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Before you sit down…  Get your binder  Also get red, blue, yellow, green, purple, and orange crayons or coloring pencils (you may need to share)

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Presentation on theme: "Before you sit down…  Get your binder  Also get red, blue, yellow, green, purple, and orange crayons or coloring pencils (you may need to share)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Before you sit down…  Get your binder  Also get red, blue, yellow, green, purple, and orange crayons or coloring pencils (you may need to share)

2 ELEMENTS OF ART

3 Line  An element of art that is the path of a moving point through space.

4 What types of lines do you see? What do the lines do? Van Gogh – Thatched Cottage in Cordeville

5 Describe the lines in this work. How are they different from the lines Van Gogh used? Piet Mondrian – Kompositsioon A

6 Shape  A defined two dimensional area. Has height and width. May be geometric or free form.

7 Shape is used in this work to make a striking statement. How do you think people reacted to this sort of art when it was new? Ellsworth Kelly – White Black

8 Describe how shape is used in the work of art. Georgia O’Keefe -

9 Form  An object with three dimensions. Has height, width, and depth. May be geometric or free form.

10 What kind of form would you describe this as? Geometrical or free form? Richard Sweeney – Paper Sculpture

11 This sculpture uses a mixture of both Geometrical and Free Forms. Why do you think the artist gave it this title? Richard Deacon – Between Fiction and Fact

12 Texture  The element of art that refers to how things feel, or look as if they might feel if touched. Objects can have rough or smooth textures and matte or shiny surfaces. RoughSmoothMatteShiny

13 What do you think this painting would look like in person? Anselm Kiefer – The Unknown Painter

14 Space  The elements of arts that refers to the emptiness or area between, around, above, below, or within objects. Shapes and forms are defined by space around and within them.

15 Value  The element of art that describes the darkness or lightness of an object.

16 What do you notice about the value of the light in this painting? Does it help set the mood or the work? Francisco de Goya – Saturn Devouring his Son

17 Color  An element of art that is derived from reflected light. The sensation of color is aroused in the brain by response of the eyes to different wavelengths of light.

18 Color Terms  Primary – Red, Yellow, Blue  Secondary – Orange, Green, Purple (Violet)  Intermediate (Tertiary) – Mixed colors of Primary and Secondary  Intensity – Hue is full intensity  Hue – Pure color  Shade – Pure + Black - Duller  Tint – Pure + White - Brighter

19 Primary

20 Secondary

21 Tertiary/Intermediate

22

23 Color Harmony  Use of Analogous or complementary colors  Analogous – Next to each other on the wheel  Complementary /Contrasting– Across the wheel

24 Analogous  Colors next to each other on the wheel

25 Complementary  Across the color wheel

26 Triadic  Triadic colors are high-energy colors that are found by choosing three colors that are separated by 120 degrees on the color wheel. The primary (red, blue, and yellow) and secondary (purple, orange, green) colors are examples of triadic colors

27 How would you describe the color in this print? Andy Warhol – Shot Orange Marilyn

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29 Look at the painting to the right (The Old Guitarist by Pablo Picasso). Think about what you see and make some notes about subject/object, use of color, the mood/meaning, and your judgment of the work. As a class we’ll discuss it using the steps of art criticism. Art Criticism


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