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Composition

Composition. Where composition lives…. In literature In music In dance In visual art. Composition is a collection of individual parts to create a unified whole. Robert Wilson/Philip Glass ’ Einstein on the Beach 1975. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmX_GgozpQs.

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Composition

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  1. Composition

  2. Where composition lives… • In literature • In music • In dance • In visual art

  3. Composition is a collection of individual partsto create a unified whole

  4. Robert Wilson/Philip Glass’Einstein on the Beach 1975 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmX_GgozpQs

  5. Composition in Visual Art …is made up of Variety(individual parts) & Unity (unification of those different parts)

  6. Vija Celmins’ Ocean Series, Graphite Drawing http://c4gallery.com/artist/database/vija-celmins/vija-celmins.html http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/vija-celmins

  7. “Excessive unity can be monotonous, while excessive variety can be chaotic”–Mary Stewart We are looking for a delicate, yet charged balance between the two.

  8. Michael Burmeister’s Spiderman Series, oil on canvas, 2008

  9. Sol Lewitt’s Wall Drawing #65, National Gallery of Art, DC “Lines not short, not straight, crossing & touching, drawn at random using four colors, uniformly dispersed with maximum density, covering entire surface of the wall.”1971: 1st installation

  10. Jackson Pollock’s #1, house paint on canvas, 1948

  11. Gestalt Theorypsychology that visual information is identified all-at-once, before it is examined by individual parts. • Grouping • Containment • Repetition • Proximity • Continuity • Closure

  12. Grouping Visually similar elements grouped together by location, orientation, shape, color

  13. Michael Burmeister –Spiderman series 2007-2009

  14. Marc Chagall’s Binding of Isaac – The Akiba

  15. Containment A type of border or boundary surrounding parts of whole composition

  16. Wassily Kandinsky’s Circle in a Circle 1923

  17. Proximity The distance between forms: the more space creates isolation, the less space creates tension. Some forms can be so close together, they merge or fuse, resulting in shared edges.

  18. Kazimir Malevich’s Suprematist Painting: Eight Red Rectangles, oil on canvas, 31.5 x 24.4”, 1915

  19. Michelangelo’s Excerpt: Creation of Adam Sistine Chapel, Fresco painting, Rome, Italy 1475

  20. close-up

  21. in context…

  22. Repetition and “The Grid” Same visual unit repeats itself over & over again…Creates a motif

  23. Piet Mondrian’s Broadway Boogie Woogie, oil painting on canvas, 1944

  24. Wassily Kandinsky’s Trente, steriograph, 1937

  25. Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s Soup, screen print, 1962

  26. Continuity Fluid connection from one component into another, suggesting movement or visual pathways.

  27. Van Goghs’ Self Portrait, oil on pasteboard, 1887

  28. Frank Stellas’ Agbatana III., acrylic on canvas, 1968

  29. Closure Our mind fills in the blank, closes the gap, completes the information an artist leaves out—invites viewer participation.

  30. Jim Dine’s Untitled (C Clamp) from Untitled Tool Series. Graphite, charcoal, and crayon on paper, 25 5/8 x 19 3/4"1973

  31. All examples of Gestalt . . .

  32. The Rama Setu to Lanka being built by Monkeys and Bears Kangra, Himachal Pradesh, India 1850

  33. In-Class Exercises Exploring new terrain: discovering a variety of Textures, inventing new Marks, and unifying those textures • Revisit Name: create All-Over GESTALT 2)Go on a hunt. Explore our room, the hallway & outdoors, identifying & collecting 20 different textures. Are you viewing it from the micro level or macro? Invent a new MARK for each new TEXTURE. Media: artist pen/markers/ink pen & pencil in sketchbook.

  34. 3) On a scratch piece of paper, delineate 12 spaces (diagonal, vertical, horizontal, spiral, circular etc.). This will be the UNITY part of your composition: organizing your textural motifs in a Repetitive GRID-like system. 4) Choose 12 different TEXTURES and assign them to their own space. Set your textures in motion, moving them across their space allowing them to repeat and grow, creating a PATTERN of evolving marks. This is a visual unit that REPEATS itself—aka MOTIF

  35. 5) Create one value scale inside your sketchbook: 2” tall and 9” wide. Each value should be 1”wide X 2”tall. Make a smooth transition from light to dark, excluding pure white and black. *Tip: use any texture you’ve collected or use simple straight lines, overlapped with straight lines to create varying degrees of darkness. Media: Artist Pen / Marker / Ink INTRODUCTION TO: Project #2: Textural Signature

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