Site Last Updated: May 6, 2005

A r t  121 Design 1 - 2D

ART FUNDAMENTALS

 

 

 

Course Syllabus & Study Guide

The University of South Dakota

Art Department

 

 

Professor Dennis Navrat

Spring Semester 2005

Classroom Pictures and Student Artwork

ART FUNDAMENTALS                     ART 121 - DESIGN I - BASIC (2D)

                                                                  

SYLLABUS / STUDY GUIDE

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

PAGES

SYLLABUS

3-35

COURSE DESCRIPTION

3

PURPOSE / SCOPE

4

GOALS AND OBJECTIVES  

5

TEXT

5

SEQUENCE

7

STUDENT ACTIVITIES

7

REQUIREMENTS

7

MEASURES OF ACHIEVEMENT

7

RE-DOING PROJECTS

8

ATTENDANCE POLICY

8

INSTRUCTOR INITIATED DROPS

8

INCOMPLETES

9

MATERIALS FEE

9

TEACHING PHILOSOPHY

9

MATERIALS / SUPPLY LIST

10

SAFETY AND HAZARDS INSTRUCTION

11

CLASS MEETING SCHEDULE - A detailed description of each class session

  12

COURSE CONTENT / STUDY GUIDE

  35

INTRODUCTION TO ART FUNDAMENTALS: 4 LANGUAGES

   36

THE FUNDAMENTALS-YOU-NEED-TO-KNOW-TO-MAKE-ART DIAGRAM

 40

GLOSSARY OF TERMS RELATING TO FORM

41

ASPECTS OF FORM and COMPOSITIONAL STRUCTURES

  42
          DesignSTRUCTURE  

49

 

PERSONAL UNDERSTANDING

81
          COMPOSITION AND DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS

 

82

FINE ART, APPLIED ART AND THE AVANT-GARDE

83

EVALUATING VISUAL ART

87

CRITICISM AND DISCUSSION

89

ANALYTIC METHOD

  90

HISTORY WORKSHEET

93

COMPONENTS OF VISUAL ART

94

SELF-EVALUATION

 95

GLOSSARY

 96
          RECOMMENDED READING 117

FINAL EXAM

119

PERSPECTIVE DRAWING

120

MATTING INSTRUCTIONS

121
         MIDTERM STUDENT SURVEYS

 

122
         "QUIZ"-FIRST DAY STUDENT INFO 123


SYLLABUS

The University of South Dakota

Course: D E S I G N I - B A S I C (2D)

Number: ART 121 3 semester hours credit

Offered: Spring Semester 2005

 Instructor:
Dennis Navrat Section U015 Course Prefix: -U015; MW 9:00am-11:50am; CFA 208
Professor of Art Office CFA 208A Telephone: 677-5732; Email: dnavrat@usd.edu
Office Hours: MTW 1:15pm-2:00pm, or by appointment
Dennis Navrat Section U025

Course Prefix: -U025; MW 2:00pm-4:50pm; CFA 208


COURSE DESCRIPTION / CATALOG DESCRIPTION

ART 121 DESIGN 1-2D ART FUNDAMENTALS  3 Semester Credits

This course emphasizes the organization of visual elements and principles while exploring creative thought
processes.  As an introduction to art materials, techniques, and processes, it is a study of two-dimensional
design and composition.

 

COURSE PREREQUISITES

None.  No previous art course experience necessary.  Beginning computer skills required.

ADDITIONAL COURSE DESCRIPTION - PURPOSE

Design 121 serves as a CORE course for General Education students, Elementary Education majors, and Art
majors.  Personal realization is stressed through the IDEA program theme of the College of Fine Arts - Arts and
Identity.

A study of ART has many purposes, among them are these:

1. ART AS A GROWTH PROCESS. In its simplest form, visual art is a natural process of movement and intuitive
thought that develops eye and hand coordination, motor skills, and contributes to a sense of well-being.

2. ART AS DISCOVERY. Art is a means to discover an inner world of emotion, insights, imagination and fantasy,
and an outer world of real people, animals, plants, places, experiences, things, and everything interesting and
curious. Art develops, fosters, and integrates Intuition (right-brain functions) with Intellect (left-brain functions).
Intuition and intellect are parallel pathways that equally lead to Knowledge.

3. ART AS A RECORD OF EXPERIENCE. All Art, past and present, records human experience in tangible forms
in order to express religious values, to immortalize, and to stimulate the intellect and fire the emotions. We have
knowledge of past civilizations because of their Art forms. We have records of the ideas, imagination, and values
of each civilization because of the Art they practiced with care.

4. ART AS CRITICAL THINKING. Developing artistic skills contributes to an awareness of Life and Nature as a
consequence of Experience, often as "a problem to be solved." Art may express social and cultural chaos, protest
injustice and raise social consciousness. The significant result of Art, beyond the Processes of Art and the
Products of Art, is a subjective/objective learning process that is forever internalized as Truth.

5. ART AS A CELEBRATION. Art often celebrates spirituality and expresses the joy, wonder, and mystery of Life
and the beauty of all things and ideas. When we affirm Life beyond ourselves, we make meaningful art of value to
others.

6. ART AS A LOVE OF NATURE. Order, Harmony, and Beauty are consequences of our best experiences in Life
and in Nature. The changing Seasons are symbolic of the processes of Life: fertilization, birth, growth, maturity,
aging, death, and rebirth. Making Art reconnects us with Nature. Not only is it natural to love Nature, it is an
essential human need which contributes to mental, physical, and emotional health. We nurture ourselves when we
nurture all species on Earth, and as we record natural peculiarities through Art.

7. ART AS A TESTIMONY. When we express our joys and sorrows through Art, we show in time and space how
we process the immensity of the world. When we communicate to others the meaning of our personal world, we
more fully recognize who we are. When we recognize our selves, we recognize our interdependence with others.
When we recognize the interdependence of all forms of Life, we are in touch with all of the Earth, with all of
Humanity, and with all of Eternity.

8. ART AS DECORATION. When artistic skill is used to adorn and embellish objects, articles, and images, such
decorative art elevates the commonplace to the extraordinary, thus making the commonplace more precious.

9. ART AS A GIFT. When we make art to give to those we love, we hope and trust in their love and devotion in
return. In this way, Art is a respectful gift of our self, motivated by love and the intensity of our feelings for others.

10. ART AS FUN. When an art activity stimulates the senses, it meets personal needs and promotes a feeling of
well being simply because of the activity itself. Art is fun, pleasurable, wholesome, and meaningful.

Design I introduces students to the fundamentals of visual art. Both Art and Design constitute the focus of this
course. By studying and applying the dynamics of visual form (the elements and principles of design), by
studying forms of expression, and by applying the design process for problem-solving purposes, the student is
guided toward an understanding of Art based upon alert, sensitive, visual perception. The course provides a basis
of understanding prerequisite to further study of specialized artistic processes of composition and expression
such as painting, printmaking, sculpture, graphic design, and architecture.


DESCRIPTION of INSTRUCTIONAL METHODS and STUDENT ACTIVITIES

This lecture/studio course approaches the fundamentals of art by providing information and a vocabulary of art
terminology, by analysis of exemplary forms of art, by involvement in the processes of art (activity), and by
considered evaluations. In the beginning, emphasis is placed on art terms, art elements and principles of
organization, supplemented by exploratory and sustained exercises in drawing, painting, collage, photomontage
and printmaking. Understanding of the nature of perception and of acute vision (seeing vs. looking) is stressed.
As terms are understood and as skills are developed through sequential practice, a shift in emphasis occurs to
emphasize the components of art, the expression of ideas, and evaluation of creative effort.

The course explores the nature of art and design by way of visual perception and analysis, historical/contemporary
examples, interdisciplinary theories, media exercises that illustrate art fundamentals, and practice solving design
problems.

Students should expect lectures, videos, slide presentations, demonstrations, discussions, required reading,
environmental research, assignments and deadlines, developing a design book, creating five mixed media design
projects, critiques, testing, and improvisational teaching. (See Daily Sequence of Activities)

 

COURSE REQUIREMENTS

To successfully complete the course, students are required to attend class sessions and to submit for credit or
grading all in-class exercises, assignments, design problems and testing.

REQUIRED TEXT

An ART FUNDAMENTALS STUDY GUIDE is provided online to serve the instructional purposes of the course.

A classroom art library is available for student utilization and additional illustration of course concepts.

WEBSITE

View the course STUDY GUIDE on the Internet at: www.usd.edu/~dnavrat.
 
The ART 121 Art Fundamentals STUDY GUIDE includes links to:
1.  "DesignSTRUCTURE Introductory Powerpoint:"  http://www.usd.edu/~dnavrat/Design%20Structure.ppt ;
2.  "DesignSTRUCTURE: A Beginning Guide to Composition:" http://www.usd.edu/~dnavrat/syllabi/design_structures.htm ;
3.  STUDY GUIDE material at: http://www.usd.edu/%7Ednavrat/syllabi/new_art_121.htm    

Recommended Textbooks (Optional):

LAUNCHING THE IMAGINATION (2D), By Mary Stewart, McGraw Hill, New York: 2002. ISBN 0-07-230355-7

ART FUNDAMENTALS/THEORY AND PRACTICE, by Ocvirk, Stinson, Wigg, Bone, and Clayton; McGraw-Hill: 

9th Ed., 2001.  ISBN 0-07-240700-X.  The text includes a CD-Rom of visual examples.

Course Supplies to be purchased by students (See Materials and Supplies List)

Course Materials and Supplies Provided (See Materials and Supplies List)

CLASS ATTENDANCE POLICY

Incomplete understanding occurs when classes are not attended, therefore attendance is expected of serious
students.  Attendance is required at preliminary and final critiques. Attendance is recorded at the beginning of
each class meeting, and is a factor in calculating the final grade for the course. Absences must be for serious
reasons. Lack of preparation for class is not a valid excuse.

An excused absence requires formal verification to the instructor (examples: healthcare, personal or family
emergency, and scheduled travel associated with a USD course or activity).

More than three unexcused absences may lower the course grade by one full letter grade. Excessive absences
may result in being dropped from the course by the instructor.

CHEATING and PLAGIARISM POLICY

The University’s Academic Dishonesty Statement: USD Student Handbook p. 35:
Academic Dishonesty. Acts of dishonesty, including, but not limited to the following:

1. Cheating - defined as, but not limited to, the following:
A. use or giving of any unauthorized assistance in taking quizzes, tests, or examinations;
B. use of sources beyond those authorized by the instructor in writing papers, preparing reports,
solving problems, or carrying out other assignments;
C. acquisition, without permission, of tests or other academic material belonging to a member of the
institutional faculty or staff.

2. Plagiarism - defined as, but not limited to, the following:
A. the use, by paraphrase or direct quotation, of the published or unpublished work of another person
without full and clear acknowledgment consistent with accepted practices of the discipline;
B.  the unacknowledged use of materials prepared by another person or agency engaged in the selling
of term papers or other academic materials.

3. Other forms of dishonesty relating to academic achievement, research
results, or academically related public service;

4. Furnishing information known or believed to be false to any institutional official, faculty member or
officer;

5. Forgery, fabrication, alteration, misrepresentation or misuse of any document, record or instrument of
identification, including misrepresentations of degrees awarded or honors received;

6. Tampering with the election of any institutionally recognized student organization;

7. Claiming to represent or act in behalf of the institution when not authorized to represent or to act.

Note that acts of academic dishonesty may result in a failing grade for the course, suspension, or expulsion by
the University
 

MAKE-UP POLICY / REDOING PROJECTS/ DO-OVERS

If unsatisfied with a grade earned for any project, a student may rework it as many times as desired within the
semester; however, only the highest grade earned on a single project will be recorded. The various grades earned
on each repeat-project will not be averaged. This policy does not apply to any project that misses a deadline.

GENERAL EDUCATION OBJECTIVES

This class fulfills the following Goal of the SDBOR South Dakota System General Education Requirements:

GOAL #4: Students will understand the diversity and complexity of the human
experience through study of the arts and humanities

STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES: As a result of taking courses meeting this goal, students will:

Learning Outcomes:

Assessment

1. Demonstrate knowledge of the diversity of values, beliefs, and ideas embodied in the human experience

The student will demonstrate understanding of historic Purposes of Art documented throughout world cultures through reading and discussion of concepts.

2. Identify and explain basic concepts of the selected disciplines within the arts and humanities.

The student will demonstrate understanding of fundamental concepts of Art relating to composition and design through testing and creative projects.

In addition, as a result of taking courses meeting this goal, students will be able to
demonstrate a basic understanding of at least one of the following:

3. Identify and explain the contributions of other cultures from the perspective of the selected disciplines within the arts and humanities

Not applicable to this course.

4. Demonstrate creative and aesthetic understanding

The student will demonstrate problem-solving ability by successfully completing required design projects in a variety of visual media.

5. Explain and interpret formal and stylistic elements of the literary or fine arts

The student will successfully research and visually interpret stylistic elements of historic and contemporary visual artists through assigned design projects.

6. Demonstrate foundational competency in reading, writing, and speaking a non-English language

Not applicable to this course.

Each course meeting this goal includes the following student learning outcomes: Required: #1 and #2. At least one of the following: #3, #4, #5, or #6. Credit Hours: 6 hours (in 2 disciplines or a sequence of foreign language courses).

COURSE GOALS

An eye for art and design is developed over time through experience with art processes and products, largely by
trial and error and evaluation. A study of art and design is not a mechanical process, but an exploration in which
attainable goals are the development of visual awareness and sensitivity to subtlety, visual drama, critical
observation, critical analysis, and the meaningful expression and articulation of good ideas. Specific goals are a
foundation in visual problem-solving, the syntax of design language, and a grounding in studio techniques requiring
fine hand and eye coordination. Course goals are...

1. To acquaint the student with aspects of visual perception relating to artistic design.

2. To foster and promote intelligent and sensitive use of the Elements of Design through awareness and
consideration of the Principles of Visual Composition.

3. To foster an appreciation of both subtle and dynamic aspects of the creation of visual form through
study and practice of design structures.

4. To encourage an attitude of sensitive inquiry into the nature of art, how it is made, what it refers to, and
how to effectively communicate using the various elements and principles fundamental to this process.

5. To encourage individual creative inquiry.

6. To enhance the student's ability to objectively criticize both his/her own artworks and the artworks of
others by developing awareness of reasons, methods, and standards for critical evaluation.

7. To develop a vocabulary of terminology relevant to understanding art, design, and the process of critical
evaluation leading to valid visual criticism.

COURSE OBJECTIVES/OUTCOMES

STANDARDS CODE

ASSESSMENT

1.  To develop understanding and skill in art processes and techniques.

Outcomes: Studio practice and writing linking art concepts to other subject disciplines.

DECA 24:16:09; INTASC #1; NCATE I.1; II.4; NASAD XI.C.

Students are evaluated on: Visual Lectures on fundamental art theory; Discussions; Use of Study Guide; Library and
Internet research; Studio
practice, problem solving,
critiques, and evaluation of Problems #1,2,3 and 4.

2.  To develop compositional skills by working with visual media structures and the elements and principles of design.

Outcomes: Understanding of visual elements, principles, and components; Studio practice and writing linking art concepts to other subject disciplines.

DECA 24:16:09; INTASC #1; NCATE I.1; II.4; NASAD XI.C

Students are evaluated on: Demonstrations; Discussions; Library and Internet research;
Use of Art Fundamentals
website; Use of Study Guide; Studio practice, problem solving, critiques, and evaluation of Problems #1,2,3 and 4; Final Exam.

3.  To develop understanding and skill in visual and verbal analysis.

Outcomes: Ability to critically evaluate and interpret art examples; Creative problem solving and activities in drawing, collage, painting, and other mixed media art.

DECA 24:16:09; INTASC #1; NCATE I.1; II.4; NASAD XI.C

Students are evaluated on: Class participation in
discussions and critiques;
Design Book notes; Studio practice; Creative examples for Problems #1 through 4; Final Exam.

4.  To utilize the knowledge of art, art materials, and psychology of human behavior to help students understand, create, interpret, and evaluate art.

Outcomes: Personal research, interpretation, and creative problem solving.

