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Welcome

Welcome. Thank you for using this pre-visit resource. We believe this will help strengthen student learning leading up to and during your gallery visit.

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Welcome

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  1. Welcome Thank you for using this pre-visit resource. We believe this will help strengthen student learning leading up to and during your gallery visit. Due to the different versions of PowerPoint schools may use, please check for, and correct any formatting issues before you use this presentation with your students. Please check by viewing in slide show format before making any necessary changes. If you have any questions please don’t hesitate to contact me. Learning Experiences Outside the Classrom Te Tuhi Centre for the Arts Phone: (09) 577 0138 ext 7703 jeremy@tetuhi.org.nz Jeremy Leatinu’u Education Coordinator

  2. Drawing outside the line Te Tuhi pre-visit lesson 1 Image: http://www.first-stop.org/2011/04/22/city-skyline/ http://kimberlykorea.blogspot.co.nz/2011/01/art-class-in-ulsan-drawing-with-wire.html

  3. Welcome to drawing outside the line During the next few lessons we will be exploring… • Drawing as we know it • New ways of drawing • Drawing Identity Image: http://mystamps.bizland.com/stwire.htm

  4. Lets start this lesson by exploring “Drawing as we know it”. Image: http://cooktownart.com.au/faye_pini.html

  5. What is drawing? And where did it come from?

  6. What is drawing? Drawing is a way to make visual art. To create a drawing you only need to make a mark on a surface. Cave drawings and paintings are thought to be the earliest forms of drawing but no one really knows exactly when the first drawing was made. Image: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petroglyph

  7. Why draw? Drawing is a way to visually reflect and capture the world around us. This may include people, animals, landscape and sea, anything the person drawing would like to capture and remember. Drawings like these cave drawings help show what the world may have looked like many years ago. Image: http://cris-a.hubpages.com/hub/in-the-beginning-part-four---art-history-from-cave-paintings-to-giotto http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=102043

  8. 15th Century Linear perspective 1998-99 Charcoal, pastel, pencil on paper 1897 Pencil and paper New ways of drawing started to arise. Over time drawing began to change, even the materials people were using to draw were different. 1512 red chalk on paper 1940 comic drawing 2008 computer drawing 15000-17000 B.P Cave paintings/drawings Image: http://theangelswearfins.blogspot.co.nz/2010/09/lascaux-cave-walls-prehistoric-drawings.html http://drawsketch.about.com/od/perspectivetechdrawing/tp/perspectiveindex.htm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Leonardo_da_Vinci_-_Self-Portrait_-_WGA12798.jpg http://writinginstruments.blogspot.co.nz/2009/12/toulouse-lautrec-dog-drawing-in-pencil.html http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/964/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drawing http://www.mde-art.com/art-blog/digital-drawings-and-art-time-lapse-animations-abstract-portraits-and-faces/

  9. But how small or big can a drawing be? They all have marks that curve, connect and line up to create a drawing. So far we know all of these art works are drawings.

  10. Here are just a few large scale drawings… Artists from around the world have moved from creating drawings on paper to drawings the size of walls. This talented artist, who is also autistic, created this cityscape of New York all from memory. This artist made their kitchen more lively by drawing a cityscape in felt on the kitchen walls and cupboards. Image http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1223790/Autistic-artist-draws-18ft-picture-New-York-skyline-memory.html http://www.homedit.com/artistic-creative-kitchen-wall-decor/

  11. Artist So LeWitt uses black paint to create thick lines that stand out from the large white wall. Artist Yosuke Goda creates intricate drawings in Felt that wrap around, under and on top of us. Artists still draw on paper, but as seen in this picture they are much bigger and create quite an impact. Image: http://thesmartestfish.blogspot.co.nz/2011/05/more-big-drawings.html http://www.field.io/process/research/art/sol-lewitt http://weburbanist.com/2011/06/08/rooms-for-art-wall-to-wall-floor-to-ceiling-drawings/?ref=search&utm_campaign=googimages&utm_source=images&utm_medium=other

  12. What about small drawings? How small can they get? Let’s use this pen to measure and see how small this picture actually is… But how small is this drawing? This drawing was made on a matchbox and is even smaller than the last drawing we saw, measuring at 5.2cm high by 3.8cm wide! Here is a landscape colour pencil drawing. You can see the artist has gone to much effort to show detail in the buildings and a range of colour in the trees. The artist has used light and dark shades to show detail in the drawing. This drawing is only 6cm high and 9cm wide! Smaller than the black pen Here is a pencil drawing on a piece of card. But how small is it? Image: http://www.agott.com/LTS/micro.html http://www.theofficedealer.com/BICVSG11BK-BIC-VSG11BK-Atlantis-Stick-Ballpoint-Pen.html http://bradney.com/mini.html http://www.behance.net/gallery/Miniature-drawings/4229557 http://www.fusegallerynyc.com/08daquino/Bukowski350004.html

  13. The artist has used very few colours in their drawing and minimal shading, make the drawing appear very flat with little depth. This graphite pen drawing with all its detail is only 2.6cm high by 3.6cm wide! But how small is this drawing? But how big is this drawing? This ink drawing is a tiny 2.5cm high and 2.5cm wide! It is the smallest drawing out of all the small drawings we have seen. The artist has given a gloomy look with most of the drawing covered in dark shades and tones and few areas with light. Here is a portrait drawing made from ink on paper. Here is a landscape drawing made with graphite pen on board. Image: http://www.agott.com/LTS/micro.html http://bradney.com/mini.html http://www.behance.net/gallery/Miniature-drawings/4229557 http://www.fusegallerynyc.com/08daquino/Bukowski350004.html http://www.dreamstime.com/royalty-free-stock-image-finger-touching-image12420126

  14. As we have seen, drawing has been around for a very long time… Let’s recap on what we have learnt so far…

  15. What have we learnt so far? Drawing… • can be simply making a mark on a surface. • helps capture our thoughts and the • world around us. • has been around for centuries, from cave • drawings through to computer drawings • can be made differently and be of different • sizes. From stamp size to room size

  16. In the next lesson we will explore “New ways of drawing”. End of lesson

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