09.05 form and principles of art

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Transcript of 09.05 form and principles of art

Songs of the Day

“Lost in Emotion” by Lisa Lisa and the Cult Jam from 1987 album Spanish Fly

“Dancing with Myself” by Billy Idol from the 1981 album Don’t Stop

Songs of the Day

“Sweet Dreams” by Eurhythmics from 1987 album Sweet Dreams (are made of this)

“Touch of Grey” by Grateful Dead from the 1987 album In the Dark

Songs of the Day

“You Might Think by The Cars from 1984 album Heartbeat City

Announcements

Please see the syllabus about making up missed classes / missed quizzes. Unless you have documentation for one of the listed excused absences YOU MAY NOT MAKE UP WORK. Do not email ANY professor an email such as this:

“I was unable to come to class today. Did we do anything important? Is there anything I need to make up?” – anonymous student 8/29

Take away from 09.03

FORM and THE ELEMENTS OF ART

Form = what the artwork looks like and is perceived with the senses. When you are describing the form of an artwork you are describing the “facts”. These “facts” include •  Medium/Materials

•  Elements of art

•  Principles of art

Take away from 09.03

MEDIUM

What is the artwork made of ? (materials: oil paint, pen & ink, watercolor, marble, neon lights, old tires, wire, list any and everything that is in the artwork.).

How was it made? (applying paint to canvas, thick layers / brushstrokes, fine detail, welded together, carved out of a structure, printed off a laser printer)

Take away from 09.03

ELEMENTS OF ART - The elements of art are the building blocks used by artists to create a work of art.

1.  Shape 2.  Line 3.  Value (light and dark) 4.  Texture & pattern 5.  Color 6.  Space

Kehinde Wiley, from the series The World Stage Kehinde Wiley, from the series The World Stage

Shape, Line, Value (light and dark), Texture & pattern, Color, Space

Form & Principles of Art

Anoli Perera, Stitched and Stretched, 2010 Bruce Monro, Field of Light, 2012

Barrett “Writing Art Criticism”

•  CHOOSING A PIECE = choose something you are passionate about or at least interested in. If you do not find something you are interested in – you could explore your lack of interest – but IT MUST BE WELL ARTIULATED AND WRITTEN.

•  DESCRIBING – describe accurately and with vivacity. Make the work come alive for your readers. Give them a verbal image they can see!

•  INTERPRATATION – The basic premise = artworks are about SOMETHING. Present YOUR understanding in a way that is convincing.

•  JUDGING – Resist finding minor faults in works of art – fault finding is petty – argue for larger ideas.

FORM What the artwork looks like

•  Aspects of artwork perceived with senses

•  Medium/Materials

•  Elements of art

•  Principles of art

•  The “facts” of the artwork – one “right” answer, not open to interpretation

CONTENT What the artwork means

•  Depends on context

•  Depends on viewer

•  Multiple & changing

•  Requires interpretation

•  No easy formula to follow

•  Aspects of artwork perceived with senses

•  Medium/Materials

•  Elements of art

•  Principles of art

•  The “facts” of the artwork – one “right” answer, not open to interpretation

FORM What the artwork looks like

!! KNOW THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THESE !!

Form

KNOW THESE TERMS AND HOW THEY INFORM AN ARTWORK

PRINCIPLES OF ART - The principles of visual art are the rules, tools and/or guidelines that artists use to organize the elements of art in an artwork.

1.  Balance 2.  Emphasis and focal point 3.  Proportion and scale 4.  Unity and variety 5.  Rhythm

Form

PRINCIPLES OF ART

1.  BALANCE •  The placement of elements in a composition

so that their visual weights seem evenly distributed

•  A sense of equilibrium between different elements

•  Some artworks are unbalanced – there is no sense of equilibrium

Form

BALANCE Symmetrical balance: Visual weight is distributed evenly throughout the composition The artwork will feel stable, traditional, and inert.

Form

BALANCE Asymmetrical balance: Visual weights are evenly distributed (there is equilibrium), but there is no mirror image on each half of the composition. Mary Ellen Mark

“Amanda and Her Cousin, Amy Valdese, North California” Gelatin Silver Print

Form

BALANCE Radial Balance: All elements visually radiate outward from a central point

Feels orderly and very organized; sense of ritual or tradition

Form

PRINCIPLES OF ART

2.  Focal point/Emphasis: In at artwork certain elements or parts of a composition are visually more important / prominent

Communicated through:

•  Size •  Color •  Texture & pattern •  Shape •  Visual interest •  Centering

Form

FOCAL POINT/EMPHASIS

Where do your eyes go first? Why?