DECA 24:16:09; INTASC #1; NCATE I.1; II.4.; NASAD XI.C

Students are evaluated on: Class participation; Critiques; Design Book notes; Studio practice; Creative examples for Problems #1 through 4; Final Exam.

Accrediting Agencies of the University of South Dakota:  
DECA – Department of Education and Cultural Affairs of the State
of South Dakota
INTASC – Interstate New Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium
NCATE – National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education

NASAD -  National Association of Schools of Art and Design

 

  EVALUATION PROCEDURES / ASSESSMENT / PERFORMANCE STANDARDS

In a design course, an instructor wears several hats during evaluations:

1.  As an ART DIRECTOR, assessing the quality of a DESIGN to the requirements of a specific job for a client.
An agency depends on a designer to create under pressure of a deadline. In this function, knowing what is
required to successfully complete a job, an instructor will tell a student exactly what to do.

2.  As a GALLERY DIRECTOR, determining if a style of ART will fit with the emphasis of a gallery and with the
stable of other gallery artists...and is visually appealing so that it has a chance to be marketable. In this function,
by recognizing quality, an instructor will select the best among similar examples of art and design.

3.  As an ART CONSULTANT, or GRANT REVIEWER, determining if your art is creative – imaginative,
mysterious, distinctly different, exciting - so that you deserve special recognition in relation to all other competitors.
In this function, by recognizing quality, an instructor will rate some works higher than others.

4.  Always as an ARTIST who has strong feelings for the process, knows what it takes to create good work,
and appreciates students who try hard and deserve credit for their efforts. In this function, an instructor patiently
guides students, and rewards meaningful effort that may be either intelligent, sensitive, or both.

The grading of art projects is an imperfect process, combining both objective and subjective determinations;
therefore, each project will be judged on several criteria. Each creative project is due for grading on a specific
date and will be scored by criteria including COMPOSITIONAL QUALITY (design unity/gestalt), AESTHETIC
QUALITY
(creativity, imagination, expression, historical and contemporary awareness, critical judgment), and
TECHNICAL QUALITY
(craft/execution, effort, learning objectives).

Grades for projects and testing will be averaged at the end of the term in determining the final grade for the
course.  Three separate grades (quality judgment ratings of "A" to "F") will be determined for most projects,
in relation to these important criteria: 

1. COMPOSITIONAL QUALITY (design unity/gestalt) - the successful resolution of an artistic statement;
the elements and principles of design working together in harmony to create a cohesive unit with nothing
superfluous; the resulting work is of visual interest and seems to be complete. 

GESTALT - relating to unity, a sensing that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts; an
instantaneous recognition that the artistic statement is meaningful; it "works" and it is delightful or
curiously interesting in many ways.

2. AESTHETIC QUALITY (historical and contemporary awareness, critical judgment), including: 

CREATIVITY (imagination) - a sensing of the degree to which the artistic statement is uniquely
resolved and visually interesting; and sensitively meaningful to its creator.

EXPRESSION - a sensing of the degree to which the artistic statement is uniquely personal and
sensitively meaningful to its creator.

3. TECHNICAL QUALITY (craft/execution/effort, learning objectives) - the care with which the artistic
statement has been produced and presented for viewing; a recognition of the degree of craft and personal
investment inherent in the manufacture of a visual image.  Also, demonstration of the successful completion
of the technical learning objectives associated with each assignment.

COMPARABLE QUALITY - a final judgment in consideration of the above factors in relation to the
work of other members of the class in fair competition.

GRADING SCALE

A  =   94-100%: Consistently outstanding, superior, excellent work.  Significant growth in skill development and
demonstrated ability in understanding and effective assimilation of presented concepts.  Exceeds most levels of
acceptance in all grading criteria.  A final course grade of "A" requires successful completion of all course
requirements and assignments.

B  =   80-93%: Consistently good, above and better than average work.  Demonstrated improvement and
growth in skill development and concept assimilation.  Meets all levels of acceptance in all grading criteria.
A final course grade of "B" requires successful completion of all course requirements and assignments. 

C  =   70-79%: Consistently adequate growth with average progress in skill development and concept
assimilation.  Meets minimum levels of acceptance in all grading criteria.

D  =   60-69%: Below average, less than adequate improvement.  Meets minimum levels of acceptance in some
but not all grading criteria.

F  =    0-59%: Unsatisfactory, unacceptable, insufficient improvement.  Does not meet minimum levels of
acceptance in any grading criteria.

GRADING CRITERIA

STUDIO PROJECTS

1.  Quality of work and Depth of Understanding

 Fine 2D or 3D studio work is not only a faithful ability to reproduce form that is experienced through processes of
visual perception, or the exact copying of observed forms, or creating from imagination, but also understanding of
the quality and dynamics of expression witnessed through the process of production and analysis of products of art.
Sensitivity and control are observable qualities in any artwork.

  Craft, craftsmanship, or quality of execution of a studio project is relative to each assignment.  Improvement of
skill with various media and sincere care in the production and presentation of each artwork is expected of each
student.

2.  Progressive improvement and growth throughout the semester.

 Art instructors are artists who know the effort and time it takes to create successful artworks, who have strong
feelings for the creative process, and appreciation for students who exert effort. All students deserve of credit for
their efforts.  Each student brings to class a different level of experience and understanding; therefore,
experiential differences among and between students will be considered in determining the final grade.
Credit is apportioned for the growth each student demonstrates at the end of the semester beyond the level of
ability observed at the beginning of the semester.

3.  Responsible attitude and willingness to work.

  Demonstration of an eagerness to learn creative concepts and to practice skill building is observable in each
class meeting.  Above-average students are expected to possess a positive learning attitude and a willingness
to be challenged beyond current understanding.

4.  Participation in course activities: class discussions, assignments, homework,
critiques and attendance at art gallery exhibition opening receptions.

  Course credit will be apportioned for student participation.  Essential to learning is a willingness to overcome
shyness and inertia and to risk being right or wrong when speaking.  A willingness to share thoughts and feelings
with others is a major, positive factor in vital group experience.  Above-average students are expected to
participate in all course activities. 

5.  Willingness to accept and use constructive criticism.

  When artworks by all members of the class are displayed and discussed, a variety of observations and
suggestions should be expected.  The qualities of the artwork are first observed and noted, and then other
possibilities are envisioned and suggested.  Be tolerant of the statements of others and open-minded to
suggestions coming from the instructor or any class member.  Try the good suggestions next time you work.

6.  Willingness to challenge one’s concepts, abilities, or complacency.

  An instructor will challenge student understanding and complacency.  What a student can do well should be
treasured.  What a student can do better should be eagerly improved. To be aware of prejudices and overcome
them will not only lead to success, but also to happiness.
 
“To grow is to change - to change is to risk what is - a willingness to let go of the status quo.”

7.  Performance on testing.

  The course may include objective testing relating to course concepts, studio processes, and art terminology.

8.  Record of attendance and tardiness.

  Incomplete learning occurs when classes are missed; therefore attendance is required.  Excessive absences
will result in grading penalties.  An instructor is blameless when a student misses a class and its points of
instruction.  Instructors are willing to clarify the points of instruction during and after class, but cannot repeat
entire classes or individually instruct any student beyond the classroom for excessive amounts of time.

Summary of Criteria for Final Course Grading:

1. Effort.

2. Quality of work and progressive improvement throughout the semester.

3. Participation in class discussions and critiques.

4. Record of attendance.

5. Average of grades received on projects and testing.

Artwork that misses a deadline may be unacceptable or otherwise downgraded. Attendance, effort, and interest
are expected of above-average students. Better than average coursework implies steady, conscientious effort,
an eagerness to learn, a willingness to be challenged, participation in classroom activities, and resolved artwork.
Each of the above factors will be a determinant of the final grade for the semester.

CIVIL DISCOURSE POLICY

A university campus is an arena for alien ideas, controversy, and disagreement.  The subject of ART is always
controversial by the nature of creativity.  An art instructor in a classroom or studio encourages controversial
topics as a means of exploring critical analysis and the Creative Process.  This course focuses on the effective
use of very powerful tools: words, images, ideas, opinions, and arguments.  As we practice our use of these
tools, we promise one another that we will engage in ethical discourse, including the honest expression of
ideas, the respectful acknowledgement of diverse viewpoints, and the creation of a confirming communication
climate to facilitate growth and change.

Students are expected to work, individually and together, to create an atmosphere that is safe, valuing of one
another, and open to diverse perspectives.

Students are expected to show courtesy, civility, and respect for one another and for the instructor.  Comments
that degrade or ridicule another, whether based on individual or cultural differences, will not be tolerated.


ADA COMPLIANCE STATEMENT

If you have a documented disability as described by the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (P.L. 933-112 Section 504)
and “Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA)” that may require you to need assistance attaining accessibility to
instructional content to meet course requirements, it is recommended that you contact Disability Services
(677-6389) in the Service Center, Room 119B, as soon as possible.  It is then your responsibility to contact and
meet with the instructor.  The Disability Services Office can assist you and the instructor in forming a reasonable
accommodations plan and provide support in developing appropriate accommodations for your disability.  Course
requirements will not be waived but accommodations may be made to assist you to meet the requirements.
Technical support may also be available to meet your specific need.


INSTRUCTOR INITIATED DROPS

USD policy allows an instructor to drop a student for non-attendance or non-participation, provided the student is
in violation of the official attendance or participation policy for the course. Instructor initiated drops are the
instructor’s option throughout the semester, to the last day of classes. The Registrar notifies the student that
he/she has been dropped from the course.  The course grade assigned will be in accord with policies for student
initiated drops.


INCOMPLETES

An "INC" grade allows a student to complete a course without repetition of the regular work of a course. It may
not be assigned when a definite grade can be given for the work done. The "Incomplete" grade is given to indicate
that some part of the work of a student in a course has for good reason, not been completed, while the rest has
been satisfactorily completed.

The phrase for good reason is interpreted as a medical emergency, prolonged medical care, a family emergency
requiring extended absence from class at crucial times in the learning process, or some other situation of similar
importance.

It is the student’s responsibility to complete required course work within the framework of the semester in which
the course is offered. Except for the crisis situations outlined above, it should be understood that an "Incomplete"
may not be allowed by the instructor, and should not be expected by the student.

MATERIALS FEE

The materials fee for the course is $22.40.  The fee is paid at the time USD tuition and fees are due at the
Business Office for the semester enrollments.  This fee must be paid at that time. 

The fee provides the Study Guide which serves as the course text, and provides the use of basic materials and
tools used in coursework throughout the semester, such as art papers, drawing supplies, painting supplies,
gesso, acrylic polymer medium, pigments, brushes, glues, adhesives, photocopies, and transparency film.
These classroom supplies will be available to students throughout the semester. 

In addition to the fee, students should expect to purchase personal tools and supplies necessary for homework
assignments designated by the instructor.  Additional cost is variable for each student, and is estimated to be
in a range from $25-40.  (See supply list)

SAFETY AND HAZARDS INSTRUCTION

Instruction and cautions regarding safety and hazards begins with the first class meeting, and will continue
throughout the course, as appropriate. The course is basically non-hazardous, and non-toxic materials will
be used. Common precautions while using sharp, pointed, or cutting tools will be emphasized.


TEACHING PHILOSOPHY
, Professor Navrat

In any of my courses, I employ interactive, participatory, teaching/learning techniques dating back to Socrates
- learning through instruction, thinking, planning, questioning and doing. I promote a learning environment in
which students are rewarded for thinking and doing.  Passivity is not rewarded.

I urge students to share their perceptions of the information and issues presented. I believe students must
actively participate in the learning process in order to more fully experience and comprehend their own thought
processes.

Thus, I encourage students to exercise a natural tendency to teach others. By encouraging student participation,
I believe both teacher and student learns even more about possibilities relating to the subject/assignment, and,
in effect, masters that subject through repetition. I repeatedly stress important information, not because I'm kind
to the least motivated class member, but because surveys show that only about 10% of an audience are listening
attentively at any one time. This process is logical and valid when exploring subjective, imaginative concepts and
issues which constitute the study of art.

The learning environment is directed toward critical thinking relating to problem solving. Some rote learning is
required of the student in order to apply skills required for problem solving. Written testing predominantly relates
to art terminology (course glossary), and rote learning is necessary to master definitions leading to the knowledge
of the discipline.

By requiring students to study the good works of others, to conduct personal research, to critically analyze issues
and concepts, to think and create possibilities for themselves, and to critically evaluate their own results and the
results of others, I actively guide students to meaningful realizations, skills, and abilities that may be successfully
utilized in the future.


MATERIALS / SUPPLY LIST

The materials fee provides the following supplies for use during class sessions:


Art Papers
: (up to 23"x35") cover stocks, tracing papers, colored tissues and construction papers, photocopies, transparencies

Drawing Supplies:

- Ebony Pencil

-black charcoal sticks, vine and compressed

- white charcoal sticks

- soft pastels: black, grays, white

- crayons and oil pastels

- black India drawing ink

- bamboo brush

- kneaded rubber eraser

- Pink Pearl eraser

- plastic eraser

- spray fixative

- drawing compass, protractor

Painting Supplies:

- black acrylic paint

- white acrylic paint

- acrylic paints: red, yellow, blue, green, violet, sienna, umber, iridescent colors, fluorescent colors, etc.

-acrylic polymer medium

- watercolor pigments

- tempera pigments

-paint brushes, hair, nylon, bristle, assorted sizes and shapes

- water containers (cups or plastic jars)

-paint mixing palettes


Miscellaneous:

- X-Acto knife

- Utility knife

- paper towels

- metal straight edge/ruler (for cutting), 18", 24", 36"

- scissors

- Glues and Adhesives: stick (UHU), Elmer's,
spray adhesives

For homework assignments, students are provided
only the following: Ebony pencil, stick glue,
watercolor set and brush, color wheel.

In addition to the materials and tools provided by
the materials fee, for class-work and homework,
each student must purchase the following supplies:

- - Design Book - (sketchbook -journal, an idea
book), such as Pentalic Sketch Journal made
by Grumbacher

ISBN No. 0-8008-7226-6, Item No. 087226, 192
pages, 7"H x 8"L, Neutral Ph, 70 lb. drawing
paper

- 2 graphite drawing pencils: 4B, 6B

- white glue 

- fine tip ballpoint pen, black ink

- utility knife or heavy-duty Xacto knife

- rags, tissues

- tag board for presentations/critiques (a higher
quality mounting board is optional)

- MAGAZINES (for collage purposes)

- other items may be necessary to complete
your own projects

NOTE - do not purchase these items until you
receive project instructions.  For homework,
students may purchase some items as needed.

STUDIO SAFETY and HAZARDS INSTRUCTION

Safe Practices in the Studio

The Art Doctor Sezzzz...if you can’t afford to cut it, gash it, smash it, lose it - 

Be Careful in Here!

Safety and hazards instruction is intended to alert you to potential dangers, health problems, and preventive
actions, not to make you fearful - so be alert and cautious, but not afraid.

What dangers are lurking about us? They are called STRESSORS, and they involve energy that can
be biological or physical (chemical, kinetic, thermal, electrical, and radiation). Excessive physical energy is
always dangerous - so avoid injuries such as burns, bruises, breaks, cuts, shocks, and repetitive motions.
Biological and chemical toxins can affect you by (1) skin contact, (2) breathing, and (3) through the mouth and
the digestive system.

Who is really truly susceptible to toxins? Who are the high-risk groups? (1) infants and children, (2)
pregnant women, (3) smokers, druggies, and heavy drinkers, (4) allergy and asthma sufferers, and the elderly
with existing health problems.  If you are in one of these groups and you are working with art materials for many
hours a day, your health risks can be compounded if you breathe polluted air (usually found in big cities, not in
Vermillion). Some adverse health effects may not appear for decades.

What hazards exist for student artists in this basic design course? Very few. Beyond avoiding cuts
with knives and the paper cutter, punctures from sharp objects, and paper cuts, the materials we use are
relatively non-toxic. There is little short-term risk from toxins in this course. Avoid inhaling dusts (sawdust, clay
dust, pastels, charcoal). Avoid inhaling vapors, fumes, and mists (spray fixative, adhesives, acrylic polymer
medium, or any oils and solvents). Avoid biological dangers of plant products, animal skins, bone, horn, and
hair by keeping your odd materials clean.

