Title: WHAT DO YOU SEE? Let
1WHAT DO YOU SEE?Lets ANALYZE Some PAINTINGS
2- Composition VIII, 1923, Wassily Kandinsky
- Oil on canvas, 140 x 201 cm (55 1/8 x 79 1/8 in)
3- Woman I
- Willem De Kooning
- Oil on Canvas
4- Pablo Picassos
- Les Demoiselles d Avignon
5- Still Life with a Ginger Jar and Eggplants,
1890-94, Paul Cezanneoil on canvas, 28 1/2 x 36
inches (72 x 91 cm)
6Dede Eri SupriaUrban Class,1977Oil on Canvas,
200x100cm
7Cindy ShermanUntitled Film Stills
8Bayu Utomo Radjikin Lang Kacang, 1991 Mixed
media 141 x 104 x 120 cm
9The 7ELEMENTS OF DESIGN
The 7 Principles of Design
FELDMANs Approach to Reading a Painting
10The 7ELEMENTS OF DESIGN
1. Line
5. Value
3. Form
6. Texture
7. Space
4. Colour
Complex Correlation
111. LINE
- A mark with length and direction. It refers to
the continuous mark made on some surface by a
moving point.
- Tools used to create lines (materials/ approach)
- Types of lines and what they say
12LINE
- Lines can be created using various tools. Lines
can be created by drawing, painting, printing,
incising etc. - Possible Materials/Tools
- Pencil (2B, 4B, 6B, H, etc)
- Colour Pencil ( Water)
- 3. Pen ( Ink Water)
- 4. Chalk/ Oil Pastels
- 5. Paints (Watercolours/ Poster Colours, Acrylic,
Oil, etc) - 6. Brushes (Flat, Round, Big, Small, etc)
- 7. Others (Sticks, Lipsticks, Paper, Rust etc)
13LINE
- Lines can be seen in some artworks as patterns or
outline of objects. - There are various different types of line
Vertical, horizontal, diagonal, straight/ ruled,
curved, bent, angular, thin, thick/ wide,
interrupted (dotted, dashed, broken, etc.),
blurred/fuzzy, controlled, freehand, parallel,
hatching, meandering, spiraling etc. - Lines often define a space and may create an
outline/ contour, define a silhouette create
patterns/ shape/ movement and the illusion of
mass/ volume.
?
14LINE
Lines can be expressive!
- It can convey messages. Certain kinds of lines
create feelings of nervousness, weakness,
strength, dominance/ power.
Type of Line
Vertical Lines
Curvy Lines
Zigzag Lines/ Diagonal Lines
Thick Lines
Thin Lines
Description
Create sense of balance in layout
Create an appearance of rhythm, harmony and grace.
Create a sense of energy and drama
Create a feeling of strength, aggression, anger
Appears delicate and fragile
(complexity)
Vertical, Horizontal, Thick, Bold Solid lines painting in red, blue and yellow
Curvy, Fluid, Thin lines splattered across the entire canvas
Complex Description
Creates an appearance of strength, stability and balance in layout. Primary colours suggest purity and back to basics?
Suggests movement, rhythm and fragility. Create a sense of confusion?
15- Materials/ Approach
- Use of bold thick brushes
- Oil paint
- Rub, scrap off re-paint
- Paint left to drip
- Line quality
- Aggressive brushwork used to outline the shape of
the figure. - Organic black lines which appears thick or thin
based on the pressure and the attack on the
canvas. - Lines created from scraping of paint/ thin layers
of paint.
LINE
- Woman I
- Willem De Kooning, Oil on Canvas
16LINE
- Materials/ Approach
- Dripping of Paint to create an Action Painting
- Enamel paint
- Use of a stick/ fine brush
- Canvas on floor.
- Line quality
- Fluid and layers of paint dripped in a rhythmic
formation of lines. - Organic curvy lines which appears thick or thin
depending of the speed and energy exert by
Pollock. - Overlapping of black, white and grey lines.
Cathedral, Jackson Pollock, 1947
17LINE
Dede Eri Supria, Urban Class,1977Oil on
Canvas, 200x100cm
- Materials/ Approach
- Meticulous capturing of the illusion of depth,
space and form. - Carefully composed image with no visible
intention of presenting lines as lines. Rather,
the lines (if any evident) are used to define a
space, an outline, a implied form or for textural
qualities. - Line quality
- No visible lines intended. Illusion of mass/
volume created with colours, tones and use of
lines. - Objects that are linear in nature (Eg. The
vertical stilts) create a sense of balance and
perspective in the painting.
182. SHAPE
- it is an enclosed space defined and determined by
other art elements such as line, colour, value
and texture.
- Geometric and Organic Shapes
- Shapes as symbols
- Shapes that evokes feelings
19SHAPE
- Geometric and Organic Shapes
- Examples of geometric/ inorganic shapes include
- circle and oval polygon such as triangle,
square, rectangle, rhombus, trapezium, trapezoid,
pentagon etc.
