Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

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Portraiture Lesson 1

Transcript of Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Page 1: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

PortraitureLesson 1

Page 2: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Connector: Card Sort

Which paintings

are portraits?

Portraits Not Portraits

Page 3: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Portraits Not PortraitsWhat is different between the 2 groups of pictures?

•Picture of a person.•Can normally only see their shoulders and face.•Records a persons appearance.•Shows a persons personality.•The picture is normally portrait way up.

•Picture is not normally of people.•Picture can be of objects, landscapes, nature and buildings.•Shows how the artist feels about the objects/scenery.•Picture is normally landscape way up.

Page 4: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Big picture

•Connector: card sort•Discuss what makes a

portrait•Mind map.

•Demonstration.•Drawing time.

•Review.

Page 5: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Learning Outcome• All will mind map their new

project and know what a portrait is.

• All will do drawing studies of the nose and lips.

• Most pupils learn what tone is and use 2 tones.

• Some will use 3 tones and use shading very smoothly.

Page 6: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Why has Portraiture been used in the past?

• Sign of wealth.• Capture a physical

likeness to send to a person they may wish to marry.

• However some portraits were made to show an idealised (air brushed) image of the person so they appeared better looking.

• Showing a physical presence in a building or space when they are absent.

Page 7: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Where can portraiture be found

today?

Page 8: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

BUT Why do we still use the painted portrait?

• To observe and understand physical

proportion.• Explore human

expression.• Patience through

the painting process.

• A painting is a one off piece and can never be painted

the same way again.• Where as a digital

photo is one of many and can easily

be forgotten.

Page 9: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Mind map

Myself Portraiture

Project

HobbiesSports/ Art/ Music/ Cooking

Foods

Sports men/women

Family/ FriendsBooks/

Authors

Singers/Bands

Colours

Clothes

Films

What are your likes

and dislikes?

Who is your idol?

-who can explain what

an idol is?

Actor/Actress

Culture

Religion

Page 10: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Demonstration: Drawing stages

1) SOFTLTY draw the OUTLINE.2) SOFTLY draw the BIG INSIDE

SHAPES.3) SOFTLY draw the DETAIL.

4) SHADE in the LIGHT TONES.5) SHADE in the MIDDLE TONES.6) SHADE in the DARK TONES.

7) START a NEW DRAWING.

Page 11: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Drawing Stages• STAGES1)Softly sketch the outline2)Softly sketch in the big shapes of the shoe3)Softly draw in small details e.g. Laces, stitches4)Add light tones= very soft pencil pressure, thin

lines (hold pencil at a diagonal to the table)NOTE: the lightest highlights leave blank/white

5) Add medium tones=medium pencil pressure6) Add dark tones=heavy pencil pressure, thick lines

Page 12: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

reviewGo round the room...Say who your idol is

And why they are your idol

Page 13: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Historical Portraits

Leonardo da Vinci,Mona Lisa, 1503-06

Johannes Vermeer, Head of a Young Girl, 1660

Unkown Artist, Henry VIII

George Romney, Mary Moser, 1770-1

Above: Giuseppe Arcimboldo’s, Vertumnus, 1591

Page 14: Portraiture Lesson 1. Connector: Card Sort Which paintings are portraits? Portraits Not Portraits.

Historical Portraits

Above: Gustav Klimt, Adele Bloch-bauer I, 1907

Left: Vincent Van Gogh, Self Portrait Saint Rémy, September 1889

Right: Tamara de Lempicka, Auto Portrait, 1929

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Contemporary PortraitsLeft: Sonia Boyce, She Ain’t Holding Them Up, She’s Holding On (Some English Rose), 1986

Left: Frida Kahlo, Self Portrait with Monkey, 1940

Below: Andy Warhol, Marilyn Monroe, 1967

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Contemporary Portraits

Left: Julian Opie,Best of Blur Album Front Cover

Left: Lucien Freud, Queen Elizabeth II, 2000-01

Below: Beryl Cook, Bertie, 1980