What preventive measures can I take?

In an emergency, dial 911 on the campus telephone located outside the art office, CFA 179.
Observe the location of the first-aid kit in each art studio/classroom.
Work in a well-ventilated, well-lighted, non-slip area, and keep it uncluttered and clean.
Do not work when you are sick, exhausted, or not alert to dangers.
Do not eat, smoke, or drink when you are working with art materials.
Wear a protective mask if you are working with dusts or vapors.
Wear rubber gloves if you are handling oils, solvents, toxic chemicals or acids.
Wear goggles if you are working with power tools, or things that fly off chips.
Always substitute less toxic materials if the results are successful.
Be aware of the toxicity of each material you use - see the Safety Data Sheet, read about what you use.
Always listen to your mother.  Do not spread your cold or flu.  Be sensible and responsible.  Be alert to
repression and censorship.  Avoid negative people.  Enjoy everything in moderation.  Be positive about
your talents and the future.
Seek beauty, grace, and elegance.

  

TENTATIVE SEQUENCE OF CLASS SESSIONS

“Time flies like an arrow.  Truth flies like a banana.” 

In each section of the course taught by different instructors, it is very likely the daily sequence will change due to
special visiting artists, meetings, or other scheduling conflicts.  If so, more class time may be allowed to
finish the project affected. 

The following design process will be utilized throughout the course:

1.  Recognize and accept a problem.  Each design problem involves specific intellectual, creative, and
technical objectives.

2.   Analyze the problem.  Each design problem involves an analysis of possibilities.

3.       Define the problem.  For each design problem, there must be understanding of the requirements
and the parameters. 

4.       Ideation.  The solution of a design problem involves searching for the best idea from among many
possibilities.  Gaining creative ideas involves individual research, discovery, exploration and activity.
In this step one finds and selects source materials for developing a design or  composition.

5.  Selection/Reduction.  When multiple ideas have been identified, the best idea is to be selected.  This
step involves making choices through practice, by juxtaposing, judging, and discriminating.  The creative
possibilities must be reduced to achieve orderly form involving visual harmony and a sense of beauty.

6.       Evaluation.  When work on the design/artwork is “finished,” a personal analysis and judgment of a
completed artwork takes place.  Refer to the fundamental questions relating to quality issues in
“Self-Evaluation” in the Study Guide.  A group analysis is called a critique.  A critique is a discussion
of the similarities and differences of artworks in which you compare your artwork with the work of others.

Each design problem will be introduced in terms of concept, objectives, and process.  This series of
problems is organized sequentially for cumulative learning.  Each exercise and problem builds from
the last instruction.  The new problem should apply learning from the previous problem.  To learn most
rapidly, be willing to challenge yourself to leave your comfort zone.

This sequence outlines instruction relating to in-class exercises, graded assignments and quizzes.  By the end
of the semester each student must complete the following mixed media design problems:


1. A Personal Design Book.

 30% of course grade
2. Analyzing Style: A Favorite Artist.  20% of course grade
3. Figure-Ground Dynamics   5% of course grade
4. Design from Within:  Aspects of Self-Representation  25% of course grade
    Design in Context: Composite Composition and Color

Additional course grading:
    Attendance and In-class exercises  variable - 10% of course grade
    Final Exam  10% of course grade

 

CLASS MEETING SCHEDULE

1. JAN. 12: Intro/Purposes of Art/ Problem 1: Design Book

14. MARCH 14: Problem 2: Visual Devices
2. JAN. 19: Elements and Principles/ Compositional Structures 15. MARCH 16: Problem 2/ Background to
 Foreground Space Transitions
3. JAN. 24: Line/Drawing/Design Book 16. MARCH 21: Problem 2 / PRELIMINARY CRITIQUE

4. JAN. 26: Shape/Proportion/Value/Texture/Pattern/
Collage
Quiz 

17. MARCH 23: FINAL CRITIQUE / 
 Problem 2;
 
5. JAN. 31: Value Scales 18. MARCH 30: Introduction to Problem 3: 
Figure-Ground Dynamics (9 class hours)
6. FEB. 2: Value Collages 19.  APRIL 4: Problem 3: Figure-Ground
Dynamics
7. FEB. 7: Color/Watercolor Painting 20. APRIL 6: FINAL CRITIQUE Problem 3:
 Figure-Ground Dynamics
8. FEB. 9: Color/Watercolor Painting 21. APRIL 11:  Introduction to Problem 4:
 Self Representation
 (18 class hours) /
Image Transfers/Process
 Layering 
9. FEB. 14: Acrylic Polymer Painting 22. APRIL 13: Problem 4: Foreground/
 Background
10. FEB. 16: Acrylic Polymer Painting 23. APRIL 18: Problem 4: Space Transitions 
11. FEB. 23: Problem 2 (18 class hours) Style Study/Favorite Artist 24. APRIL 20: Problem 4: Color Chroma and
 Emphasis
12. FEB. 28: Problem 2/Mixed Media
25. APRIL 25: Problem 4:
 
PRELIMINARY CRITIQUE
13. MARCH 2: Space Illusion/Transfers/Perspective/Mats/MIDTERM REVIEW 26. APRIL 27: LAST CLASS DAY 
FINAL CRITIQUE  Problem 4 / Final Exam
 Due  / Course Summary
 

WEEK 1January 10 - 14, 2005

 SYLLABUS

Wednesday, January 12 – Sections 015, 025 

Class 1 Concept:          INTRODUCTION TO DESIGN

             Objectives: To present an overview of the course and its contents.  To emphasize fundamental
art
concepts as represented by the Elements of Art, the Principles of Design Organization, and the
Visual Forces.

Note:   The objectives of the first eight class sessions are to introduce concepts, theory, terminology,
the Principles of Art, and explore the Elements of Art (point, line, shape, value, texture, and color), the
elements of light, form, space, pattern, and compositional structures.  Studio practice will include an
introduction to the visual media of drawing, collage, photomontage, painting, and printmaking (using
photocopies and multiples in artworks).
  

            Process: Introduction to classmates, course syllabus and requirements, text, grading, attendance,
incomplete, and re-working policies; glossary; materials fee; supplies, the Design Book/notebook/journal. 

            Problem 1, your personal Design Book project, is to be a continuous record of class notes relating to
in-class instruction, diagrams, terms, design sources, personal inspiration, and mixed media designs that
will emphasize types of compositional structure.  The Book will receive six grades throughout the semester
(worth about 30% of semester grading).  You must create at least seven pages a week in order to remain
on schedule with this project.
It is required for midterm grading (56 pages minimum = "A" grade for Quantity/Practice for this project)
and end-of-semester grading (105 pages minimum = "A" grade for Quantity/Practice for this project).  You
will earn extra course credit by exceeding the minimum page requirements. The Design Book will be graded
separately on QUANTITY, EXPLORATION, and QUALITY.  You may expect to work in the Design Book
during each class session and continue homework in the Design Book by weekly assignment.
 

            Lecture.  Subjective survey on art experience.


            RESEARCH ASSIGNMENTS.  Visit the course Website, view DesignStructure Introductory Powerpoint, 
link to DesignStructure and preview the material and illustrations of compositional concepts, r
ead the course
Syllabus, and peruse the Study Guide material.  To prepare for each class, read the Tentative Sequence of
Class Sessions information for the date of the class, and refer to related areas of the Study Guide, including
terms and definitions relating to the daily class objectives.  F
rom any design text or through Internet search 
engines, over the first four weeks, read information on Form; Line; Shape; Value; Texture; and Color.
Also, write a short definition of "ART" that makes sense to you and bring it to the next class to share.


            SUPPLIES ASSIGNMENT:  Purchase the Design Book (180-200 pages) and bring it to Class 2.
Pay Materials Fee.


                        DESIGN BOOK ASSIGNMENT:  During Week 1 finish a minimum of seven pages as homework.
Practice drawing, using
any kind of imagery you wish.

WEEK 2 – January 17 - 21

 

Wednesday, January 19 - Sections 015, 025

Class 2 Concept         COMPOSITION: THE ELEMENTS of DESIGN STRUCTURE and the
PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN ORGANIZATION

            Objectives: To instruct in the fundamentals of art, the Elements of Art, and the Principles of Art.  To
instruct in the medium of drawing, and the Elements of Point, Line, Shape, and Value. 

            Process: Instruction on Safety and Hazards, Studio Rules, Project Storage/Partners; Video on The
Elements of Art; FORM Diagram and Definitions; Pattern and DesignStructure online quide.
The first exercises are completed over several class sessions and begins with a lecture and
demonstration of drawing based on Point, Line, Shape, and Value.
Introduction to art concepts and terminology relating to the elements and principles of art; the
components of art: Subject Matter, Form, and Meaning); the dynamics of form organization; the elements
of light; the picture plane, flat space and illusory space; line, value; figure (positive) and ground (neutral);
compositional shapes.

            Students select partners for storage area drawers.

            Demonstration (If needed): paper folding for book construction/bookbinding to create an original
sketchbook
.

            The first exercises begin exploration and practice with drawing media, tools and materials.  Exercises
with types of line and line qualities
lead to personal understanding and discovery. 


In-class Exercise: Demonstration and practice of dynamic line qualities through word associations,
using graphite,
charcoal, and brush and ink media on 18" x 24" or larger paper.  Explore the eight
varieties of line (refer to definitions
of LINE in the glossary.

The Design Book (approx. 200 pages, 7"x 8") is an image book/notebook/journal for personal creative
imagery.  It must be brought to class and worked in during each class session.  It is to be completed
with compositions, notes, diagrams, sketches, drawings, paintings, collage, photomontage, prints,
Xerography, and mixed media, on the front and back of each page. It is a continuous homework
assignment throughout the semester.  Seven pages must be completed per week.  Most of the pages
must be created using mixed media and layering of processes. 
Extra credit can be received by
completing additional pages by end of term.
 

Continue Problem 1: Design Book - Elemental Art: Point, Line, Shape, Value, Texture, Color. This Design
Process exercise moves through the design and composition process and introduces each student
to art terminology, art elements, art principles, art mediums and techniques (drawing, texture rubbings,
painting, collage, photomontage, image transfers, and printmaking (Xerography). This introductory
process exercise will be introduced during several class sessions and leads to Problem 2 - an analysis
of the design structure (composition) of your Favorite Artist's imagery and the development of a mixed
media composition in the style of your Favorite Artist.

During the initial series of design exercises, six Elements of Art Structure, twelve Principles of
Design Organization, seventeen Compositional Structures, and a variety of art mediums and
techniques will be introduced:

The Elements of Art and Design Structure:

1.       POINT (Pixel).  Medium: drawing; In-Class Exercise (20-30 minutes): Pointillism; In the Design
Book, students complete one life-size pointillist drawing of a small object of their choice, using
only dots. 
(Weeks 1-15)

2.       LINE.  Medium: drawing; Types of Line: delineating, outline, contour, diagrammatic, structural,
gesture, calligraphic, implied; In-Class Exercise: Exploring adjectives, word associations, and
examples of related emotional, linear expression
(Weeks 2-15)

3.       SHAPE.  Mediums: drawing, collage, painting, mixed; Types of Shape: Angular/Geometric
and Curvilinear/Organic/Biomorphic; Basic shapes; Found Objects; drawing and collage
(Weeks 3-15)

4.       VALUE.  Mediums: drawing, collage, painting, all others; Types of Value: Within a range from
light to dark; Light and Shadow; the elements of light; curving light; planar light
(Weeks 2-15)

5.       TEXTURE.  Mediums: rubbings, drawing, collage, painting, all others; Types of Texture: Actual,
Artificial, Invented
(Weeks 3-15)

6.       COLOR.  Mediums: drawing, collage, painting, all others; Theory and Pigment mixture: hue,
value, and chroma.  (Weeks 3-15); Week five exercises: Painting with neutral colors, painting
basic forms by understanding planes and surfaces, color mixing and matching, painting an object
with the Elements of Light.

      Understanding Compositional Structures - examples of seventeen different structures;
Mediums: all

              Process: Work on Problem 1 in class – In-class exercises in the Design Book relating to instruction
on art theory, the Elements of Design, and drawing techniques.


            Gallery Visit!!!  In the Main Gallery, view:  
Imaging the Edge of Whirl: Den Navrat Retrospective 1965-2005, on exhibition January 10-31, 2005.
A chance for students to ask some questions of the artist. 

            DESIGN BOOK ASSIGNMENT: In-class exercises: Point, Line, Shape, Value.  During Week 2
finish a minimum of seven pages during class sessions and, as homework, using subject matter of your choice.


                        INTERNET RESEARCH and READING ASSIGNMENT: Do a search on: Texture


WEEK 3 – January 24 - 28

 

Monday, January 24 – Sections 015, 025

Class 3 Concept         PRACTICING ART FUNDAMENTALS IN THE DESIGN BOOK

Objectives: To instruct in the fundamentals of art, the Elements of Art and the Principles of Art. To
instruct in the medium of Collage and the Elements of shape, texture, and value. 

Process: Instruction relating to Problem 1 - the Design Book. Video #2 on The Visual Language
of Design: Visual Style.

Work on Problem 1 in class – In the Design Book, in-class exercises relating to instruction on art
theory, the Elements of Design, drawing, and collage techniques.  Specific drawing and collage exercises:
Brush and ink drawing on previous mark-making/line drawing exercise.  Creating texture rubbings.  Grid
pattern collage exercise incorporating rubbings with drawing and collage.  Students cut their dynamic
line exercise into 1" squares and, combined with rubbings, design a "textured" grid pattern on a double-
page spread in their Design Book.

Instruction in mixed media processes and composition, involving Value Scale, Shape, Proportion,
Collage, Photomontage, Photocollage, Pattern, Repetition, Texture,  and Rubbings.


DESIGN BOOK ASSIGNMENT: During Week 3 finish a minimum of seven pages during class
sessions and as homework, using collage and photomontage, practicing use of the compositional
structures, GRID and EVEN SPREAD, and using color proportions based on the Law of Areas/
Law of Backgrounds to regulate color value change.  Practice MONOCHROMATIC and
ANALOGOUS color schemes (research Color terms in the Study Guide).


Wednesday, January 26 - Sections 015, 025

Class 4 and Class 5 Concept: DESIGN PROCESS EXERCISES

Objective: To instruct in the elements of art and art media using collage, photocollage, and
photomontage, emphasizing shape, value, texture, and pattern.

Process: Introduction to proportional shaping systems.

Introduction to PROPORTIONING systems - The Greek savant Eudoxus, The Golden Mean,
The Fibonacci Series of Numbers, and Chaos theory

Introduction to SHAPE exercise and proportional VALUE systems.  Explanation of traditional Black/White/
Gray "grisaille" pre-painting value system and relationship to current 3-value and 4-value systems.
Introduction to "Thumbnail" compositional planning diagrams.

In-class exercises: Divide a blank page into only two shapes.  How do you create the most pleasing
proportions on a page using only two shapes?  Is it a logical or an intuitive process? 
Continue the exercise
by dividing additional pages into three shapes and four shapes
.

Continue Problem 1 Design Book: Elemental collage exercises, using neutral tones of white, gray, and
black in two, three, and four value compositions, using
black and gray construction papers.

            Process: Demonstrations of collage and photomontage.

Fundamental Terms: Shape, Proportion, Value, Texture, Collage, Space, Intervals,
Color
, Photocollage/Photomontage.

            Related Terms: Format, Picture Plane, Figure, Ground, Background, Middle ground, Foreground,
Actual/natural texture, Artificial/simulated texture, Invented texture (Patterning), Abstract texture, Realistic,
Abstract, Nonobjective, Dominant, Subordinate, Transition, Transparency, Compositional Structures, Color,
Hue, Value, Intensity, Color Schemes
(Monochromatic, Analogous - term definitions are in the Study
Guide glossary) 


            QUIZ


             ASSIGNMENT: In the Design Book, complete a "Figure in an Environment"  photomontage
using segmented magazine photographs.  Work in a mosaic technique by overlapping
collage pieces.  Due Monday.