- Examples of organic shapes include
- Anything that do not have a regular fixed shape.
Anything from nature.
Organic shapes are often described as amorphous
and biomorphous.
20SHAPE
?
- Simple shapes may be given contextual meanings
and hence become recognizable symbols
?
?
21SHAPE
- Shapes can evoke feelings by changing their
colours.
22- Wassily Kandinsky,
- Composition VIII, 1923,
- Oil on canvas, 140 x 201 cm
SHAPE
- Materials/ Approach
- Detailed and mathematical approach to painting.
- Appear to have used mathematical tools like
rulers, compasses etc - Shape quality
- Geometric shapes of varying sizes. (eg. Circles,
triangles, grids etc) - Gradual and mild colours used for individual
shapes to create a sense of unity/ balance in the
painting. - Patterns, Rhythm and sense of depth created with
repeated use of certain shapes.
23- Materials/ Approach
- Oil Paint on Canvas
- Carefully conceived composition and layout which
shows multiple angles and viewpoint of objects. - Shape quality
- Angular shapes combined to form the figure, an
organic form. - Nature of cubism.
- Shapes that are suggestive of fruits.
- Colours added in shapes to create illusion of form
SHAPE
- Pablo Picasso
- Les Demoiselles d Avignon
- Oil on Canvas
243. FORM
- Form also refers to an element of art that is
three-dimensional (height, width and depth) and
encloses volume. It is the total physical
characteristics of an object. - For example, a triangle, which is
two-dimensional, is a shape, but a pyramid, which
is three-dimensional, is a form. - Cubes, spheres, ovoids, pyramids, cones and
cylinders are examples of various forms.
- Organic Vs Geometric Form
254. COLOUR
- Colour is produced by light of various
wavelengths, and when light strikes an object and
reflects back to the eyes. - When the spectrum is organized as a color wheel,
the colors are divided into groups called
primary, secondary and intermediate (or tertiary)
colors analogous and complementary, and also as
warm and cool colors.
26- Colors can be objectively described as saturated,
clear, cool, warm, deep, subdued, grayed, tawny,
matt, glossy, monochrome, multicolored,
particolored, or polychromed. - Some words used to describe colors are more
subjective (subject to personal opinion or
taste), such as exciting, sweet, saccharine,
brash, garish, ugly, beautiful, cute,
fashionable, pretty, and sublime.
COLOUR
27The Colour Wheel
COLOUR
28Warm Colours Vs Cool Colours
Warm Colours Expressive Qualities
Red, Red-Orange, Yellow Produces a sense of warmth, harmony or anger.
Cool Colours Expressive Qualities
Blue, Blue-Green, Violet Produces a sense of freshness, coolness or sadness.
29SYMBOLISM and EMOTIONS
- Color conveys meanings in two primary ways -
natural associations and psychological symbolism.
- It is not mind control. The truth of the matter
is that people are comfortable when colors remind
them of similar things. Eg. a soft shade of blue
triggers associations with the sky and a
psychological sense of calm.Successful design
requires an awareness of how and why colors
communicate meaning. The source of these meanings
can be quite conspicuous, such as those found in
nature red is the color of blazing fire and
blood, blue the color of cooling waters and the
sky. Other meanings may be more complex and not
universal.
COLOUR
30- Natural AssociationsOccurrences of colors in
nature are universal and timeless. For example,
the fact that green is the color of vegetation
can be considered a universal and timeless
association.
COLOUR
31Psychological/ Cultural Associations
COLOUR
- Color may generate another level of meaning in
the mind. This symbolism arises from cultural and
contemporary contexts. As such, it is not
universal and may be unrelated to its natural
associations. - Eg, greens associations with nature communicate
growth, fruitfulness, freshness and ecology. On
the other hand, green may also be symbolic of
good luck, seasickness, money and greed all of
which have nothing to do with green plants. These
associations arise from a complex assortment of
sources.
32Psychological/ Cultural Associations
COLOUR
- Furthermore, color may have both positive and
negative symbolism. - For example, although blue is the beautiful color
of the sky on a sunny day, it can be symbolic of
sadness or stability. Idiomatic American English
reflects these traits in phrases such as singing
the blues and blue chip stocks. - Red is another example of dual symbolism. On one
hand, as the color of fire and blood, it is an
energizing, aggressive and bold color. In direct
contrast, red is used for STOP signs throughout
the world today.
33Although there are no absolutes, there are
logical sources for the range of complex and
sometimes contradictory psychological/cultural
meanings of colors. These may arise from any of
the following
COLOUR
- 1. Cultural associations the color of currency,
traditions, celebrations, geography, etc. (Eg,
green is associated with heaven (Muslims) and
luck (U.S. and Ireland)2. Political and
historical associations the color of flags,
political parties, royalty, etc. (Eg, green is
the color of Libya's flag its the favorite
color of Emperor Hirohito and the source of
"Green Day" in Japan, and in the U.S., the Green
Party.)
