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Formal Elements Elements of Art Principles of Art

Elements Of Design Powerpoint 2006

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Page 1: Elements Of Design Powerpoint  2006

Formal ElementsElements of ArtPrinciples of Art

Page 2: Elements Of Design Powerpoint  2006

What makes up an art work?

The Elements of art

Page 3: Elements Of Design Powerpoint  2006

Elements of ArtThe composition of an art work is made up

of the arrangement of the elements.These are known as the Elements of Art

• Color • line • texture • tone • shape /form

Page 4: Elements Of Design Powerpoint  2006

COLOUR

• Colour is very expressive and an exciting element of art. It appeals strongly to the senses and emotions.

• Colour can communicate in all different ways, it can be very powerful thing in art work. Art works can communicate by colour alone. It can cause emotional reactions.

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COLOUR

• Primary colours-yellow, red and blue.

(colours that can not be made by mixing other colours.

• Secondary colours- purple, green and orange (colours mixed from a combination of any two primary colours)

• Complimentary colours (colours found on the opposite on the colour wheel.)

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• Monochromatic colour scheme (uses only one colour and tints and shades)

• Harmonious colours- colours that have something in common. One colour will be in harmony with another.

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Primary coloursLichtenstein

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Secondary colours

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Complementary coloursGauguin

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Monochromatic colour schemeEscher

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Colour Schemes

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Colour schemes

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Complementary colours scheme

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Communicating with colour

• Cool colours go away from you

• Van Gogh

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Van Gogh

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Rothko

• Warm colours come towards you

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Rothko

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Lines

Line in art may mean a single thin stroke

It may signify the meeting edge of two areas

It may refer to the contours – as in sculpture

Line can display strong suggestion of

Movement

Line can produce a sense of tranquility

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Line Clement Meadmore

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Linecan create volume

Escher

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Lines can create movement they can move through an art work

Escher

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Lines can create movementBrett Whiteley

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Brett Whiteley

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Brett Whiteley

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Brett Whiteley

• Larger lines in the foreground

• Smaller lines in the back ground give an illusion of distances, space and perspective.

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Lines create pattern and shapeJohn Olsen

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Tone

• Tone can be flat or graduated

• Can be created by using shading, line or dots.

• Lines can be used to create tone in hatching or cross-hatching

• Dots can be used to create tone.

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Rick Amor

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Tone

• Tone can be subdued• Strong• Contrasting

• Rick Amor

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ToneRembrandt

Hatching and cross-hatching

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Tone

• Dramatic use of tone. Mattia Preti

• Tone used to attract out attention to the most important part of the painting

• Spot light shining on the painting

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Texture

• Read or Simulated• Real texture are the

textures that actually exist – they are what you actually feel

• Simulated textures

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Texture• Grained

• Rough

• Corrugated

• Smooth

• Furry

• Shiny

• prickly

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TextureVan Gogh

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Texture

When we actually touch and feel a surface we experience real texture

• Real texture; the feel of a surface Cactus, feathers, scales

When we look at a photograph or a painting of the texture of a surface such as glass or velvet leather, we see patterns of light and dark that create the effect of texture

• Simulated texture; a two dimensional surface that imitates real texture, simulated textures copy or imitate real textures.

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Simulated textureimitates real texture

Max Ernst

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Oldenburgreal texture, the feel of a surface

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Shape / Form

• A shape is an area that is defined in some way by a line, an edge, a colour or a texture. If we traced around its outline we would have a shape, silhouette

• Shapes are flat they have only two dimensions – height and width

• Shapes can be geometric – look as if they were made with a ruler.

• Organic – irregular, uneven shapes of nature.

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Shape

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Shape / Form

• Forms, like shapes have height and width but they also have the third dimension depth. They are solid. They have volume and occupy space.

• Two dimension - painting

• Three dimension - a sculpture

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Elements of Art

• These five elements are the primary aspects of visual perception. Every artwork can be described by reference to these elements.

• For example, a work will have the presence of strong lines or absence of line. A work may be full of tone or a complete lack of tone.

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Principles of Design These are the nine main principles of design

Contrast

Repetition

Movement

Rhythm

Direction

Space

Balance

Proportion

Emphasis

Unity

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Principles of Art

• The artists use the principles to combine the elements in a satisfying way.

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Ways to create space

• Divide the picture into the fore-ground, middle ground and background

• Strong details is used in the foreground, with gradual loss of detail as the image fades into the back ground

• Large objects in the fore ground graduating to smaller objects in the back ground

• Overlapping of objects give the appearance of objects being in front of each other

• Warm colours in the foreground and cool colours in the back ground

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DegasSpace

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Balance

• Refers to the distribution of weight in an art work so that no one part overpowers another or seems heavier that another.

• Artists may choose to create imbalance of a particular purpose. Sydney Long

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Proportion

• The relationship between the size of the objects within an artwork.

• Eugene von Guerard

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Emphasis

• An artist can create a centre of interest by allowing one area of an art work to dominate.

Picasso

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Contrast Picasso “Girl Mirror”

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Repetition

• John Brack - “Collins St 5pm”

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Rhythm

• Richard Mock