            INTERNET RESEARCH  and READING ASSIGNMENT: Do a search on "Color"

WEEK 4 – January 31 - February 4

 

Monday, January 31 - Sections 015, 025

Class 5 Concept: INSTRUCTION IN VALUE SCALES

Objectives: To instruct in the elements of art and art media using drawing, collage, photocollage, and
photomontage, emphasizing value, texture, and pattern. 
Continuation of in-class exercises relating
to the Elements of Design Structure.

Process: Demonstrations of Value, the Elements of Light, and proportional Value systems.  Individual research
 - discovery, exploration, activity, selection.  
Introduction to value scales.  In the Design Book, create three, standard nine-value Value Scales
using graphite, charcoal, and collage.

Video on Collage Process


DESIGN BOOK ASSIGNMENT: During Week 4, to complete assignments relating to VALUE studies and
color schemes, finish a minimum of seven pages during class sessions and as homework, using
subject matter of your choice, utilizing drawing, collage and photomontage. 


 

Wednesday, February 2 - Sections 015, 025

Class 6 Concept: INSTRUCTION IN VALUE COLLAGES

Objective: To instruct in the elements of art and art media using drawing, collage, photocollage, and
photomontage, emphasizing value, texture, and pattern.

Process: Continuation of value collage and photomontage exercises.  Definitions and exploration of color
schemes.  
Continuation of photomontage exercise, Figure in an Environment, in three additional versions: black/white
shapes only; three-value B, W, MG; four-value B, DG,  LG, W.  Use and combine diverse photo fragments
cut from magazines.

Process: Video #3 on Color.  The human eye recognizes about 7,000,000 differences of color; a
computer recognizes about 20,000,000 differences of color.  Discussion Question: Do the
13,000,000 color changes that the human eye does not recognize really exist???

Instruction in color properties: Hue, Value, Chroma; Primary Colors of Light (R,G,B), of
Pigments (Y,R,B), of the Graphic Arts (Y, Cyan, Magenta), of Psychology (R,Y,G,B), of
Elemental, Indivisible Hues (R,Y,G,B,V); Color relationships, the Color Wheel, Color Temperature.

Related Color Terms: Secondary, Tertiary, Tint, Tone, Shade, Opacity, Transparency,
simultaneous contrast.
Color Purposes: Design Function, Aesthetic Appeal, Emotional Appeal, Sensuous Appeal,
Symbolic Color
Color Schemes: monochromatic, analogous, achromatic, complementary,
split complement, double complement, duad, triad, tetrad, etc. (refer to Art Glossary in Study Guide)

ASSIGNMENT DUE MONDAY:  Emphasis on layering of Processes with Collage and Photomontage.
Motif: Figure in an Environment using photocollage and a color scheme (either monochromatic or
analogous).            

WEEK 5 – February 7 - 11

 

Monday, February 7 - Sections 015, 025

Class 7 Concept:          INSTRUCTION IN ART FUNDAMENTALS, WATERCOLOR PAINTING
PROCESSES and TECHNIQUES

            Objectives: To instruct in the elements of art and art media using transparent watercolor painting,
emphasizing color, the six elements of light, the basic 2D shapes (circle, square, rectangle, triangle),
and the basic 3D forms (sphere, cube, cylinder, cone). 
To develop visual understanding and skill through
color mixing and the properties of color: Hue, Value, Chroma).
            

            Process: Continue the Elemental Art process exercises: Instruction relating to Color, Texture,
Form, and Space, utilizing painting.  Watercolor painting instruction.  Watercolor tissue painting exercise
to explore color mixing and artistic concepts of "accident" and "chance."

Demonstration and in-class exercise relating to watercolor processes: Dry in Dry, Wet in Wet,
Dry in Wet, Wet in Dry.
Instruction and practice the Basic Watercolor washes: Even, Graded, Streaky, and Very Dark.

Related Color Terms: Secondary, Tertiary, Tint, Tone, Shade, Opacity, Transparency,
simultaneous contrast.
Color Purposes: Design Function, Aesthetic Appeal, Emotional Appeal, Sensuous Appeal,
Symbolic Color
Color Schemes: monochromatic, analogous, achromatic, complementary,
split complement, double complement, duad, triad, tetrad, etc. (refer to Art Glossary in Study Guide)


            DESIGN BOOK ASSIGNMENT: Begin practicing compositional structures on each page, relating to
in-class exercises: PAGE SEQUENCING  – minimum of 7 pages.  Using the 8-page folded paper book created 
during the second week of classes, develop a story line and personal story book similar to a comic strip or 
children's book. 
Use your choice of structures and subject matter.  Work with mixed media layering
of processes and designing in sequence of several pages at a time.  Cut or shape portions of one page to
reveal part of the following page. 
Use methods of irregular shaped pages by folding, cutting and tearing.
Use cut holes and shapes in each page to encourage anticipation of "turning the page" to see what comes next.
Practice mixed media processes both in-class, and as homework, relating to instruction.  
Use subject matter of your choice.  Practice watercolor color schemes to create color harmony.  During
Week 5 finish a minimum of seven pages during class sessions and as homework.

 

Wednesday, February 9 - Sections 015, 025

Class 8 Concept: INSTRUCTION IN WATERCOLOR PAINTING PROCESSES, COLOR
RELATIONSHIPS, and
Use of COMPOSITIONAL STRUCTURES

                        Objective: To instruct in the elements of art and art media using transparent watercolor painting,
emphasizing color, the six elements of light, the basic 2D geometric shapes (circle, square, rectangle,
triangle), and the basic 3D geometric forms (sphere, cube, cylinder, cone). 
To develop visual understanding
and skill through color mixing and the three properties of color (Hue, Value, and Chroma).

                        Process: Continue the Elemental Art process exercise by painting basic geometric forms with the
elements of light and shadow, on watercolor paper and in the Design Book.

                        In-class exercises relating to watercolor painting of basic forms: the Circle, the Cube, the Cylinder, and
the Cone.
Practice the "Serving-Up" technique.  Painting the Basic Geometric Forms with light and shadow: the Circle,
the Cube, the Cylinder, and the Cone.

Practice color mixing and color relationships exercise/ Color Temperature – Warm and Cool; Painting
color schemes with watercolors: Analogous, Complementary, Triad, Split-Complement.  

 PAINTBRUSH   CARE and CLEANING

With care, a paintbrush will function beautifully and last for decades, especially if no paint is allowed to dry on
the hairs or bristles, the ferrule, or on the handle.  During a painting session, immerse the brush in water
whenever you are not using it.  Clean each brush immediately after use.

DO NOT THROW AWAY ANY BRUSH: CLEAN IT. 

Dried water-based paints clean easily with water.  Dried acrylic paints clean easily with Denatured Alcohol.
Dried oil paints may be cleaned with petroleum solvents, like Paint Thinner or Acetone.  To clean a brush,
use warm water and soap. 

1.  To clean a brush, use warm water and soap.
2.  Gently massage soap into the hairs and bristles, especially near the ferrule.
3.  Rinse with warm water.  Never use hot water to rinse.
4.  Repeat soaping and rinsing if necessary.
5.  Store brushes upright in the brush containers, handle-down.

    

WEEK 6 – February 14 - 18

  Monday, February 14 - Sections 015, 025

Class 9 -  Concept: INSTRUCTION IN VISUAL PROBLEM-SOLVING: COMPOSITIONAL STRUCTURES
and
ART ANALYSIS; INSTRUCTION IN ACRYLIC PAINTING PROCESSES
 

Objectives: To instruct in acrylic painting processes, emphasizing warm and cool color temperature
relationships.  Using techniques of glazing and scumbling (see definitions in the Study Guide Glossary),
to develop multiple layers of process to increase the visual surface appeal of background areas in an artwork.
In the Design Book, t
o study and practice universal design structures, with mixed media processes of drawing,
rubbings, collage, photomontage, and painting.  To develop compositional and technical skill.

Process: Slide lecture: Classic (Apollonian) compositional design vs. Romantic (Dionysian) compositional
design.

Instruction in Compositional Structures and diagramming structures.  Discussion. 

Gallery Visit.

Begin acrylic painting exercise: basic volumes, light/shadow, monochromatic color value changes; Paper
preparation - Gesso; Glazing and scumbling exercise emphasizing alternating warm/cool layers
to develop color and texture and a history of surface processes.  


Design Book Assignment: Use the Compositional Structures: HORIZONTAL and VERTICAL 
 - 3 pages each.  Practice color exercises to create simultaneous contrast.
During Week 6 finish a minimum of seven pages during class sessions and as homework.


            Assignment.  Research the library and the Internet for images created by your favorite artist
(For Problem 2, bring a book, print, poster, photograph, or photocopy of works of the favorite artist to class)

 Wednesday, February 16 - Sections, 015, 025  

Class 10  Concept:  ACRYLIC PAINTING PROCESSES

            (This class session will be taught by a Graduate Teaching Assistant)

            Objectives: To instruct in acrylic painting processes, emphasizing warm and cool color temperature
relationships.  Using techniques of glazing and scumbling, to develop multiple layers of process to
increase visual surface appeal of background areas in an artwork.

Process: Continue and finish glazing and scumbling exercise.  Work in the Design Book on a painting
of a single object using the Elements of Light, in either watercolor or acrylic.


            Assignment: For next class, bring an example of the work of your favorite artist (a book, print, poster,
photograph, or photocopy).  For visuals of famous artists, check this website: www.artchive.com


WEEK 7 – February 21 - 25 

   

Wednesday, February 23 – Sections 015, 025  

Class 11  Concept: Introduction to PROBLEM 2: THE STYLE OF A FAVORITE ARTIST:
Acrylic Painting

 (This class session will be taught by a Graduate Teaching Assistant)

This problem requires more discrimination than any of the previous exercises.  Problem 2 involves
mixing media - composing with a combination of rubbings, drawing, painting, photo shapes, collage,
xerography, and/or film transparencies. 

Objectives: To gain understanding of the process of visual analysis.  To interpret styles of art and
create an original artwork related to style preference, using mixed media and layering of transparent and
opaque processes.

The problem leads to the development of a composition in the style of a favorite artist.  Research
and select an artist for your study. 
Consider why the work of this artist appeals to you on the basis of
SUBJECT MATTER, FORM, and MEANING.  In your Design Book, write notes about each of these components
of the artwork you select.  Select several color images and bring them to class.  On gessoed paper at least
11” x 14” create an interpretation of the image, in mixed media (more than a single medium).  Your interpretive
composition must go beyond copying an image by the artist.
Your work should include major visual effects used by the artist, such as technical style, use of color,
value contrast, etc.
Your work can combine fragments of several images by the artist.  Your work should include layering of
processes using media techniques practiced during previous class sessions, such as drawing, collage,
watercolor painting, acrylic painting, glazing and scumbling, photocopying, and image transfers.

View slide examples.  Instruction in "cartooning" - using a grid to proportionately enlarge an image.           

  Technical Objectives: Style analysis and practice; compositional development beyond the influence
of the original artist, using mixed media; development of space and illumination; value contrast,
transparency, and spatial illusion
; Development of dominant and subordinate areas to control
visual movement.

Process:  Gallery Visit.  Instruction in analysis methods and photocopying.  Develop a composition
in the style of your favorite artist, utilizing Drawing, Rubbings, Painting, Photomontage, Collage,
Xerography, and image transfers (to be demonstrated during a future class session).

Practice with Art Analysis, Tracings, Xerography. 

            Individual Conferences on Style of Favorite Artists  


Recommended Artists to Research for Problem 2: Similar Structures: Titian, Pastoral Concert, 1509;
Edouard Manet, Luncheon on the Grass, 1863; Paul Cezanne, Luncheon on the Grass, 1870;
Similar
Structures
: Yasumasa Morimura, Portrait (Futago), 1988; Giorgione, Sleeping Venus, 1505; Lucas Cranach,
Nymph
, 1530; Edouard Manet, Olympia, 1863; Paul Cezanne, Olympia, 1873; Henri Matisse, Odalisque,
1904; Henri Matisse, Blue Nude, 1907; Henri Matisse, Odalisque with Magnolia, 1923;
Similar Structures:
Matisse, Dance, 1909; Roy Lichtenstein, Artist’s Studio: The Dance, 1974; Larry Rivers, Arts and the Artist:
Matisse and the Dance
, 1992; Similar  Structures: Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze, George Washington Crossing
the Delaware
, 1851; Robert Colescott, George Washington Carver Crossing the Delaware, 1975;
Leonardo da Vinci, Mona Lisa, 1503; Marcel Duchamp, L.H.O.O.Q., 1919; Sadie Lee, Bona Lisa, 1992;
Similar Structures: Leonardo da Vinci, The Last Supper, 1509; Emile Nolde, The Last Supper, 1909.
Recommended virtual gallery to research: www.artchive.com 

Note: The Similar Structures styles listed above introduce the concept of Appropriation Art of the 1980s –
artists directly influenced by the ideas and design structures of other artists.  Artists have been influenced
by other artists since the beginning of time, and commonly "borrow" the good ideas of
others in order to
explore creative ideas of interest.

Design Book Assignment: Use the Compositional Structures: DIAGONAL and CENTRAL LOCATION 
 - 3 pages each.  Practice color exercises to create simultaneous contrast.  During Week 7 finish a minimum
of seven pages during class sessions and as homework.


 

WEEK 8 – February 28 - March 4 - 

MIDTERM WEEK

 

Monday, February 28 – Sections 015, 025 

Class 12 Concept: Studio Practice - Continue Problem 2: The Style of A
Favorite Artist.

            Objectives: To develop compositional and technical skill by working with art media.  To interpret
styles of art, select image fragments, and create an original artwork related to style preference,
using mixed media and layering of transparent and opaque processes.

Process: Continue the development of a composition in the style of your favorite artist, utilizing
mixed media such as Drawing, Rubbings, Painting, Photomontage, Collage, and/or xerography.

Demonstration and practice of acrylic lift transfer technique.

            Individual Conferences on Style of Favorite Artists, as needed.

            The Design Book (Problem 1) is due for Mid-Term Grading this week.


            Design Book Writing Assignment: Analyze the work of your favorite artist by writing a paragraph
each about Subject Matter, Form, and Content.


Design Book Assignment: Use the Compositional Structures: CIRCLE and TRIANGLE  - 3 pages each.
Practice with color schemes of your choice on each page.
During Week 8 finish a minimum of seven pages during class sessions and as homework.
            


Wednesday, March 2 – Sections 015, 025  

Class 13 Concept: INSTRUCTION IN THE RECOGNITION OF VISUAL QUALITIES

            Objectives: To develop skill in visual and verbal analysis.  To interpret styles of art and create an
original artwork related to style preference, using mixed media and layering of transparent and opaque
processes.
Problem 1: DESIGN BOOK/JOURNAL DUE FOR
MID-TERM EXAMINATION

Objectives: To complete at least 56 pages of the personal Design Book.  To assess progress on
Problems 1and 2.

To instruct in preparation of artwork for display or for exhibition.

Process: Studio Practice - Work on Problem 2 and Design Book compositions in class.  Three
midterm grades will be determined for QUANTITY/PRACTICE; EXPLORATION/ASSIGNMENTS,
and QUALITY/CARE of your designs and images for Problem 1 Design Book.  A minimum of
56 pages should be designed now.  Turn in the Design Book for grading during Class 13.


Problem 1: Design Book Midterm Grading Criteria: Three grades will be determined, as follows:
(1) Quantity/Practice - 56 pages = A; Number every seventh page in your design book and also indicate the
total number of pages you have completed by midterm.
(2) Exploration/Assignments - including assignments of: Pointillist Drawing, Line/Grid Collage,
 3 shape collages, 3 Value Scales, Figure in Landscape photomontage (4 versions emphasizing
value systems and color schemes ), "Law of Areas" photomontage, three pages each of structures -
GRID, EVEN SPREAD, PAGE SEQUENCING (book), HORIZONTAL, VERTICAL, DIAGONAL,
CENTRAL LOCATION, CIRCLE, TRIANGLE, and a written Style Analysis (subject matter, form, meaning)
of Problem 2.  Label each assignment.  Completion of all assignments = A; and
(3) Quality/Care - relating to craft, personal expression, and aesthetics, this grade usually ranges
from A to D, depending upon artistic "quality."