34- 3. Religious and mythical associations the
colors associated with spiritual or magical
beliefs (Eg, the green man was the God of
fertility in Celtic myths, a symbolism that
carries over into todays associations of Green
MM candies with sexuality in the U.S. Also, in
contemporary Western culture, green is associated
with extraterrestrial beings.)4. Linguistic
associations color terminology within individual
languages (Eg, South Pacific languages refer to
shades of green by comparison to plants in
various stages of growth. In Scottish Gaelic the
word for blue ('gorm') is also the word used for
the color of grass.5. Contemporary usage and
fads current color applications to objects,
sports, and associations generated by modern
conventions and trends. (Eg, green is used world
wide for traffic lights signifying "go." In
Scandinavia, green has been a popular color for
many decades. In the U.S., avocado green was a
popular color for appliances in the 1960s. Today,
lime green has been a hip and trendy color in
fashion and advertising in the US since the late
1990s.)
COLOUR
- http//www.colormatters.com/brain.html
35The bride in this Renaissance masterpiece wears
green as a symbol of her fertility. She is
slouching in imitation of pregnancy, thus
indicating her willingness to bear children.
365. VALUE (TONE)
- Value refers to the lightness or darkness of a
colour. This is important in any polychromatic
image, but it can be more apparent when an image
is monochromatic, as in many drawings, woodcuts,
lithographs and photographs. This is commonly the
case in much sculptures and architecture too.
- Changes in value, whether sudden or gradual, can
add greatly to the visual impact of art forms.
Changes in value can also be used to help the
artist express an idea.
37VALUE (TONE)
A value scale employing a smoothly nuanced
gradation of values.
A value scale or gray scale in eight stepped
grades of values.
And another stepped scale produced by hatching
and cross-hatching.
38- Below another value scale or gray scale in
which stepped grades of values are labeled for
their percentages of black, and values used to
give planar shapes greater solidity and depth.
VALUE (TONE)
39- A full range of values can also be produced by a
variety of other means. These include hatching
and stipple techniques, as well as with textures
and patterns of other sorts. - The following illustration shows colors of
various values. Value changes from pure hues are
called shades and tints. On the right, pure hues
are marked by dots. Notice how their values
their positions beside the gray scale are
varied.
VALUE (TONE)
406. TEXTURE
- Texture is the surface quality or "feel" of an
object, its smoothness, roughness, softness, etc. - Textures may be actual or simulated. Actual
textures can be felt with the fingers, while
simulated textures are suggested by an artist in
the painting of different areas of a picture
often in representing drapery, metals, rocks,
hair, etc.
Samuel van Hoogstraten (Dutch, 1627-1678),
Trompe-l'oeil, 1664, oil on canvas, 45.5 x 57.5
cm,
Woman I, Willem De Kooning Oil on Canvas
41Examples of textures
Words describing textures include flat, smooth
(third row, right), shiny, glossy, glittery,
velvety, feathery, soft, wet, gooey, furry,
sandy, leathery (second row, right), crackled
(upper left), prickly, abrasive, rough (first
row, right), furry, bumpy, corrugated (second
row, left), puffy (second row, third), rusty
(third row, second), slimey (third row, third).
TEXTURE
427. SPACE
- An element of art that refers to the distance or
area between, around, above, below, or within
things. It can be described as two-dimensional or
three-dimensional as flat, shallow, or deep as
open or closed as positive or negative and as
actual, ambiguous, or illusory.
43two-dimensional space Illusion of Depth flat,
shallow, or deep
Workers in a Canteen by Chua Mia Tee
SPACE
Les Demoiselles d Avignon by Pablo Picasso
Cathedral, Jackson Pollock, 1947
44- Space is implied when perspective is used. Other
methods used to suggest space include overlapping
objects, scaling and shading.
SPACE
- perspective - The technique artists use to
project an illusion of the three-dimensional
world onto a two-dimensional surface. Perspective
helps to create a sense of depth of receding
space. - Fundamental techniques used to achieve
perspective are controlling variation between
sizes of depicted subjects, overlapping some of
them, and placing those that are on the depicted
ground as lower when nearer and higher when
deeper. In addition, there are three major types
of perspective aerial perspective, atmospheric
perspective and linear perspective.
http//studiochalkboard.evansville.edu/draw.html
45Three-dimensional space
SPACE
A Thousand Years by Damien Hirst
Temple of the Mind by Montien Boonma
In Bed by Ron Mueck
46- In these images, negative spaces have been shaped
and placed among positive spaces so that a viewer
can make closure on a triangle, a square, and a
cube.
SPACE
47The 7ELEMENTS OF DESIGN
When Analyzing Works Objectively..
The 7 PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN
FELDMANs Approach to Reading a Painting