heinrich Klüver on the form constants resulting from mescaline intoxication. The visual and synaesthetic hallucinations this drug produced resembles, as Wees noted, a listing of visual forms employed in visual music: These form-constants provide links between abstraction, visual music and synaesthesia. The cultural significance of form constants, as Wees notes in
Light Moving in Time is part of the history of abstract film and video. The practice of the ancient art of
divination may suggest a deliberate practice of cultivating form constant imagery and using
intuition and/or imagination to derive some meaning from transient visual phenomena.
Psychedelic art, inspired at least in part by experiences with psychedelic substances, frequently includes repetitive abstract forms and patterns such as
tessellation,
Moiré patterns or patterns similar to those created by
paper marbling, and, in later years,
fractals. The
op art genre of visual art created art using bold imagery very like that of form constants. In
electroacoustic music, Jon Weinel has explored the use of altered states of consciousness as a basis for the design of musical compositions. His work bases the design of sonic materials on typical features of hallucinatory states, and organises them according to hallucinatory narratives. As part of this work, form constants feature prominently as a basis for the design of psychedelic sonic and visual material. ==See also==