Continue Problems in class, approximately two hours; work on either Problem 1, Problem 2,
or both projects.

            Process: Instruction in space illusion, perspective drawing, and acrylic transfer techniques.
            Students continue work on Problem 2 and work in the Design Book.

  Concept:         INSTRUCTION IN SPATIAL CONCEPTS and PERSPECTIVE DRAWING  

Objectives: To instruct in concepts of space illusion and in perspective drawing to develop technical
understanding and skill by practicing linear perspective drawing.

Process: Lecture and demonstration on Space Concepts and Spatial Techniques.  Introduction to
Perspective Drawing.  Demonstration and in-class exercise of 1-pt., 2-pt., multiple-point, ellipses
(see Perspective Drawing Problems near end of Study Guide).  Design Book drawings relating to
space illusion.

Continue Problem 2.  Work in class on Problem 2.

Individual Conferences on Style of Favorite Artists, as needed.


WEEK 9 – March 7 - 11: SPRING BREAK

   

WEEK 10 - March 14 - 18 

Monday, March 14 – Sections 015, 025 

 Class 14 Concept: INSTRUCTION IN SPATIAL CONCEPTS and
Layering of Processes

Objectives: To instruct in concepts of space illusion and to develop technical understanding and
skill by by exploring mixed media to create multiple layers of visual information.

Process: Studio Practice - Continue work on Problem 2

Individual Conferences on Style of Favorite Artists, as needed.   

Studio Practice: In-class work-time on Problem 2. 


Design Book Assignment: Practice the Compositional Structures: DIAMOND and ANGULAR
DOMINANT 
- 3 pages each.  Work with color strategy/color schemes such as duad and
triad on each page.  During Week 10 finish a minimum of seven pages during class sessions and
as homework.
 


 Wednesday, March 16 – Sections 015, 025

Class 15 Concept: Problem 2 Analyzing Style/Favorite Artist        

Objectives: To develop compositional and technical skill by working with art media.  To interpret
styles of art, select image fragments, and create an original artwork related to style preference,
using mixed media and layering of transparent and opaque processes.

Process: Continue the development of a composition in the style of your favorite artist, utilizing
mixed media such as Drawing, Rubbings, Painting, Photomontage, Collage, and/or xerography.  


INTERNET RESEARCH and READING ASSIGNMENT: Do a search on "Space"


 

WEEK 11 –  March 21 - 25, 2005

Monday, March 21 – Sections 015, 025

Class 16 - Monday, March 21 - Section 015, 025  

Concept:  Analyzing Style: A Favorite Artist - PRELIMINARY GROUP CRITIQUE

Objectives: To develop compositional and technical skill by working with art media.  To interpret styles of
art, select image fragments, and create an original artwork related to style preference, using mixed media
and layering of transparent and opaque processes.

Process: Continue Problem 2 in class; PRELIMINARY CRITIQUE during 3rd class hour


ASSIGNMENT: Continue Problem 2 out-of-class, to complete for the final critique at the next
class session.
 


Design Book Assignment: Practice the Compositional Structures:  CURVILINEAR DOMINANT and
CANTILEVER 
- 3 pages each.  Practice at least two color schemes of your choice.  During
Week 11 complete a minimum of seven pages during class sessions and as homework.


          INTRODUCTION TO RESEARCH ASSIGNMENT (Preparing for Problem 4): 

Determine the country of origin (or geographical region) of your ancestors.  Through library or
Internet research, select artworks representative of that culture, or its styles of art.  The artist
or artists you choose should be related to your ethnicity, family heritage, or place of family origin.
You will need to bring to class examples of the artworks you choose.  In your Design Book notate
the facts about each artist you choose (list artist, date, title of artwork, and other notes relating
to the study guide History Worksheet).  Discussion.


 

Class 17 - Wednesday, March 23 - Section 015, 025

Concept: Analyzing Style: A Favorite Artist

Objectives: To develop compositional and technical skill by working with art media.  To interpret styles of
art, select image fragments, and create an original artwork related to style preference, using mixed media
and layering of transparent and opaque processes.
To understand the use of dynamic visual devices in
artworks. 
To assess image qualities during a group critique.

Process: First hour, final work on Problem 2; Second-third hours: FINAL CRITIQUE OF PROBLEM 2

artdesign18.jpg (44448 bytes)

 

 

 


Student Examples of Problem 2

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WEEK 12 - March 28 - April 1, 2005

Wednesday, March 30 - Section 015, 025

Class 18 -  Concept:  INSTRUCTION IN DEVELOPING COMPOSITIONAL DYNAMICS

Dynamic Visual Devices: Tension, Proximity, Continuity, Closure

Objectives: To develop skill in visual and verbal analysis of artworks and to develop technical skill with art
media.  To create a design illustrating the concepts of continuity, proximity, visual tension,
closure, and the illusion of shallow space, using equal amounts of black shapes and white shapes
(no grays, no colors) (Problem 3).

Instruction in the Visual Devices of Proximity, Continuity, Closure, and Tension.

Instruction in Figure-Ground Reversal.  Slide lecture on Figure/Ground relationships and examples.
Discussion.

Introduction to Problem 3: Creating Dynamic Shapes and Space: Figure/Ground Reversal.
Create a composition that uses figure/ground reversal to establish visual order as well as visual
ambiguity.  Give the composition variety by having three points of varying relative dominance within it
 - primary, secondary, and tertiary visual attraction (visual hierarchy).  Lead the viewer through the
image, controlling what s/he looks at first, secondly, and thirdly.  Think in terms of focal point,
visual movement, spatial illusion, and maintaining the interest of the viewer.
Size 8"x8" on 14"x 14-1/2" mat.  Discussion of examples and practice in class.

Technical Objectives:  The finished work is to show: Equal quantities of Black and White shapes;
Spatial Illusion; Continuity; Proximity; Closure; Visual Tension; Visual Hierarchy.

*****Advice for creating compositional dynamics/figure-ground reversal:

When working with black and white, think Ying and Yang, to create a 50%-50% balance of black
and white elements.
Think of figure and background in visual competition to create an ambiguity of dominance between
foreground and background.  When you cannot tell if you are creating a black image on a white
background, or a white image on a black background, you have succeeded in creating a figure-
ground reversal.  Employ design strategy to lead the viewer’s eye through THREE elements of
dominance in a specific order to create visual hierarchy – a primary focal area, a secondary focal
area, and a tertiary focal area.  Create spatial illusion through visual complexity by alternating a
directional pattern within your design.  (see examples)***** 

Figure-Ground Space Illusion is achieved by any of the following techniques:

1.  Change in size of pattern elements.

2.  Change in alignment of pattern elements.

3.  Change in direction of pattern elements.

4.  Change in view of pattern elements.

5.  Change in overlapping of pattern elements.

6.  Change in bending or curving of pattern elements.

7.  Change in texture of pattern elements.

8.  Addition of shadow.

 


Design Book Assignment: Practice the Compositional Structures:  TWO CENTERS and the BRIDGE 
  - 3 pages each.  Practice at least two color schemes of your choice.
During Week 12 complete a minimum of seven pages during class sessions and as homework.


WEEK 13 – April 4 - 8, 2005

Monday, April 4 – Sections 015, 025

Class 19 Concept: INSTRUCTION IN DEVELOPING COMPOSITIONAL DYNAMICS

Objectives: Introduction to Problem 3: To develop skill in visual and verbal analysis of artworks and to
develop technical skill with art media.  To create a design illustrating the concepts of continuity,
proximity, visual tension, closure, and the illusion of shallow space, using equal amounts of black
shapes and white shapes (no grays, no colors).

Instruction in the Visual Devices of Proximity, Continuity, Closure, and Tension.

Process: Continue Problem 3 in class

Individual Conferences on Problem 3   

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Student Examples of  Problem 3

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Recommended Artists to Research for Problem 3: Hans Baldung Grien, Stupified/Bewitched Groom, 1544;
Jacques-Louis David, Oath of the Horatii, 1784;  M. C. Escher (any graphic works, circa 1922-1968)
  www.mcescher.com  ; Max Ernst, Two Children are Threatened by a Nightingale, 1924; Rufino Tamayo,
Man Contemplating the Firmanent
, 1944; Joseph Kosuth, One and Three Chairs, 1965; David Hockney,
The Splash
, 1966; Victor Vasarely (Dynamic Optical Art
designs), 1960s; Bridget Riley (Dynamic Optical
Art designs), 1960sInternet search: "Figure-Ground Reversal," "Tessellations," and "Optical Illusion." 


Design Book Assignment: Practice the Compositional Structures: - The CRUCIFORM and the L – SHAPE
-
3 pages each, with subject matter relating to Problem 4.  Practice at least two color schemes of your choice.
During Week 1
3 finish a minimum of seven pages during class sessions and as homework.
     

Wednesday, April 6 – Sections 015, 025

Class 20 Concept: Studio Practice - Problem 3: Complete Figure/Ground Reversal - Introduction to Problem 4: Self-Representation

Objectives: To create a design illustrating the concepts of continuity, proximity, visual tension,
closure, the illusion of shallow space, and areas of emphasis by using equal amounts of black shapes and
white shapes (no grays, no colors), by working with the art medium of collage or by direct cutting of shapes.

Process: First hour: work on figure-ground reversal composition in class; Second hour: FINAL CRITIQUE:
            Figure-Ground reversal composition
; Third hour: Introduction to Problem 4: Self-Representation (due April 27);

 
            Distribution of Take-Home Final Exams (due April 27)

Objectives of Problem 4: Self-Representation: To create a self-representation that is more than a self-portrait.
To develop technical and compositional skills .To instruct in methods of visual symbolism and communication
to create meaningful artworks. 
To
design with personally meaningful information combined with appropriated
design or image fragments.
  To create a mixed media composition. 

Process: In Problem 4, consider how you can DESCRIBE yourself, as well as how you can REVEAL, CONCEAL,
and TRANSFORM yourself through imaginative application of design elements and principles.  Study tesselation
to understand how imaginative pattern can describe and express yourself.  Through DESIGN and COMPOSITION
you can select the best ideas and concepts of both the past and the present to make a special image of yourself.

You will create a self-representation that may include segments of published art images or decorative designs
that relate to family heritage and your your personal characteristics and interests.

This problem may utilize Appropriation (1980s-present), an art concept and movement with emphasis on
"borrowing."  It is an eclectic creative process in which a new work is created by taking a pre-existing image
(or multiple images, or parts thereof) from another context (art history, advertising, the media), and combining
the appropriations with new images and ideas presented in a different context. The use of Appropriation Art is
widespread worldwide (especially in computer-generated imagery), but remains legally controversial.  To avoid
potential legal ramifications, appropriated imagery must not be a direct copy or imitation of the original in the
same scale and medium.  A new work, significantly different from the original, must evolve during the creative
process.

You are to create a life-size portrait of yourself to include portions of imagery related to your cultural heritage.
Did your ancestors immigrate to the United States?  If so, from what country on which continent did they come?
Assignment:
Research styles of art from that geographic area.

Research Strategy: After determining your cultural heritage, pick one or more historic paintings, artworks,
or decorative designs that are representative of your cultural heritage.  Choose works based upon pattern,
interesting composition, or subject matter depictions of your personal interests. Try to find an example with
unusual or effective use of color.  You are to complete personal research, and find cultural examples at the
library or on the Internet, as homework.  Bring books containing images to class.

Be prepared to discuss your choices of artists and to provide facts on the paintings you select by
completing a "History Worksheet" in your Design Book.

SLIDE EXAMPLES and DISCUSSION.  A class discussion and personal research at the library
or on the Internet will assist you in this selection and design process.  Conduct a "self portrait"
search on the Web for some examples.


Recommended Artists to Research for Problem 4: Albrecht Durer, Self-Portrait with a Sprig
of Eryngium
, 1483;
Vincent Van Gogh, Self-Portrait with Bandaged Ear, 1889; Marianne Von
Werefkin, Self-Portrait, 1908;
Egon Schiele, Self-Portrait, 1910; Ernst Ludwig Kirchner,
The Drinker (Self-Portrait), 1910; Ernst Ludwig
Kirchner, Self-Portrait with Model, 1915;
Erich Heckel, Man on a Plane, 1917; Frida Kahlo, Diego and I, 1949;
Cindy Sherman,
Untitled Film
Still, 1978; Cindy Sherman, Self-Portrait, 1983
.  Internet Search: "Self Portrait
images"

The compositional structure to be used in this problem is of your choice.  As you think about ways to DESCRIBE, REVEAL, CONCEAL, and TRANSFORM yourself in this image, consider the opportunity to present aspects of your Past, Present, and Future in the manner of structures you select.  Can you
achieve this objective on a single panel or would multiple panels be better?

Example of diptych (two panels):

image001.gif (2448 bytes)

             A triptych involves three panels.

            Example

       of                     PAST               PRESENT          FUTURE

   Triptych:             (1st Panel)       (2nd Panel)         (3rd Panel)

 

Other variations of a single panel or multiple panels may be used in this problem.  Within any panel, multiple structures must be used to assure both layering of processes and the layering of information about yourself. 

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To begin thinking about the content of Problem 4, consider these

Aspects of Self-Representation...

Making art is about harnessing creative energy.  Creating a self-portrait is a self-discovery project involving
the creation of an image involving physical likeness, aspects of your personality, and gender considerations.
It should be more imaginative than a simple head and shoulders portrayal of yourself.

After you have researched your family heritage and reflected upon cultural influences on your life, think about
the origin of your surname to provide clues to symbols that may effectively represent your heritage, and by
extension, your Self.

An example from my own experience is the name Navrat, which, according to distant relatives now living in
Slovakia and Russia, is a rare name on this earth. It has ancient, linguistic meaning as follows: In Bohemian,
Navrat
means "to return" or "to come again." In Russian, it means "gatekeeper." A comparison of these
definitions allows me to imaginatively contemplate my roots and to wonder about metaphysical phenomena
such as destiny and reincarnation. Do I have a destiny related to the origin and occupations of my ancestors?
As a lifelong teacher, I have helped thousands of students gain access to understanding and realize their
personal dreams and ambitions. Is this type of "gate keeping" merely coincidence, or was it preordained?

Research your own name and ancestors to provide clues to your own identity and potential access to
personal understanding.  Research styles of art and craft relating to your heritage.  In addition, take a
personal inventory of your strengths and weaknesses, your likes and dislikes, your successes, your joys
and sorrows, and your dreams and aspirations for the future.

Objective: To communicate to others beyond yourself an orderly portrayal of yourself and your attributes,
involving:

A. Physical likeness.  How do you appear to others?  You must include a life-size representational
portrayal of yourself (in a large scale within the picture plane). It can be based on a photograph of you,
but respect the following caveats:

1. Avoid a symmetrical composition of face or figure. Near-symmetry or asymmetry is more
imaginative.  Symmetry is too often compositionally boring.  Any portrayal of nudity is OK.
You must portray a part of yourself as representational art, such as a portion of your face,
head and shoulders, or parts of your body, from a perspective other than frontal symmetry.
Provide enough detail about yourself to be recognizable as You.

2. Avoid an allover style of expressionistic abstraction of face, body, or its parts. A wildly
expressionistic image is angst-ridden, may not have widespread meaning, and may have
too much potential to be excessively chaotic.   Any other expressionistic mark-making
within the picture plane is encouraged.

B. Psychic likeness.   How do you act?  And why?  In the early 20th century, Sigmund Freud
studied both conscious and unconscious human behavior and postulated that the human brain
operates on three levels of energy: Ego, Id, and Superego.  He identified, beyond the basic animal
instincts to seek food and avoid pain, two sources of psychic energy which he called "drives:"
aggression and libido.  "Libido" (Id) encompasses sexuality but also has a more expansive
meaning involving the desire for stimulation and achievement.  The key to his theory is that these
were unconscious drives, shaping our behavior without the mediation of our waking minds.  These
drives surface only in our dreams, and their meaning is heavily disguised when attempts are made
to interpret them.

