HIGH SCHOOL / STUDIO SERIES...Digital Fine Art Images Extend the fine art in the book with images...
Transcript of HIGH SCHOOL / STUDIO SERIES...Digital Fine Art Images Extend the fine art in the book with images...
Highlights include:
• Dazzling contemporary and historical fine art examples
• Opportunities for writing, portfolio development, and critical analysis
• Outstanding student art
• Point-of-use instructional support for teachers
• Tips for developing good studio habits
• Student handbook
By John Howell White
HIGH SCHOOL / STUDIO SERIES
For more information, visit DavisArt.com, call 800.533.2847, or email [email protected].
This contemporary look at painting’s diverse media, tools,
and processes offers inspiration and instruction to students
and teachers alike. Dazzling fine art accompanies the
clear, practical text; hands-on studio experiences with
step-by-step photographs invite experimentation and
allow students to build skills sequentially. Accomplished
student artwork, historical background, career guidance,
and point-of-use instructional support round out this
exciting new addition to the Davis Studio Series.
eBook
Experience Painting
Available as eBook or print textbook.
Davis Digital PlatformWith Davis Digital, students and teachers can access their eBooks, ePortfolios, and other features from a computer, tablet, iPad, or from most mobile devices with an Internet connection.
• eBooks: Each eBook purchase includes the Student Book, the Teacher’s Edition, and the Reproducible Masters.
• Curriculum Builder: Easily organize and customize the curriculum to meet your students’ needs. Add your favorite lessons, videos, or projects.
• ePortfolios: You and your students can easily create online portfolios. Share your portfolios with parents, classmates, community members, and colleagues.
• Digital Images: Access a set of 50 fine art images for each eBook to introduce or extend the studio activities in the eBook.
• Student Accounts: Students can access eBooks from home or school and create ePortfolios to share their work. The purchase of an eBook includes options for 30, 55, or 230 student accounts.
Digital Fine Art ImagesExtend the fine art in the book with images from around the globe and across time correlated to each lesson. Low-cost sub-scriptions to more than 30,000 images are available. Learn more at DavisArt.com.
Table of ContentsChapter 1: The Basics of Painting
Chapter 2: Tempera and Gouache
Chapter 3: Dry Media
Chapter 4: Watercolors and Inks
Chapter 5: Acrylics
Chapter 6: Oils
Chapter 7: Encaustics
Chapter 8: Wall Painting
Chapter 9: Other Ways to Paint
Student Handbook
Glossary
Fig. 5–19. What do you think dominates this painting: the subject matter, the artist’s values and interests, or the painting process? Why do you think so?Kerry James Marshall, Better Homes, Better Gardens,1994. Acrylic and collage on unstretched canvas, 100" x 142" (254 x 361 cm). Photo © Denver Art Museum
As you play with paint and imag-ery and make spontaneous choices, you’ll gradually develop your own artistic style. Your style will be evi-dent in the subjects you choose, the way you represent your subjects, and the way you use acrylic paint.
The development of style is a kind of “conversation” between your sub-ject, your values and interests, and your painting process. At times, the subject matter dominates, at times the painting process dominates, and at times your values and interests dominate.
Improvisation: Developing a Style
Chapter 5 Acrylics 20
“I found I could say things with color and shapes that I couldn’t say any other way—things I had no words for.”Georgia O’Keeffe
Fig. 5–1. What do you notice first when you look at this painting? What message do you think the artist wants to send? Yoshitomo Nara, No Hopeless, 2007. Acrylic on canvas, 46" x 35 ¾" (117 x 91 cm). © Yoshitomo Nara, courtesy Pace Gallery.
5 Acrylics
Chapter 5 Acrylics 2
Point-of-use videos demonstrate key techniques in the eBook.
Student eBook.
For more information, visit DavisArt.com, call 800.533.2847, or email [email protected].
Go to Texas.DavisArtSpace.com for a test drive.