1 / 12

Principles of Design & Composition 10/8/2012

Principles of Design & Composition 10/8/2012. You Need: Principles of Design Worksheet Pen or pencil. Put your name on your worksheet: Flip it over and “scribble scrabble” random lines all over the back side. Flip it back to the front

braima
Télécharger la présentation

Principles of Design & Composition 10/8/2012

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. Principles of Design& Composition10/8/2012 • You Need: • Principles of Design Worksheet • Pen or pencil

  2. Put your name on your worksheet: • Flip it over and “scribble scrabble” random lines all over the back side. • Flip it back to the front • Follow along with the brief description of each Principle. Add your own notes to help you remember.

  3. Balance • Feeling of visual stability • Asymmetrical: uneven on both sides • Symmetrical: even on both sides • Radial: symmetrical around a center point

  4. Pattern Repeated elements to create a design or surface texture The green star is the center of a design that is repeated exactly, many times across the page.

  5. Emphasis A focal point or most important idea in an artwork This watercolor painting emphasizes the peacock feather colors & shapes by making them the largest & most central part of the artwork.

  6. Contrast Strong differences between elements like color, shape, size & texture that creates visual interest The dull underwater colors make the bright colors of the umbrella, girl’s clothes even more noticeable. Sizes of the fish, girl and ocean itself are also very different.

  7. Rhythm Repeated elements in a variety of ways Text (pieces of words) are scattered throughout this painting. The green & blue colors are also repeated in different sizes and varieties in many places.

  8. Movement Directs the eye through an artwork The ribbons the woman holds literally move our view from the front of the picture to where she is standing. This creates a “swoop” effect that gives the feeling of wind.

  9. Unity A feeling of completeness in an artwork. The similar shapes and colors of the foxes create rhythm. The shapes of the foxes and where their faces point, lead our eye around the painting. The simple background color creates emphasis (focus) as well as contrast in color.

  10. Composition: The organization of the elements in an artwork The photographer “framed” a scene with a door. The door frame breaks the scene into small & large shapes (contrast, pattern) and eventually helps to lead our eye back to the human figure in the distance (movement). What other elements & principles do you notice in this photograph?

  11. Use your View Finder • Flip your worksheet to the back side again. • Try to “frame up” 1 or 2 mini-compositions & trace around them with your View Finder. • What small part of your scribble scrabble can be considered “organized?” • Think about MOVEMENT, EMPHASIS, BALANCE & CONTRAST….

  12. Now • Visit each artwork posted around the room. • Choose 1 artwork that BEST shows each Principle of Design. (write the number in the space provided) • Write WHY you chose that artwork for each principle. • Example: “This artwork uses Contrast because there is a very large, white house next to a very small, black tree.” • Zero points for: “I don’t know (IDK)” or incomplete sentences.

More Related