Recently neuroscience has confirmed that Freud was correct in that the roots of these drives is in
the limbic system, a primitive part of the brain that operates mostly below the horizon of
consciousness.  Psychology now categorizes these drives, also known as emotions, as Rage,
Panic, Separation Distress, Lust, and Seeking (a variation on libido).  These drives or emotions
are primitive brain circuits that control how we respond to our environment.  Rage, Panic, and
Separation Distress seem to contribute to negative human behavior.  Lust is a drive to seek
pleasure, and may or may not contribute to negative behaviors.  

"Seeking" seems to be a drive to seek pleasure and meaning.  Only Seeking seems to contribute
to positive human behavior. The seeking drive, although it originates in the limbic system like the
others, seems to be the only one involving parts of the forebrain, the seat of higher mental functions.

Seeking is a brain function located near the cortex known as the ventral tegmental area, which in
human lies just above the hairline.  When you unconsciously have an urge to rub your forehead,
what are you seeking?  The "Seeking" emotion, then, is what keeps us guessing and going
about the purpose of our lives.  The "Seeking" drive is especially strong in creative personalities.

Human consciousness makes order out of chaos by: Sensing, Thinking, Feeling, and Willing.
Artists do the same in visual problem-solving.
    
        

Ego.  1. The self, especially as distinct from the world and other selves.  2. Psychoanalysis.
The personality component that is conscious, most immediately controls behavior, and is most
in touch with external reality.  3. a. Self-love; egotism.  b. Self-confidence; self esteem. 

Id.  The division of the psyche associated with instinctual impulses and demands for immediate
satisfaction of primitive needs.

Superego.  The division of the human psyche that develops by the incorporation of the perceived
moral standards of the community, is mainly unconscious, and includes the conscious.    

 Why do you want to do stuff?  What are you seeking?    What do you want to do?  

Suggestions:  Portray aspects of your personality, soul and spirit. Consider your positive attributes
more than your negative attributes. What are your psychological strengths and characteristics?
What is your passion in Life? What is the extent of your spirituality? On a less
serious note, you may use humor, contrast or exaggeration.  If appropriate, you may explore
psychic phenomena such as a Psyche knot, a visual psychodrama, or a psychological moment.
What about taboos? Do you want to portray something controversial? If so, why or why not? In
any event, try to balance your wonderful attributes with your fears and uncertainties.

C. Gender.  How does your gender contribute to your view of Life and possibilities in life?  Portray
aspects of your gender and sexuality. When you consider your sexuality, think positively, not
negatively. Think nude, not naked.  Besides your face, what parts of yourself could you portray
nude? "Nude" is natural, while "naked" implies something puritanically sinful. American culture
is permeated with vestiges of 19th century Victorian thought toward sexuality, resulting in sexual
inhibition and pleasure-anxiety in many individuals. Think true love, not sexual anxiety or lust.

"Sexual energy is the life force made manifest. It is the ultimate creative drive that inspires and
animates us," according to Stella Resnick, Ph.D, a sexuality researcher. Does this mean that
sexual energy propels creative energy?  If it does, your imagination resides in your sexuality, and
that is wonderful energy. Beyond your interest in physical sex, how do you picture your natural,
sexual self? Try to be honest. You may abstract the concept of gender (exaggerate,
re-arrange, and/or simplify) by design. You may depict structural, functional, and/or behavioral
characteristics of yourself - your outsides, or insides, or both.

Technical REQUIREMENTS

The design challenge is to visually relate the multiple compositional structures you utilize through use of the
Elements of Design Structure (especially color, shape, value, and texture),  and the Principles of Design
Organization (especially space and contrast), and the Visual Forces (closure, continuity, proximity, and
tension).

Your image involves the creation of both representational space and abstract space, thus the use of light,
illumination, shadow, and value structure is to be emphasized.  You are encouraged to develop space in
three ways: surface space, shallow/deep space illusion, and advancing space (illusion in front of the picture
plane).  When you do this, you will be combining Representational, Abstract, and Non-objective subject
matter in one artwork.  When you do this, you are communicating with others on an intellectual level, an
emotional level, and a sensuous level. 

Use mixed media, involving drawing, collage, painting, xerography, and transfers.  You must use
texture,
some figure-ground dynamics, extreme contrast, and the visual forces of closure,
tension, proximity
, and continuity.

Emphasis must be placed on strong design and use of effective coloration.  Size of the composition
should allow a life-size portrayal, no smaller than 14" x 18."  Your composition may be mounted on a gray
or black mounting board (which you must purchase), with appropriate margins around the image.

Color is emphasized.  You must use variations of chroma, value, and hue in your design strategy.
Scale is important.  Pattern may be important to you.

You must create an image with both dominate and subordinate areas of design.  Do not place equal
visual emphasis throughout your design, because an equal emphasis on everything is insensitive and
chaotic.  An example of what not to do would be to scatter photographs of yourself and your good friends
throughout the picture plane.  Be very selective when using photographs of your family and friends.  Avoid
a random scrapbook look. Strategy: Think of combining more than one basic compositional structure to
create layers of visual information.

Summary of Technical Objectives/Emphases: Compositional Structure: one or more panels, any panel
must utilize multiple design structure shapes; Media: Mixed; Processes: many layers; Color Properties:
Chroma, Value Contrast; Space Illusion: light/shadow effects, shallow and deep space, illumination,
transparency (check out this website:   www.terrasight.net ); Visual Effects: both subtle and dynamic

TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS – Problem 4 

Problem 4 represents a final test of understanding and application of the fundamentals of art. 

1.      COMPOSITIONAL STRUCTURE – use of one or more panels, each subdivided into shapes that
create any of the design structures studied in the course.  Use of overlapping multiple structures
is required because this planning assures layering of processes 

2.      MIXED MEDIUMS – any combination of drawing, collage, painting, transfers, etc. 

3.      CONTENT – life-size self-portrait, self-representation applied in dominant and subordinate areas of
the composition 

4.      USE OF DESIGN ELEMENTS – (all) point, line, shape, value, texture, color 

5.      USE OF DESIGN PRINCIPLES – (all) Harmony (rhythm and repetition) Variety (contrast and
elaboration), balance, movement, proportion, dominance/emphasis, economy, space 

6.      USE OF VISUAL FORCES – (all) visual tension, proximity, continuity, closure 

7.      VISUAL EFFECTS – figure-ground shape dynamics, extreme contrast using light and
illumination to create space illusion, transparency, color chroma emphasis, texture, pattern

8.      OBJECTIVES – visual unity, color harmony, and beauty

 

CREATIVE PROCESS:

RECEIVE DESIGN PROBLEM – understand problem and goals; ask questions 

RESEARCH PROBLEM – collect data, review similar solutions by others 

ORGANIZE RESEARCH DATA – review project goals; set priorities; prioritize goals, facts and features 

CREATE THUMBNAILS – experiment; take design risks; brainstorm possibilities 

RENDER LAYOUTS – select and reduce possible solutions; recreate best, most diverse thumbnails at
actual size; solve objectives of problem 

CRITIQUE and REVISE – evaluate  solution; combine successful sections of several layouts; keep what
works and improve what doesn’t 

COMPLETE FINAL DESIGN – tightly execute the best design; watch craftsmanship; mount or present
carefully

MORE CREATIVE SUGGESTIONS: Review the steps in the Design Process.  Take a personal inventory
of yourself  - your family, your cultural heritage, interests, and past experience. Write notes about yourself.
Think about symbols of your Self, presented by narrative images - enlargements, blow-ups, parts that seem
to extend beyond the edges of your design. Think about about your ego, your id, and your superego - what is
valued and what isn't about your self?  Think about your dream images, distortions, anthropomorphizing
something that represents an aspect of your personality.
Think about your loves and your lovers, and your best and worst life and death experiences. Sort through
a photographic history of yourself portraying your activities and interests and then choose a personal photograph
or two that you can transform through drawing or photocopying to incorporate into your design. Begin trial ideas
and compositional structures in your Design Book.  Work on 3 - 5 pages of thumbnail self-portraits, some simple,
some complex. Consider patterning some of the background area with tesselations designed with
imagery relating to your heritage and/or your personal characteristics and/or personal interests.
Select from the possibilities and reduce the imagery to an orderly statement of your self, orderly,
yet not overly complex.

Consider yourself a unique thing of beauty.

Work on this problem will be divided between development of background processes and development
of foreground processes.  The background development will emphasize a “layering of processes” to show
a “history of surface development,” or a "history of effort" to portray an attractive “paint quality.”  The
foreground process will emphasize the use of elaboration within the composition. Technical transitions
between foreground and background will complete the design process.


INTERNET RESEARCH and READING ASSIGNMENT: Do a search on "Visual Content and Style"


WEEK 14 – April 11 - 15, 2005

Monday, April 11  – Sections 015, 025

Class 21 Concept: COMPOSITE SELF-REPRESENTATION (Problem 4)

Objectives: To instruct in methods of visual symbolism and communication to create meaningful
artworks. 
To
design with personally meaningful information combined with appropriated image
fragments.  To create a mixed media composition. 
To develop subordinate background
structures and layering of processes with pigments
, collage, and other mixed media.

Process:  Work on Problem 4: Composite Self-Representation in class.   Determine the compositional
structure.  Determine value contrast throughout the composition.  Begin to develop the BACKGROUND
through
layering of processes, such as glazing and scumbling on gessoed paper or paper board, with
acrylic pigments and acrylic polymer medium.  Consider patterning some of the area with tesselations
designed with imagery relating to your heritage and/or your personal characteristics and/or personal
interests.

Video on Masks from Different Cultures.

Practice color mixing, painting, and value contrast.  The picture plane must be developed by
multiple processes from BACKGROUND to FOREGROUND. 


Design Book Assignment: Practice the Compositional Structures:   RADIAL - 3 pages,
plus 4 pages of Multiple Panel compositional structures (diptych, triptych, or other variations of Multiple
Panels.  During Week 14 finish a minimum of seven pages during class sessions and as homework relating
to self-representation.

Wednesday, April 13 – Sections 015, 025

Class 22  Concept: STUDIO PRACTICE: Developing Imagery from
                                   Background to Foreground

Objectives: To instruct in methods of visual symbolism and communication to create meaningful
artworks. 
To
design with personally meaningful information combined with appropriated image
fragments.  To create a mixed media composition. 
After developing subordinate background
structures and layering of processes with pigments and mixed media, then to continue to
develop foreground areas with dominant subject matter.

Process:  Work on Problem 4: Composite Self-Representation in class.   Video on Tesselations.
After
completing multiple background structures and layering of processes, begin to develop the
foreground areas of dominant subject matter.  Practice color mixing, painting, and value contrast.
The picture plane must be developed by multiple processes from BACKGROUND to FOREGROUND. 

Suggested Background to Foreground Process Steps:

1.  Gesso the picture panel

2.  Develop glazing with acrylic polymer medium and minimal pigmentation to create
     transparent and translucent effects

3.  Develop scumbling with acrylic polymer medium and minimal pigmentation

4.       Develop background compositional structures on the panel

5.       Develop a range of value contrast on the panel.

6.   Develop additional layering of processes by alternating Warm Color and Cool Color
pigment (or collage layers) to develop color value contrast and color harmony

7.  Apply foreground life-size portrait

8.  Create both dramatic and subtle transitions between the background and foreground

9.  Apply all learning objectives relating to art fundamentals, as required 

WEEK 15 – April 18 - 22, 2005

 

 

Monday, April 18 – Sections 015, 025

Class 23  Concept: Studio Practice: Developing Transitions in Space 

Objectives: To instruct in methods of visual symbolism and communication to create meaningful
artworks. 
To
design with personally meaningful information combined with appropriated image
fragments.  To create a mixed media composition, possibly including
image transfer processes to
develop foreground imagery over background imagery. 

Process: Work on Problem 4: Composite Self-Representation.  Create the background with
multiple layers of painting, collage, and/or photomontage.
 
It is expected that the imagery of your
heritage (art or craft) has previously been selected for work in this session, and that work on the
background compositional structure is nearly finished.
Continue to establish a background layering of processes.  Begin to develop foreground imagery
with mixed media (transfers, collage, painting, drawing, etc.). 
 

Individual Conferences on Composite Compositions.


Design Book Assignment: Practice the Compositional Structures.  During week 15 complete
7 pages of structures and subjects of your choice in class and as homework.  
 


INTERNET RESEARCH and READING ASSIGNMENT:  Do a search on " bas relief 3-D Art


 

 

Wednesday, April 20  - Sections 015, 025

Class 24 Concept: Studio Practice - COMPOSITE SELF-REPRESENTATION

 

Objectives: To instruct in methods of visual symbolism and communication to create
meaningful artworks. 
To
design with personally meaningful information combined with appropriated
image fragments.  To create a mixed media composition. 
To continue work on structural elements, 
composition, and color effects.
  

Process: In-class work on Problem 4.  Development of foreground imagery in mixed media.
Practice with mixed media to relate foreground with background and to develop visual connections
between the layers of space.  Develop spatial variety by applying the Law of Backgrounds and apply
Emphasis by utilizing color chroma.

Individual Conferences on Composite Compositions.


  

WEEK 16 – April 25 - 29, 2005 - Last Week of Classes

 

Monday, April 25 – Sections 015, 025

Class 25  Concept: Studio Practice - COMPOSITE SELF-REPRESENTATION: PRELIMINARY CRITIQUE.

 

                       

Objectives: To instruct in methods of visual symbolism and communication to create meaningful
artworks. 
To
design with personally meaningful information combined with appropriated image
fragments.  To create a mixed media composition. 
To develop both subtle and dynamic
transitions between the background and foreground imagery. 

Process: Work on Problem 4 in class.  Develop areas of closure, tension, continuity, and proximity
that complete both dramatic and subtle transitions between background and foreground.
Successfully incorporate the technical requirements of the problem.

Individual Conferences on Self-Representation, as needed. 

Last Hour: PRELIMINARY CRITIQUE OF PROBLEM 4


Design Book Assignment: Practice the Compositional Structures: During Week 16 finish a
minimum of seven pages, using compositional structures and subjects of your choice, during
class sessions and as homework.
                       


 

 

Wednesday, April 27 - Sections 015, 025 - LAST CLASS MEETING

Class 26  Concept: Studio Practice - COMPOSITE SELF-REPRESENTATION: FINAL CRITIQUE  

 

 Objectives: To instruct in methods of visual symbolism and communication to create meaningful
artworks. 
To
design with personally meaningful information combined with appropriated
image fragments.  To create a mixed media composition. 
To assess visual qualities of
Problem 4 during a group critique.  
  

Process: First hour, complete Problem 4 in class.  Continue to create foreground/background transitions
to create coherence, order, and areas of beautiful surface craft. 
Continue layering of processes in mixed
media.
  Prepare Problem 4 for presentation.  Second and third hours:

FINAL CRITIQUE OF PROBLEM 4   


 

Objective: To prepare Problem 4 for evaluation.

TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS and GRADING CHECKLIST – Problem 4 

Problem 4 represents a test and demonstration of understanding and application of the fundamentals of art. 

1.       __ CREATIVE CONTENT – self-portrait, self-representation, applied in dominant and subordinate areas
of the composition

        __ Research of Heritage and Steady Effort 

2.       COMPOSITIONAL STRUCTURE / FORM STRUCTURE – use of multiple design structures within the
picture plane (any combination of design structures studied throughout the course).  Use of overlapping
multiple structures assures layering of processes and spatial qualities, including both bold and subtle areas

___ One or More Panels

___ Multiple Design Structures

___ Mixed Media

___ Layering of Processes

___ Effective use of Design Elements (especially shape, value, texture, color)

___ Effective use of Design Principles (especially Harmony, contrast, proportion, space, movement,
emphasis)

___ Effective use of Visual Forces (tension, continuity, proximity, closure)

___ Technical Processes (skill, craftsmanship, execution, care) 

3.       VISUAL EFFECTS

___ Figure-ground shape dynamics

___ Transparency, light and illumination

___ Color Chroma emphasis 

4.       OBJECTIVES

___ Visual Unity

___ Color Harmony

___ Sense of Beauty

 

Student Examples of Problem 4: Self-Representation

artdesign13tn.jpg (15424 bytes)

artdesign22.jpg (47893 bytes)

Objective: To complete course objectives and requirements.