Form

FOCAL POINT/EMPHASIS

Where do your eyes go first? Why?

Form

FOCAL POINT/EMPHASIS

Where do your eyes go first? Why?

Form

FOCAL POINT/EMPHASIS

Technically, there is only ONE focal point in a composition. Other prominent areas are called accents.

Form

FOCAL POINT/EMPHASIS

Form

FOCAL POINT/EMPHASIS

Focal point

Form

FOCAL POINT/EMPHASIS

Focal point

Accent

Accent

Form

FOCAL POINT/EMPHASIS

Form

FOCAL POINT/EMPHASIS

Focal point Focal point

Form

FOCAL POINT/EMPHASIS

Focal point

Accent

Accent

Form

PRINCIPLES OF ART

3. Proportion and Scale: Proportion is the relation of art elements and subjects to each other in terms of size. Scale is size relative to what we consider standard/normal

Form

Proportion and Scale

Michelangelo Buonarotti David, marble, 14’3” high, 1501-1504

Form

Proportion and Scale

René Magritte The Listening Room 1952, oil on canvas 17 3/4” x 21 5/8

Form

Proportion and Scale

Form

PRINCIPLES OF ART

4.  UNITY AND VARIETY

Unity refers to cohesion in a work of art: integration of all the aspects of the work into a whole. Variety represents visual interest in an artwork created by contrast and difference.

Form

UNITY AND VARIETY

Unity can come from …

•  Style •  Color harmony •  Repeated elements •  Visual element that encircles or joins

Form

UNITY AND VARIETY

Unity through repeated elements…

Cornell Capa “Bolshoi Ballet School, Moscow”

Gelatin Silver Print 1958

Form

UNITY AND VARIETY

Unity through repeated elements and color…

Sandy Skoglund Revenge of the Goldfish

1981

Form

UNITY AND VARIETY

Variety can come from variation in…

•  Objects •  Shapes •  Textures and patterns •  Colors

Form

UNITY AND VARIETY

What unifies this installation? What provides variety?

Form

UNITY AND VARIETY

What unifies this album cover? What provides variety?

Form

UNITY AND VARIETY

What unifies this painting? What provides variety?

Form

UNITY AND VARIETY

And now for

something completely different… Too much of one thing (unity) can be uninteresting……

Form

ELEMENTS OF ART 5. Rhythm •  A visual tempo or beat •  Produces the look and feel of movement •  Repeated elements in the artwork draw the viewer’s eye

around the artwork •  Movement and action are sometimes created by a

diagonal or fluid line rather than repeated elements •  Artwork seems active and dynamic rather than passive

and static

Form

RHYTHM

Henri Matisse, Dance I, 1909, oil on canvas, 8’ 6 ½” x 12’ 9 ½”, Museum of Modern Art, NY.

Form

RHYTHM

Piet Mondrian, Broadway Boogie Woogie. 1942-43, oil on canvas, 50 x 50 inches, Museum of Modern Art, NY.

Form

KNOW THESE TERMS AND HOW THEY INFORM AN ARTWORK

PRINCIPLES OF ART - The principles of visual art are the rules, tools and/or guidelines that artists use to organize the elements of art in an artwork.

1.  Balance 2.  Emphasis and focal point 3.  Proportion and scale 4.  Unity and variety 5.  Rhythm

Kehinde Wiley, from the series The World Stage Kehinde Wiley, from the series The World Stage

Balance, Emphasis and focal point, Proportion and scale, Unity and variety, Rhythm

“Pulse Room”

FORM = aspects of artwork perceived with senses

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbiqDufLCDY

QUIZ #2

PEOPLE IN THE COMPUTER ROWS – CLOSE YOUR BROWSER PLEASE TEAR OF THE SPIRAL FRAYED EDGES OF YOUR PAPER PUT YOUR QUIZ IN THE FOLDER THAT CORRESPONDS WITH YOUR LAST NAME

ALBERTO – ESHIET ESPINOSA – KEARNS KECK – REBEIL REIL - ZNACHKO

WRITE YOUR NAME, DATE AND QUIZ 2 AT THE TOP OF YOUR PAPER!!

QUIZ #2

1)  What is the difference between form and content? After you state the general difference list two specific differences.

2)  What are two tips that Sayre gave in his article “Working with

Words and Images”?

3)  True or False: The definition of art is only dependent on individual values.

4)  What can color suggest / bring to an artwork? (example: the use of line can suggest movement)

Use complete sentences unless prompted otherwise!