Upload
kvelez12
View
1.352
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Art A visual statement that represents the world around you, communicates an idea, expresses a feeling or present an interesting design.
What is applied art?Applied art refers to art that is made to be functional as well as visually pleasing.
Visual CultureThe visual statements you find in your
environment every day. Paintings , books, chairs, videogames
advertisements everything one sees, has seen or may imagine.
The internet, movies, toys, fashion and cars as well as fine arts are all part of one’s visual culture.
PerceiveTo be come aware through the senses fo the
special nature of objects. Using sight hearing touch smell and taste to
perceive an object increases your understanding of it.
Artists must strengthen their perception to interpret what they see in the world around them.
•The fundamentals or vocabulary of the artist’s language.
•The basic visual components that an artist uses to create visual art.
•Line, color, value, shape, form, space, and texture
A mark with length and direction.
A continuous mark made on a surface by a moving point.
Ansel Adams
Gustave Caillebotte
LineLines can be described
as having/beinglength and width short/long, thick/thin, dark/light, blurred/uneven, sharp/clear.
The style where lines are emphasized is called “linear”. Self Portrait of
Pablo Picasso
COLOR•Consists of
•Hue (name for the color)
•Intensity (brightness)
•Value (lightness or darkness).
Henri Matisse
Venice Twilight by Claude Monet
Color Theory• Hue Hue : name for the color
• Intensity: Intensity: brightness or dullness of a hue.
• Bright pure hues are called high-intensity high-intensity colors
• Dull hues are called low-intensity low-intensity colors.
• ValueValue : : lightness or darkness of a hue.
• When white is added to a hue the result is a tint.tint.
• When black is added to a hue the result is a shade.shade.
ColorPrimary colors are
basic colors that can not be obtained by mixing. They are red, yellow, and blue.
Secondary colors: are obtained by mixing primary colors. They are orange, green, and purple.
Tertiary or Intermediate Colors: in between primary and secondary colors on the color wheel, have more of a primary color in them. They are: red-orange, yellow-green, blue-green etc.
The Color WheelThe color wheel is a tool
to help you organize colors, mix colors and compare colors.
Colors across from each other on the wheel are complementary colors.
Colors next to each other within the same family are analogous colors.
An area clearly set off by one or more of the other six visual elements of art. They have height and width but not depth. Shapes are flat, 2 dimensional.
Joan Miro
ShapeShape is an a element
that artists use to convey their message or visual statement.
Geometric shapes: Geometric shapes: precise mathematical shapes ex; circle, square, triangle.
Free-form or Free-form or organic shapes organic shapes ex: outline/contour of a lake. Balancement by Wassily
Kandinsky
FORMFORM A 3-dimensional object; or something in a 2-dimensional artwork that appears to be 3-dimensional
Cylinder, cube, cone, pyramid, free-form form
Jean Arp
The distance or area between, around, above, below, or within things.
Linear perspective- the lines of buildings roads and similar objects are slanted to make them appear to come together or meet in the distance.
Size- objects in the foreground (front) are made bigger than objects in the background.
Overlapping- nearer shapes and forms overlap or partly cover those meant to appear farther away.
Placement- distant objects are placed higher up in the picture.
Foreground, Middle ground and Background (creates DEPTH)
La Rue de la Bavolle in Honfleur by Claude Monet.
Space
SpacePositive space filled with somethingNegative empty spaces between the shapes
or forms in two and three dimensional art.Intensity and value- the colors of objects
meant to appear in the distance are lower in intensity than those of objects meant to appear nearer. They are also lighter in value.
Detail- more detail is added to closer objects and less detail is added to those in the distance
TEXTURETEXTURE
•The surface quality or "feel" of an object, its smoothness, roughness, softness, etc.
•Textures may be actual or implied.
Cecil Buller
Texture- the element of art that refers to how things feel, or look as though they might feel , if touched. Visual texture- is texture you experience with your eyes as you remember them from experience. Ex. Paintings of velvet, leather, silk or concrete.
Principle of art concerned with arranging the elements so that no one part of the work overpowers, ore seems heaver than, any other part.
Alexander Calder
Balance
Formal balance is dignified, stable, more static and symmetrical.
Informal balance is asymmetrical.
The Last Supper by Leonardo Da Vinci
Symmetrical BalanceThe parts of an image are organized so that one side mirrors the other.
Leonardo DaVinci
AsymmetricalAsymmetrical Balance BalanceWhen one side of a composition does not reflect the design of the other.
James Whistler
Radial BalanceWhen the elements of art or object in an
artwork radiate or come out from a central point.
EmphasisEmphasis is a
principle that captures your eye when you first see an art piece.
The focal point or center of attention.
The Herring Net by Winslow Homer
CONTRAST A large difference between two things to create interest and tension.
Ansel AdamsSalvador Dali
The principle of art that indicates movement through the repetition of elements and objects.
Marcel Duchamp
MovementThe principle of art that
leads the viewer to see action in a work, also the path that the viewers eye follows through the work.
Movement is the principle of giving life to an artwork.
The artist makes a compelling path through repeated line, color, and shapes.
Napoleon Crossing the Alps by Jacques-Louis David
Gustav Klimt
PATTERN-Two dimensional, decorative visual repetition.
-Motif- unit of repetition in a visual pattern.
RepetitionRepetition is a
principle that can be simple or complex.
Repetition of line shape and color creates a visual rhythm.
A pattern or motif also results from repetition.
Repeated patterns also show order.
UnityUnity is the
arrangement of elements and principles of art to creat a feeling of completeness or wholeness.
Irises by Vincent van Gogh
HarmonyA principle of design where elements of art are combined to accent their similarities and bind the picture parts into a whole. Sandy Skoglund
VarietyVariety is a
principle that uses differences and contrasts between elements to bring an art piece to life.
Variety brings life and attention to an art piece.
The Persistence of Memory by Salvador Dali
•The comparative relationship of one part to another with respect to size, quantity, or degree; SCALE.
Gustave Caillebotte