ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

17
ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

Transcript of ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

Page 1: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

ELEMENTS OFART

The “building blocks” of a composition.

Page 2: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

LINE

c

ontinuous mark made on a surface by a moving point

T

ypes of Line:• Contour• Outline• Implied

Page 3: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

CONTOUR

Page 4: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

OUTLINE

Page 5: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

IMPLIED LINE:

L

ines that may not have been actually drawn, but that

the composition of the work makes it appear that

they are there.

Page 6: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

IMPLIED LINE

Page 7: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

SHAPEa

n enclosed space defined

by other elements of art

T

ypes of Shape:• Geometric• Organic

Page 8: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

FORM

A

“shape” that is

three-

dimensional and

encloses volume

(value makes

this possible).

Page 9: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

SPACE

r

efers to the distance or area between, around, above or

within things.

T

ypes of Space:• Positive• Negative

Page 10: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

T

he space that is “filled in” in

an artwork. I.E. The part that

has been drawn, painted,

sculpted, etc…

POSITIVE NEGATIVESPACE SPACE

T

he “empty space” or “empty void”.

The space that is ‘left over’ or not

filled in.

Page 11: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

COLOR

e

lement of art that is produced when light, striking an

object, is reflected back to the eye.

T

hree parts of color:• Hue• Intensity• Value

Page 12: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

HUEs

imply means

the name we

give to a color

(red, yellow,

blue, etc.)

Page 13: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

INTENSITY t

he strength and vividness of the color (uses words such as

vivid, dull, bright, etc…

Page 14: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

VALUEd

escribes the lightness or darkness of a

color.• This is the key to making form – or

objects that appear 3D

Page 15: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

TEXTURE

r

efers to the surface quality or "feel" of an object

T

ypes of Texture:• Actual• Implied

Page 16: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

T

hese textures use the sense of

touch and can actually be felt.

E

xample: Touching the bark of

a tree – I know it’s rough b/c I

felt it.

ACTUAL TEXTURE VS. IMPLIED TEXTURE

These textures use the sense of sight and cannot actually be felt. We know what it should look at from the way it looks.

Example: Looking at a picture of tree bark – I know it’s rough, but I can’t feel it by rubbing a picture.

Page 17: ELEMENTS OF ART The “building blocks” of a composition.

IMPLIED TEXTURE