1 / 35

ELEMENTS OF ART ADVANCED ART

ELEMENTS OF ART ADVANCED ART. What are the elements of art?. L ittle S ally F rom C arrollton V omits T omato S oup. Little = Line Sally = Shape From = Form Carrollton = Color Vomits = Value Tomato = Texture Soup = Space. So how do we remember the elements?. L INE

Télécharger la présentation

ELEMENTS OF ART ADVANCED ART

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ELEMENTS OF ART ADVANCED ART

  2. What are the elements of art?

  3. Little Sally From Carrollton Vomits Tomato Soup

  4. Little = Line Sally = Shape From = Form Carrollton = Color Vomits = Value Tomato = Texture Soup = Space

  5. So how do we remember the elements?

  6. LINE Continuous mark made on some surface by a moving point. It may be two dimensional, like a pencil mark on a paper. The path a dot makes traveling through space. Types of lines: 1. vertical 2. horizontal 3. diagonal 4. curved 5. zig-zag

  7. LINE - VERTICAL

  8. LINE - HORIZONTAL

  9. LINE - DIAGONAL Mark Pease

  10. LINE - CURVED Alex Rubio

  11. LINE – ZIG-ZAG

  12. ACTUAL AND IMPLIED LINES

  13. D-FACE Tristan Rennie, Kevin Burke, Ozzie Ausband, Dave Ruel, and Steve Alba.

  14. Shape • A shape always has two dimensions, length as well as width. • Types of shape: • 2D • Organic • Geometric

  15. Shape – 2D - Organic Sandra Howard

  16. Shape – 2D - Geometric Metatron’s Cube

  17. FORM • A form always has three dimensions; length, width and depth. • 3D • Organic • Geometric

  18. FORM – 3D - Organic Jessica Rosenkrantz Philip Starck

  19. FORM – 3D - Geometric Gerrit Rietveld

  20. COLOR • Is an element of art with three properties • Hue, the name of the color, e.g. red, yellow, etc. • Intensity or  the purity and strength of the color such as bright ness or dullness. • Value, or the lightness or darkness of the color. • Types of color: • Primary • Secondary • Intermediate • Complementary • Analogous • Monochromatic • Tint/Shade

  21. Color – Primary

  22. Color – Secondary They are made by mixing two primary colors together.

  23. Color – Intermediate They are made by mixing a primary and a secondary color together.

  24. Color – Complementary Colors directly across from each other.

  25. Color – Analogous palette of compatible color combinations that blend well together. They are neighbors on the color wheel.

  26. Color – Monochromatic Monochromatic colors are all the colors (tints, tones and shades) of a single hue. Robert McKay

  27. Color – Tint/Shade Tint is the mixture of a color with white, which increases lightness. Shade is the mixture of a color with black, which reduces lightness.

  28. VALUE • Value is the range from white to black or light to dark. • Types of value: • High value is on the light end of the scale and suggests tinting. • Low value is on the dark end of the scale and suggests toning.

  29. VALUE – High value Low value Chuck Close

  30. Texture • Types of texture: • Tactile • Visual (implied)

  31. TEXTURE - Tactile

  32. TEXTURE – Visual (Implied) Lucian Freud

  33. SPACE • Types of texture: • Positive • Negative

  34. SPACE

More Related