1 / 43

INTRODUCTION: REVIEW

INTRODUCTION: REVIEW. What is Art? . Form of expression with aesthetic Organize perception A work of art is the visual expression of an idea or experience created with skill Is communication – it is a language that artists use to express everyday words can not express. Perceive:.

gracef
Télécharger la présentation

INTRODUCTION: REVIEW

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. INTRODUCTION: REVIEW

  2. What is Art? • Form of expression with aesthetic • Organize perception • A work of art is the visual expression of an idea or experience created with skill • Is communication – it is a language that artists use to express everyday words can not express

  3. Perceive: • Is to become deeply aware through the senses of the special nature of a visual object. • You train your eye to perceive

  4. Purposes of Art • Personal Function • Social Function • Spiritual Function • Physical Function • Educational Function

  5. Personal Function • Artists create art to express personal feelings

  6. Social Function • Artists may produce art to reinforce and enhance the shared sense of identity of those in a family, community or civilization

  7. Spiritual Function • Artists may produce art to express spiritual beliefs about destiny of life controlled by the force of a higher power

  8. Physical Function • Artists and craftspeople constantly invent new ways to create functional art

  9. Educational Function • Artist produce artworks, such as symbols, painted signs, to impart information.

  10. Where Do Artists get Ideas? • Outward to their natural and cultural environment • Inward within themselves for creative motivation • Nature • People & World Events • Myths & Legends • Spiritual & Religious Beliefs • Creative Techniques • Artists of the Past • Ideas Commissioned by Employers

  11. Aesthetics • The values that allow you to judge art as satisfying • The philosophy or study of the nature of beauty and art • Sensitivity to beauty in the eye of the beholder

  12. Art Criticism • An organized system for studying a work of art

  13. Criteria • Standards of judgment

  14. A Four Step System • Description • Analysis • Interpretation • Judgment

  15. Description • What do you see? • Just the facts no opinions

  16. Analysis • How is the work organized? • The elements and principles

  17. Interpretation • What is the artist saying? • You explain the mood or meaning of the work. • Your interpretation is determined by the first two steps.

  18. Judgment • Is this work successful? • You use the aesthetic theories and qualities of art.

  19. Aesthetic Theories & Qualities of Art • Literal Qualities / Imitationalism • Design Qualities / Formalism • Expressive Qualities / Emotionalism

  20. Literal Qualities / Imitationalism • Are the realistic qualities that appear in the subject of work. • It has to look life like to be considered successful • Focus on realistic presentation

  21. Design Qualities / Formalism • Places the emphasis on the design • The arrangement of the elements of art using the principles of design

  22. Expressive Qualities / Emotionalism • Is concerned with the content • It requires the work to have a strong communication of feelings, moods or ideas from the work to the viewer

  23. Forms of Expression • Realism • Representational • Abstract • Non-Objective (Non-Representational)

  24. Realism • Represents the external world in an objective factual manner • This art deals with a subject matter

  25. Representational • To reproduce recognizable subject manner with a slight distortion due to personal interpretation and style • This art form deals with a subject matter

  26. Abstract • Imagery that simplifies, distorts or exaggerates the concept with personal interpretation and style. • Technique overrides the representation • This art form deals with a subject matter

  27. Non-Objective (Non-Representational) • Not intending to represent actual objects or elements of nature. • Does not deal with a subject matter

  28. Types of Art • Visual Arts • Performing Arts:

  29. Visual Arts • Permanent • Audience primarily uses sight • Fine Art • Deals with process • Motivation is self, enjoyed for owns sake • Commercial Art • Deals with product • Motivation is client needs, commerce relationship and/or trade

  30. Performing Arts • The human body is the medium • Occupies space and time within a moment • Audience uses sight and hearing • Process- rehearsal • Product- performance/show:never exactly the same • Fine Art • Commercial Art

  31. The Basic Properties of Art • Subject • Composition • Content

  32. Subject • The image viewers can easily identify in a work of art

  33. Composition • The way the principles of art are used to organize the elements of art

  34. Content • The message the work is trying to communicate

  35. Credit Line • Is a list of important facts about the work of art • Most credit lines contain at least six facts • Name of Artist • Title of Work, This always appears in italics • Year the work was created • Medium • Size • Location of ownership

  36. Art Basics • Materials • Tools • Medium

  37. Materials • The object used as the base of the creation of art

  38. Medium • Method of Expression • The material that is manipulated to create the image • Paint • Pastel • Charcoal

  39. Tool • The object that manipulates the medium to apply it to the material

  40. Symbol • Something that stands or represents for something else

  41. The Elements of Art • The basic visual symbols in the language of art • Line • Shape • Form • Space • Color • Value • Texture

  42. Principles of Design • The rules that govern how the artists organize the elements of art • Proportion • Balance • Unity • Variety • Rhythm • Emphasis

  43. Harmony • When all the Principles of Design are working together

More Related