The ELEMENTS are what Art is composed from--including line, shape, form, value, color, space and texture. The elements working in a composition will illustrate the PRINCIPLES of design in some fashion or another.
To create two balanced, mirrored compositions, one
(positive) and one (negative) both using black and white.Use a variety of shapes, all of which touch
the edges of the picture plane.
Materials
• Torn or cut papers
• X-acto or scissors
• Rubber cement
• Bristol groundsheets/black and white Murano paper
(you will need
one white sheet and one black sheet)
In addition to
the above you will need one sheet (19x24”) white, 2-ply Bristol for mounting.
Procedure
• Start first composition with a white ground sheet of
9.5x12.5"
• Cut or tear a variety of biomorphic shapes from black
paper.
• Lay black shapes on white ground to create your
composition making sure that
each shape
touches at least one edge of the picture plane.
• Repeat the process for a second reversed, mirrored,
composition of above using white
paper on a
black sheet.
• Mount both compositions on white 19x24"
groundsheet.
Goal
Compositions should be mounted either side-by-side or
stacked to form a mirror image of each
other. One positive, one negative.
Tips
• Work from the edges of page into the center.
• Look at natural forms for biomorphic shape ideas.
(trees, water, smoke etc.)
• Pay attention to craft!
Artist Reference
Franz Kline
Donald Sultan
Examples from previous semesters: YOURS will look much better than these.
Biography DUE NOW. Please get with me and we will go over your bio to refine and/or flesh it out.
SKETCHBOOK: Tuesday December 3. NO LATE SKETCHBOOKS. NO EXCEPTIONS!!! Please see notes on sketchbooks if you have questions on what you need to include on your sketchbook
Presentation_ Tuesday December 3 and Thursday December 5. Please see post on presentation outline for more information. Texture Project Due Thursday December 5
Digital Documentation of your work (photos) –Due last day of class December 5
Tuesday November 26 is the last day to turn in any late work
1. Using Google Images and the search tools, find a "large" portrait of a famous person.
2. Download the image to your machine.
3. Follow the steps below in preparing the image to be reproduced using cut paper
YOU DO NOT NEED TO DO THE PIXELATED VERSION
You will build this portrait up in layers. For many of the images, you will find that you will be building up to white. This is not always the case, but a hint at how you might go about building this.
In order to learn your name, I need your help. Please print these and bring them to class.
Please create an 8.5x11 word document/"self portrait" with your name, an image of yourself, and answer a few of the questions below.
You can use photobooth to take the photo, or use one from your phone, Facebook, Instagram, or wherever. I will use these to learn your names and what it is you are hoping to learn from this class.
NAME:
Do you have a nickname or
Alias that you would prefer I call you by?
Where you are from:
What you are majoring in:
What you hope to learn from
this class: PLEASE PRINT AND BRING THIS TO CLASS!!!!
Today we are working on our second project. I will come around and help you work out design and finalize your designs for you projects. I am also happy to help out with any other issues you might like assistance with. If you are just joining us. Please see project guidelines and lecture materials by clicking on this link: http://lwtechdesign.blogspot.com/2017/04/week-2.html
You are selecting ONE of the following Gestalt Principles: 1. Continuity 2. Similarity 3. Proximity 4. Closure Here is a refresher of the laws we reviewed in Tuesday's class.
Gestalt is a psychology term which means "unified whole". It refers to theories of visual perception developed by German psychologists in the 1920s. These theories attempt to describe how people tend to organize visual elements into groups or unified wholes when certain principles are applied. These principles are:
Similarity
Similarity occurs when objects look similar to one another. People often perceive them as a group or pattern.
The example above (containing 11 distinct objects) appears as as single unit because all of the shapes have similarity. Unity occurs because the triangular shapes at the bottom of the eagle symbol look similar to the shapes that form the sunburst.
When similarity occurs, an object can be emphasised if it is dissimilar to the others. This is called anomally.
The figure on the far right becomes a focal point because it is dissimilar to the other shapes.
Continuation Continuation occurs when the eye is compelled to move through one object and continue to another object.
Continuation occurs in the example above, because the viewer's eye will naturally follow a line or curve. The smooth flowing crossbar of the "H" leads the eye directly to the maple leaf.
Closure Closure occurs when an object is incomplete or a space is not completely enclosed. If enough of the shape is indicated, people percieve the whole by filling in the missing infomation.
Although the panda above is not complete, enough is present for the eye to complete the shape. When the viewer's perception completes a shape, closure occurs. Examples
Figure and Ground The eye differentiates an object form its surrounding area. a form, silhouette, or shape is naturrally perceived as figure (object), while the surrounding area is perceived as ground (background). Balancing figure and ground can make the perceived image more clear. Using unusual figure/ground relationships can add interest and sublety to an image.
Figure The word above is clearly perceived as figure with the surrounding white space ground.
In this image, the figure and ground relationships changeas the eye perceives the the form of a shade or the silhouette of a face.
This image uses complex figure/ground relationships which change upon perceiving leaves, water and tree trunk.
In the image above we are seeing several phenomena. The law of closure around the figure, the law of similarity in our mind's need to separate the figures into light blue and dark blue, and finally, the law of proximity allows us to see two groups (or figures) based on how close they are to each other.
Above we see the edges of the words create "CLOSURE" which signifies to us, the viewer, the shape of the light bulb.
Above, we are also seeing the law of "Closure" happening.
We can see the law of continuity applied in the image above. Because of the placement of the squares in a spiraling pattern, we visualize linear spirals towards the center of the composition.
In the image above, we are seeing the effects of two phenomena again. because of the direction of the lines, we are seeing continuity create a shape, or closure of the box shape in the center.
The Above image illustrates the gestalt principle of closure. The edges of the horizontal lines create the shape of a fish.
In the above image, we are seeing several phenomena occur. The PROXIMITY of the shapes force the viewer to group the sets of shapes. SIMILARITY also helps that process. We perceive the shapes as a tree with a grouping of leaves at the top of the image.
What principles are you seeing in the above image?
Day 2__Project_001 The Bauhaus and Art Deco
Bauhaus and Art Deco are two movements that happened in the earlier part of the twentieth century. A lot was going on in this time period. The Industrial Revolution had swept across the country causing the uprise of city centers, manufacturing, factories, steel productions, and railroads (which shipped everything everywhere creating nationwide commerce). Art had shifted too. Have a look
Art Deco or Deco, is an influential visual arts design style that first appeared in France just before World War I and began flourishing internationally in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s before its popularity waned after World War II. Deco is a very dramatic style that emphasizes geometric forms: spheres, polygons, rectangles, trapezoids, zigzags, chevrons, and sunburst motifs. Elements are often arranged in symmetrical patterns. Modern materials, such as aluminum, stainless steel, Bakelite, chrome, and plastics, are frequently used. Stained glass, inlays, and lacquer are also common. Colors tend to be vivid and high contrast
BAUHAUS The second of these two movements centered around an actual school called the Bauhaus. The Bauhaus, similar in aesthetic to the Art Deco movement is also characterized by a simplistic, modern, and slightly industrial feel. It's impact on architecture, typography, graphic design, and furniture design are still highly relevant, even today... almost 100 years later. It could be said that the mid-century modern building that we are sitting in was in many ways influence by bauhaus as well.