
The new project, called Sonnet Signatures, is an extension of Rougeux’ Between The Words posters, which visualized the punctuation in classic literature. “I wanted to find an interesting way to quantify the poetry that could apply to any written text—not just Shakespeare’s sonnets,” Rougeux says. “The sonnets just happened to be a perfect set of bite-sized data that seemed appealing on their own and interesting as a whole.”
How Rougeux came up with the swooping signatures for each of the sonnets required something of a mathematical equation. Using the original 1609 text, he began by assigning each letter a value (a=1, b=2, c=3). Then line by line, he added all of the letter values together then divided them by the number of letters used. That average number was used as the y-axis coordinate, while the total number of letters used in each line determined the x-axis coordinate. Rougeux then connected the dots with a sweeping stroke that follows the order of the sonnet’s lines.
The result is 154 abstract drawings that have a distinct Picasso-circa-light-painting vibe to them.
via Wired


