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TEXTURE

TEXTURE. Texture. Texture refers to the surface quality or "feel" of an object - smooth, rough, soft, etc. Textures may be actual (felt with touch - tactile) or implied (suggested by the way an artist has created the work of art -visual). Actual Texture.

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TEXTURE

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  1. TEXTURE

  2. Texture Texture refers to the surface quality or "feel" of an object - smooth, rough, soft, etc. Textures may be actual (felt with touch - tactile) or implied (suggested by the way an artist has created the work of art -visual).

  3. Actual Texture • Texture is the tactile quality of a surface or the representation of that surface. If it is the way something feels when you touch it, it is called real texture. • In art, real texture will be more likely seen in sculpture, but painters can also create real texture with thick paint

  4. Real Texture - Painting

  5. Real TextureOBJECTby Meret Oppenheim

  6. Simulated or Implied texture Texture is what your eyes tell you about how things in the drawing would feel if you could touch them, called simulated texture. Photography is very good at translating real texture into implied or simulated texture, but painters and draftsmen can also learn to recreate the visual appearance of textures in very convincing ways.

  7. Trompe l’oeil • VISUAL TEXTURE is the illusion of texture. • trompe l'oeil is a method of art that is intended to create a realistic illusion of texture and depth in a work of art. The term means "fool the eye" in French.

  8. Simulated or Implied Texture

  9. Examples of students creating their own textures.

  10. Sometimes, visual textures can be small icons of natural forms, or a mini-composition of lines and shapes that contrast each other. In these two groups you will see textures suggested by food, animals, medallions, geometry, games or weather and many that are just simple line designs.

  11. Artists who Use Texture

  12. George Seurat (1859-1891) • French Post-Impressionist painter. • He did a lot of optical mixing as well… relying on the viewer’s eye to see different colors through his use of POINTILISM (aka painting using dots/stippling) • Most paintings are of common scenes in France

  13. Anselm Kiefer (1945-____) • A German Neo-Expressionist painter and sculptor whose work often reacts to modern day issues • He often incorporates clay, straw, ash, lead, and collage into his paintings to add texture. • His art resembles the past yet a futuristic post-apocalyptic landscape.

  14. Jessica Drenk (1976-____) • A contemporary young American sculptor. • All of her sculptures emphasize form and texture. She works in all types of materials, including pencils. Her sculptures can be hard and sharp or soft and delicate. There’s a huge range.

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