Process: Summary of Course.

Process: Turn in Design Book, Problem 4, the Final Exam, and any do-overs for final grading.

DESIGNBOOK/JOURNAL DUE FOR FINAL GRADING - The book must be finished with a minimum of 105 pages,
each well considered and designed with mixed media processes.

Problem 1: Design Book Final Grading Criteria: Three grades will be determined, as follows:
(1) Quantity/Practice - 105 pages = A; Number every seventh page in your design book and also
indicate the total number of pages you have completed by now.

(2) Exploration/Assignments - including assignments of: DIAMOND, ANGULAR DOMINANT,
CURVILINEAR DOMINANT, CANTILEVER, TWO CENTERS, THE BRIDGE, RADIAL, MULTIPLE
PANEL (3 pages each structure), CHOICE (14 pages), and written notes on family heritage and
planning of Problem 4.  Label each assignment.  Completion of all assignments = A; and
(3) Quality/Care - relating to craft, personal expression, and aesthetics, this grade usually
ranges from A to D, depending upon artistic "quality."

WEEK 16 – May 2 - 6 – FINAL EXAM WEEK

 FINAL WEEK – Design is complete and does not meet.


 Study Guide 

Art 121 Design 1 -2D

ART FUNDAMENTALS

THE STUDY GUIDE AND GLOSSARY FOR DESIGN I CAN BE VIEWED AT:
  www.usd.edu/~dnavrat 

You can access this information on the Internet for study and testing purposes at any time.

This study material is meant to augment the class sessions, and is not a substitute for class attendance.

Professor Navrat

STUDY GUIDE

Imagining Perfection to Perfect Imagination

The Foundation Program of the art department coordinates fundamental educational goals and
information among various instructors. Each instructor presents similar information in dissimilar
ways, with some uniformity desirable, but little uniformity intended. Here I lend interpretation to
a basic outline of artistic concepts, concern, and terminology.

My intent is to make the study of art reasonable, sensible, logical, fun and meaningful for
beginners. As an art student soon discovers, most of Art (like everything else based largely upon
emotion) is debatable.  Even after teaching this course nearly 110 times over the span of my
career, the information continues to evolve each semester as a consequence of experiencing
what is workable with my students, and as a means to mentor graduate teaching assistants
(so that GTA's will understand there is more need to perfect the wheel than to reinvent it).
Professor Navrat

DEFINITIONS OF ART 

  1. Art is the conscious production or arrangement of sounds, colors, forms, movements or
    other elements in a manner that affects the sense of beauty; specifically, the production
    of the Beautiful in a graphic (2D) or plastic (3D) medium.
  2. Art is human effort to imitate, supplement, alter, or counteract the work of Nature,
    including the Universe.
  3. Art is the study of visual perception and activities.
  4. Art is the product of visual perception and activities.
  5. Art is the process of visual perception and activities directed toward the production of
    objects of art.
     
  6. Art is uncommon, not common.
  7. Art is not ordinary, but extraordinary.
  8. Art appeals to the mind, the senses, and the spirit.
  9. Art elevates the mind, the senses, and the spirit.
  10. Art is easy for kids.
  11. Art is joy made visible.
  12. Art is hard for adults.
  13. Art is pain made visible.
  14. Art takes time and care.
  15.  Art is a good idea made visible.
  16.  Art is a sincere emotion made visible.
  17.  Art is not artificial or phony.  
  18.  Art is the unknown and previously not witnessed. 
  19.  Art is high quality of conception or execution, as found in works of beauty.
  20.  Art is aesthetic value.
  21.  Art is any field or category of art, such as visual art, theatre, music, dance, or literature.
  22.  Art is a nonscientific branch of learning, one of the liberal arts.
  23.  Art is a system of principles and methods employed in the performance of a set of
    activities, such as the art of building.
  24.  Art is a trade or craft that applies a system of principles and methods, such as
    pursuing the baker’s art
    .
  25.  Art is a specific skill in adept performance conceived as requiring the exercise of
    intuitive faculties that cannot be learned solely by study, such as the art of writing letters.
  26.  Art employs artful devices, stratagems, and tricks.
  27.  Art employs artfulness, contrivance, and cunning.
  28.  Art is visually illustrative material.
  29.  Art can be made from artifacts, including art history.
  30.  Art is not crap.

INTRODUCTION

The making of art may be understood as an attitude encompassing both a process and a product
- an active process involving critical thinking, and a product of quality - a good idea made visible.
A product of Art, an art object, must link an artist with an audience. Art, then, is a word that
summarizes qualities of communication involving presentation, technique, integration, and message.

Design is concerned with the structure of effective communication in world art and with the structure
of the environment, the ultimate source of form. The course involves processes of selection and
reduction
to create visual order from chaos. A successful design must be distilled from innumerable
possibilities and choices. To explore the design process for problem-solving purposes, we apply the
following steps: (1) Recognize and accept a problem; (2) Analyze the problem; (3) Define the
problem; (4) Create Ideas; (5) Select/Reduce; (6) Implement; and (7) Evaluate.

Through the study of the components of a work of art - subject matter, form, and meaning
(content) - the student acquires a basis for imaginative interpretation and analytical evaluation of
all forms of two-dimensional and three-dimensional art. The interpretation and discussion of
historical and contemporary examples - exemplary forms of visual expression - facilitate learning.

Ability to interpret and discuss works of art is developed through experience with the components
of art, attitudes, prejudices, perception, and historical and contemporary examples.
Understanding is affected by exploration and practice with art media (tools and materials),
including drawing, painting, collage, photomontage, Xerography, and mixed media. Through
practical application, the ability to visually express ideas is developed. Emphasis is placed
throughout the course on the process of discovery and individual exploration.

An introduction to Art Fundamentals:

 

Four Complementary Languages: Verbal, Written, Mathematical, and Visual

Visual communication is learned indirectly through the means of verbal and written communication.
We first learn to speak, to count, then to draw, write, and to read. Communication occurs in a circular
manner from speaking to reading to writing to drawing to speaking.... In order for communication to
be successful, we must have some skills at converting our sensitivities and sensibilities into formal
languages -- verbal, written, mathematical, and visual.

Why Learn About Art?

By nature, the arts are intrinsically multicultural and international in scope. As artists, performers,
communicators, and scholars, we are committed to the diversity of human experience and truth
expressed in cultures past and present.  We are recorders of events and presenters of human
values transformed imaginatively. We deal sensibly with all of life and nature through ideas, images,
sounds, motion, and stories. We are the conscience and the hopefulness of humanity. We nurture
the young. We tend to the infirm and the grieving. We challenge the strong. We celebrate and
entertain. We keep sacred trusts. We represent fairness. We envision humane progress. These
are the collective strengths of the arts through all times.

We are thinking and feeling individuals. We learn about art in order to clarify and to account for our
experiences with life that are personally meaningful and worthy of record. We write about art in order
to clarify and to account for our responses to those experiences that interest or excite or frustrate us.
We learn to make art for the same reasons.
By either putting words or images on paper we have to take a second and third look at what is in
front of us and what is within us. By concentrating on what interests, excites, and frustrates us, we
learn a great deal about ourselves and our similarity to others. When we read about and see the art
and the artists of past civilizations we learn about the values and accomplishments of people since
the beginning of time. When we compare values and accomplishments we begin to set our own
standards. When we have some confidence in what we know to be true, we feel a need to share
that information with others -- we hope to communicate.

In order to effectively communicate with others, we must have the skills to think, to tell, to write,
to calculate, and to make images of what we can see, what we know to be true, and of what we
can imagine. It is what we can imagine that makes the future.

We learn to make art in order to express what we think and what we feel.

There is much joy in the freedom to make decisions, to have options and to exercise choice. The
purpose of education is to prepare each of us for the freedom to create our own life and to take
responsibility for our actions.

Instruction in art should contain no rules, formulas, or guarantees; however, it is predicated on
fundamental elements and principles that encompass a wide range of expression.

There should be some system to the instruction, but the "system" should be kept within
tolerances that permit discovery. Beyond a certain point, the more we attempt to be "systematic"
in art instruction, the more we miss the essential value of art. (We cannot prescribe feelings,
emotions, intelligence, or sensibility, and art is nothing if it lacks these qualities. We cannot
prescribe personality, and art is always recognized by the imagination of its maker.)

Art instruction, therefore, narrows down to a few simple procedures that are deceptively complex
in their application.  It always succeeds or fails with the sensitivity of the students and their capacity
for work. Student sensitivity feeds on the enthusiasm for exploration exhibited by the instructor.
An atmosphere of creative excitement is the most important element in providing meaningful art
instruction.

Teaching and learning require similar skills. A teacher is willing to share perceptions and
enthusiasms by leading students; however, there must always be a point at which the student
may take over the search for discovery -- a point at which the student becomes the teacher.

Students often think they are writing (or making art) for the teacher, but this is a
misconception; when you write (or make art) YOU are the teacher.
An essay on art (or
a work of art) is an attempt to help someone see the work as you see it, and an opportunity for
an observer to respond to your efforts.

Learning is linear. A teacher will take you down a line of thought and consideration until you are
capable of drawing your own conclusions and are capable of becoming your own teacher. At this
point, the communication that is education (teaching and learning) has been successful and you
are free to do as you please, reasonably and creatively.  Be willing to see where your natural
curiosity will lead you!

You must understand that most of the original thinking about art is in the art and not on it. The
joy of art is in its making and in its witness, and rarely in its description. Joy suffers in translation.
But talking and writing about art serves useful purposes:

1. Introduces you to art and artists of which you were previously unaware.

2. Throws light upon the relation of art to life, to science, economics, ethics, religion, history, and
all other subjects.

3. Illuminates the process of artistic "Making".

4. Shows you relationships between works of different ages and cultures, which you could never
have seen for yourself (because NO ONE ever knows enough and never shall).

5. Gives you a "reading" of a work, which increases your understanding of it.

6. Convinces you that you have undervalued an idea, author, artist, or a work because you had not
read carefully enough.

7. Provides you with information you can use to form your own judgments and to make your own
decisions.

To be critical in these ways emphasizes observing, showing, illuminating, and ruminating. A good
critic sees excellence as well as faults.

Critical analysis is, literally, a separating into parts in order to understand the whole. Analysis is a
process applied in thinking, talking, writing, calculating, and making art. To analyze is to consider
all conceivable aspects and characteristics of your subject by asking questions and organizing the
answers resulting from the inquiries.

A study of art begins with a few basic facts that have been agreeable over the centuries, and
awareness that art is a process as well as a product. We will first analyze the product as a means
of understanding the process. Our study actively involves Theory and Practice (explanation and
activity).

Major Components of a Work of Art: Subject Matter, Form, Meaning (Content)

PERCEPTION GUIDES COMPOSITION 

TWO BASIC LAWS OF VISUAL PERCEPTION APPLYING TO COMPOSITION
(
Physiological not Sociological):

1. The eye, as an extension of the mind, to make order out of chaos, automatically relates
things of similar character.

2. The eye is attracted to unique forms in a visual system.

These two laws outline how a vital and dynamic living system, a human being, copes with visual reality by
instinctively tapping into innate survival skills: (1) Humans seek visual order within the chaos of reality to
avoid confusion and potential physical harm. (2) Humans seek unique visual features to enliven and vitalize
an otherwise boringly similar or uniform environment.

From these ideas we can discern two perceptual states: confusion (consistent unpredictability) and
boredom
(consistent predictability), neither state of which is usually acceptable to human beings for an
extended time period. These laws apply not only to the visual environment, but also to other choices we
make in life, such as our preferences for music, food, places, activities, and people.

Psychologically, socially, and artistically, our "cravings" may be based as much in deficiency as in desire.
If we are deficient in understanding, we desire to remedy that deficiency through study and practice. If we
desire something strongly, we will manage to achieve it through persistence and perseverance.

As we practice our art and it is deficient, we desire to improve it. It is relatively easy to recognize visual
deficiency in artwork, just as it is easy to recognize artwork of beauty and elegance.  In all that we do
reasonably, we seek a healthy balance (but not a boring equilibrium without relief).

 

When we first consider any work of art, we must ask ourselves three very important questions:

1. What is it about? (SUBJECT MATTER)

2. How is it made? (FORM)

3. What does it mean? (CONTENT OR MEANING)

It is the answers to these questions (revealed through theory and practice) that will form a basis for
understanding and appreciating any work of art. It is the repetitive and expanding search for these
answers, which becomes a formal study of art. A formal study of art (or of anything else) is nothing
more than a close look and thoughtful consideration extended over a period of time.

 

The Elements of Art Structure and Principles of Design Organization

A work of art draws attention to itself by the energy it transmits by the beauty of its unity. We are
drawn to a work of art that curiously fascinates us. The Chinese have created this underlying unity
by a manifesto set down fifteen centuries ago by Hsieh Ho. It consists of six guiding goals that
have unified Chinese artists and their work ever since:

1. Imbue the work with life and spirit.

2. Handle the brush with vigor - give inner strength to each line.

3. Be truthful in depicting objects.

4. Use color as it appears in nature.

5. Attend to harmony in composition and arrangement of the picture.

6. Endlessly copy and transcribe masters of the past.

Western cultures have followed similar principles and teachers now guide students in an integrated
manner based on combining these lasting influences.

Primary to the understanding of art and design is the matter of FORM. While criticism has many
avenues of approach, the most fundamental is, perhaps, FORMAL or FORMALIST CRITICISM.
This type of analysis is based on an understanding and application of the various formal elements
found in works of visual art.

To understand how to create underlying unity in a work of art, our study concentrates on the
dynamic interaction of the elements and principles of form organization. We begin to analyze and
practice with each descriptive word representing this dynamism. The first terms represent the
Elements of Art Structure: POINT (Pixel), LINE, SHAPE, VALUE, TEXTURE, and COLOR

 

The Fundamentals-You-Need-to-Know-To-Make-Art Diagram

When we first consider the making (or analysis of any work of art, We must ask ourselves three
very important questions: What is it about? (SUBJECT MATTER); What does it look like? (FORM);
What does it mean?  (CONTENT/MEANING). Subject matter, form, and meaning are essential
components of any work of art. A helpful diagram of the component FORM looks like this:

 

 

FORM
is the use of
The Elements of Art Structure:
Media:
Point, Line, Shape,
Value, Texture, Color
according to
art tools, materials,
techniques, processes
The Principles of Design Organization:
HARMONY
involving
RHYTHM - REPETITION
 

(in balance)

VARIETY
involving
CONTRAST - ELABORATION
employing

BALANCE

MOVEMENT

PROPORTION

DOMINANCE/EMPHASIS

ECONOMY

SPACE

combined in such a manner by ART DEVICES or VISUAL FORCES
representing the process of life or energy, such as
 

 

Tension, Proximity, Continuity, and Closure
to produce
Unity (Gestalt) / Beauty
(Resulting in a product of art that is meaningful in some way)




GLOSSARY OF TERMS RELATING TO FORM


 

ELEMENTS OF ART STRUCTURE - irreducible rudiments basic to the process of
making art, including

Point (Pixel)- a unit or individual detail which anticipates movement.  The pixel is the
basis of 20th Century visual technology.

Line - a solid row of points creating visual movement;

Shape - a two-dimensional, flat object bounded by an actual or implied line;

Value - the degree of lightness or darkness of color; its tone relative to a gray scale rated
one (black-the absence of light) through ten (white-light itself, the lightest value);

Texture- the visual or tactile surface characteristics and appearance of something;

Color - a phenomenon of light (as red, brown, pink, gray) or visual perception that enables
one to differentiate otherwise identical objects. The aspect of objects and light sources that
may be described in terms of hue, value (or lightness), and saturation for objects, and hue,
brightness
, and saturation for light sources.

PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN ORGANIZATION - fundamental ingredients used to organize
the elements of design structure, necessary to the process of making and of analyzing art, including:

HARMONY - the result of causing each emphatic feature of an artwork to show visual
connections with other features which causes them to be seen as integrated members of the
whole; harmony involves REPETITION and RHYTHM 

Repetition - the use of the same visual element a number of times in the same composition.
Repetition may accomplish a dominance of one visual idea, a feeling of harmonious
relationship, an obvious planned pattern, or a rhythmic movement

Rhythm - a continuance, a flow, or feeling of movement achieved by repetition of regulated
visual units; the use of measured accents

VARIETY -the quality or state of having differing parts creating visual interest; variety
involves CONTRAST and ELABORATION

Contrast - extreme differences; a juxtaposition of dissimilar elements (as color, tone, or
emotion) in a work of art

Elaboration - interesting fullness of detail, complexity, intricacy

BALANCE - a sensing of equilibrium in a work or art

MOVEMENT - the quality (as in a painting or sculpture) of representing or suggesting motion

PROPORTION - a sensing of harmonious relation of parts to each other or the whole

DOMINANCE/EMPHASIS - giving unique visual weight to one or more areas in composition

ECONOMY - the efficient and concise use of the elements of art

SPACE - in 2D art, illusions of depth throughout the picture plane; in 3D art, measurable,
physical mass.

 

Visual Forces / Visual Devices:

Tension - a sensing of parts in a composition threatening change

Proximity - closeness of elements in a composition which tend to form a subdivision, or group

Continuity - a unifying alignment of elements to create visual movement in a composition

Closure - the tendency of the viewer to complete a suggested shape or form

 

The Universal Goals of Designing and of Art-Making: ORDER and BEAUTY

UNITY - (ORDER, ONENESS, GESTALT) a sensing that all the parts of a composition are working
together and are necessary; cohesiveness; overall oneness; a basic aim of the process of making art

Gestalt - a sensing in a work of art that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts; instantaneous
recognition of significance; a sensing that the art work has meaning beyond its appearance

BEAUTY - combinations of qualities that cause delight or pleasure


Part 1: ASPECTS OF FORM

The ELEMENTS OF ART STRUCTURE

 

The PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN ORGANIZATION

 

Point (Pixel)

Harmony (Repetition and Rhythm)

Line

in balance with

Shape

Variety (Contrast and Elaboration)

Value

Balance   Movement  Proportion

Texture

Dominance / Emphasis

Color

Economy
Space (includes Mass, Volume)
 

COLOR. Since color is the most complex Element of Art an entire course is devoted to it at USD - 
Design II Color Study
. Special notes are presented here to guide understanding of the use and
handling of color during Design I Art Fundamentals. More comprehensive definitions of color
terminology are presented in the glossary.

COLOR WHEEL. A circular, two-dimensional model showing color relationships, originating from Sir
Isaac Newton’s bending of the straight array of Spectral Hues, into a circle.

COLOR HARMONY. A result of strategic, visual connections between and among colors (a variety
of hue, color value, and color chroma) used in a design or composition that causes an impression of
color integration, as opposed to color antagonism. Harmony is achieved by repetition of characteristics
that are the same or similar.

COLOR SCHEMES. Color schemes relate to the positions and relationships of hues on a color
wheel. Pre-selection of a color scheme for a design promotes strategic thought relating to color harmony.
Color schemes include, Analogous, Complement, Diad, Double-complement, Monochromatic,
Split-complement, Tetrad, and Triad. (See definitions in Glossary of Terms)

Objectives of a color scheme:

  1. Please the artist

  2. Be appropriate to the purpose and form

  3. Have variety and/or harmony

  4. Possess recognizable unity

HARMONIOUS HUES: hue groups which are six steps or less apart on either the warm or cool side
of the Munsell color circle, or are only three steps away from a key hue on either side.

CONTRASTING HUES: hue groups which are diametrically opposed – opposites - intermixed warm
and cool, or which are more than six steps from a key hue, on the Munsell Color Circle

HARMONIOUS VALUES: values four steps or less apart on the Munsell Value Scale

CONTRASTING VALUES: values more than four steps apart on the Munsell Value Scale

HARMONIOUS CHROMAS: chromas which all have the same degree of intensity, either weak,
medium, or strong

CONTRASTING CHROMAS: chromas which range in degree of intensity from weak to strong

 

Color Strategy: THE EIGHT BASIC COLOR ARRANGEMENTS 

1. HARMONIOUS HUES, HARMONIOUS VALUES, HARMONIOUS CHROMAS

2. HARMONIOUS HUES, HARMONIOUS VALUES, CONTRASTING CHROMAS

3. HARMONIOUS HUES, CONTRASTING VALUES, HARMONIOUS CHROMAS

4. HARMONIOUS HUES, CONTRASTING VALUES, CONTRASTING CHROMAS

5. CONTRASTING HUES, HARMONIOUS VALUES, HARMONIOUS CHROMAS

6. CONTRASTING HUES, HARMONIOUS VALUES, CONTRASTING CHROMAS

7. CONTRASTING HUES, CONTRASTING VALUES, HARMONIOUS CHROMAS

8. CONTRASTING HUES, CONTRASTING VALUES, CONTRASTING CHROMAS

 

Hints: Start simply, choose a key hue, avoid pure or tube colors (you must mix a lot, so always have
Red, Yellow, Blue, Black and white on your palette), analyze mixtures, compare, proportion hues
according to the Law of Areas (Law of Backgrounds), explore, have fun color mixing

 

VISUAL FORCES / VISUAL DEVICES

Tension Proximity Continuity Closure

SPATIAL DIMENSIONS OF ART

Shape / Form     Volume / Mass     Height / Elevation     Width / Breadth

Length / Depth    Thickness / Girth    Plan     Plane Section   

Time / Interval / Duration

TECHNIQUES TO CREATE SPATIAL ILLUSION

Perspective: atmospheric, linear, geometric, converging parallels, diminishing size relationships
(recessional space), sharp and diminishing detail.

Use of the elements of light (highlight, light tone, mid-tone, base tone, reflected light, and cast shadow.

Value contrasts.

Position within the picture plane.

Overlapping of shapes and/or forms.

Interpenetration of shapes and/or forms.

Fractional representation.

Transparency.

 

Fundamentally, the Elements of Art Structure are irreducible elements found in every work of visual art.
The Principles of Design Organization, when used with intelligence and sensitivity, can vitalize a work of
art by a dramatic, as well as subtle arrangement of the parts of a composition.  In a Formalist approach to
art, this effect is achieved by understanding and applying two basic laws of composition toward the two
basic aims of design - the creation of order and the creation of beauty.

When we begin to study varieties of compositional structure, construction of PATTERN shows us that
repetition creates precise order and considerable beauty through repetition of a common element such as
line, shape, texture, or color, commonly seen as a symmetrical form.  But unceasing repetition without
variation creates decoration with minimal emotional association, or decoration without expressive content;
thus, most artists utilize compositional structure beyond pattern, or limit pattern in an artwork in order to
work more dynamically with asymmetrical balance rather than symmetrical balance alone. 
An understanding of pattern construction leads to further creative investigation and variation of design
structures.

PRINCIPLES OF PATTERN CONSTRUCTION

 

PATTERN results from the repetition of an element or motif, thus any shape or line repeated often will
produce some form of pattern.  The role of pattern is surface decoration. It can be a vital part of physical
structure, integrating ornament with function, such as in weaving, knotting, braiding, and bricklaying.
While pattern is most often applied to utilitarian objects, pattern also forms aesthetic objects such as
painting, collage, and sculpture.

The system of distribution and the relative detail of the motif determine the relative complexity of a given
pattern, although complexity is no guarantee of quality.

Formal patterning, called allover pattern, requires even distribution achieved through regular, measured
intervals.  As decoration, it usually plays a subordinate role to function, as in architecture, textiles, crafts,
wallpaper, wall coverings, wrapping paper, tiles and mosaics. Formal patterning generally follows these
types of networks:

REPEAT PATTERN NETWORKS

          1. SQUARE     

2. BRICK

 

3.       HALF-DROP

 

4.       DIAMOND

5.       TRIANGLE


6.       OGEE - the ogee is derived from the diamond or lozenge, becoming a figure based on
the "S" curve.

The ogee network, either horizontal (like stretched fishnet) or vertical (like glass
Christmas ornaments) is characterized by graceful curvature of any dimension,
repeating formally or informally.  Below is a patterned variation of the ogee curve:



7.       HEXAGON


8.       SCALE

 

9.       CIRCLE



Any of these networks may be visible and obvious, such as checks, lattices, stripes, or plaids. Spaces
between lines are in fact shapes that may interlock or connect endlessly. Addition of additional elements
of design beyond line (add point, value, texture, and/or color), or diminishing size relationships, creates
beautiful complexity, variety, and richness of patterning.

In formal patterning, a pattern may exist both as surface and substance, to produce counterchange,
a figure-ground reversal (see definition of each term).

 

SINGLE MOTIF PATTERNS

Single motif patterns (based on a square, or a tree leaf, etc.) can possess great diversity by gradually
changing the size relationships of the single motif, thus creating spatial illusion, and by elaborating upon
the motif with additional elements of design beyond line and shape, thus creating variety and emphasis
through the use of value contrast, texture, or color variation.

 

IRREGULAR, RANDOM PATTERNS

Informal patterning, or random pattern, is first witnessed in Nature (see Golden Section and Fibonacci
numbers; study Chaos theory), usually found in fine art, and involves irregular intervals, leaving much to the
imagination, thus creating more visual excitement through variation. Fine artists are greatly influenced by
informal patterns derived from Nature which often involve irregular repetition of color as well as line and
shape. Areas of formal patterning may, of course, be added to informal patterning, or vice versa.

Pattern / VOCABULARY TERMS

COUNTERCHANGE – A figure-ground reversal resulting from the superimposition of a line or series of lines
on a shape or pattern. The lines, usually checker-like, form the boundaries for alternating colors, textures,
surfaces, or other elements.

DIAPER – A pattern or network of one or more repeating units, constructed in such a way that the outline
of each unit forms part of the outline of the neighboring unit. Also, a diaper is the process of producing or
laying out such a pattern.

FIGURE – A form or shape determined by outlines or exterior surfaces.

FIGURE-GROUND REVERSAL – A pattern or design with roughly equal quantities of two contrasting
colors, textures, or other elements, both of which may be perceived as either figure or background.

GRID – A regular network or pattern of (usually straight) lines used to correctly place a pattern on a surface.

INTERLACE – A design in which elements (usually linear) pass over and under each other, producing a
complex, woven effect.

INTERVAL – An area or space between recurring elements.

LOZENGE (parallelogram) – A four-sided equilateral shape whose opposing angles are equal.

MOTIF – A theme, or dominant recurring visual element, form, or subject.

NEGATIVE SPACE – The background, ground, or space in a composition not occupied by the figure, or
major elements.

NET LINES – The lines, visible or invisible, of any given network. Also, net lines create the skeleton of
a pattern.

NETWORK – A repeating combination of curved or straight lines. A network is the basic understructure
of all repeat patterns.
(See also Diaper. All networks are diapers, but many diapers are more complex than mere networks.)

PLACEMENT – The location or arrangement of the elements of a pattern.

POSITIVE SPACE – The space in a composition occupied by the figure, or major element(s).

REPEAT – A pattern composed of two or more identical elements, or units.

SCALE – Relative or proportionate size. Also, a figure formed by a network of overlapping circles.

UNIT – The figure that is the basic element of a pattern.

DesignSTRUCTURE

A Beginning Guide to Composition in Art  

Click on the above Design Structure link for an illustrated guide to basic design structures.

 

Design and composition requires practice Proportioning and layering shapes within the
picture plane.  To create the most aesthetically pleasing size relationships, scale, and the
positioning of intervals within a picture plane, a study begins with traditional understanding
of proportion in Nature, natural phenomena, and metaphysics.  Study the proportion of
shapes in Nature.  Study and practice the following two proportioning systems:

 

1.       The GOLDEN SECTION and the GOLDEN MEAN: Metaphysical Curiosity
or Universal Revelation?
 

Historical Background

    Most attempts to explain the origin of the Golden Section, its use in antiquity, during the Middle
Ages, the Renaissance, and into the 21st century trail off into legend, speculation, and metaphysical
or mathematical obscurity.
Some say it originated in Egypt, as one of several proportional systems used in their buildings,
statues, and paintings.  Others connect it more convincingly with the work of the Greek savants,
such
as Plato, and geometers, notably Pythagoras and Eudoxus, both of whom probably knew well
Egyptian achievements in architectural proportioning.

The Golden Section of a line and the Golden Section of an area appear to have been employed as
regulating devices in Greek architecture and in the designing of pottery as early as the 5th century
B.C.  The architects of the Parthenon (Ictinus, Calicrates, and the sculptor Phidias) seem to have
made use of an advanced understanding of Golden Section and Root – 5 proportions.   No one is
certain of Greek architects' plans for their most famous temples and buildings, such as the
Parthenon.  No one knows if they deliberately used the golden mean in their architectural plans,
or not.

    Euclid (a Greek geometer living about 300BC), in his treatise called "Elements," calls dividing a
line at the 0.6180399.. point : dividing a line in the extreme and mean ratio. This later gave rise
to the name golden mean.  This was the "mean and extreme ratio," according to the Greeks, while
it has been known in more recent times as the "divine proportion" and "golden section." There is some
confusion over the origin of the later term, the "Golden Section."    

    In 1509, Luca Paccioli authored a book called De Divina Proportione (The Divine Proportion).
It contains drawings made by Leonardo da Vinci of the 5 Platonic solids. It was probably Leonardo
da Vinci who first called it the sectio aurea (Latin for the golden section).

    In the 20th Century, the American mathematician Mark Barr used the Greek letter phi ( phi) to
represent the golden ratio (using the initial letter of the Greek Phidias who used the golden ratio in
his sculptures).  Another source attributes the term "Golden Section" to Johannes Kepler, who
believed it to be one of the most beautiful constructions in the mathematical world.

 

Fully Entering the TWILIGHT ZONE!

 

    Recently, researchers (ELTRAD: Extremely Low Frequency Research and Development) detected
electromagnetic signals from space with a frequency of 1.618033, which is the value of phi (The
Golden Ratio.  “These signals appear with no relationship with any known source.  They are not
related to solar anomalies or any known weather pattern.”
Source:
www.goldennumber.net/energy/htm.

           

    Today, mathematicians also use the Greek letter tau ( t), the initial letter of tome, which is the
Greek word for "cut" as well as phi.   From an aesthetic perspective, the golden ratio or golden mean
is one of the most beautiful quarks of the mathematical universe because of its combination of
elegance and simplicity.

Legend: Eudoxus’ Stick Trick

During the 3rd century B.C. it is said that Eudoxus carried with him a stick – probably a walking stick
 – which he asked friends to divide at whatever point they sensed to be the most pleasing. More often
than not, much to his delight, they chose the point of the Golden Section. (Do not try this at home(!),
as I fear that the American educational system, over the past fifty years, with its insistence upon
left-brain logic and equal treatments, has destroyed much of natural curiosity in the vast majority of
students. Subtlety of thought is disappearing in America.)
Fact or fiction, this tale illustrates something important in art and design: THE CLOSE
RELATIONSHIP OF INTUITIVE PERCEPTIONS, OR FELT RATIOS, TO REASONED CONCEPTIONS
OR MATHEMATICAL RATIOS.

Application

Art may spring up at any point between the extremes of passion and construction, but cannot arise
exclusively at one pole or the other. At one extreme is pure emotion and chaos; at the other is pure
geometry (unvarying pattern). We look, therefore, for a kind of harmonic – rhythmic conformation in
art, where feeling accommodates itself intimately to order, and geometry is a component of
expressive structure. The important point is that the geometric mode, of whatever sort, must never
be decided upon beforehand and made to serve merely as a frame on which to hang the rest.
It must be part of the original idea, and function as an integral part of form and feeling. Accepting
this, one may proceed to a study of geometry with no fear of entering upon sterile ground. IN ANY
EVENT, ONE CAN NEVER BE SURE FROM WHERE ENLIGHTENMENT OR INSPIRATION
WILL COME.

Problems of proportion arise in any art problem.  These pertain to measurement (addition) and
geometry (ratio), on one hand, and to perception and intuition on the other.  The Golden Section is
often used or recognized in all types of artwork.  In Art, its use can be a practical beginning of
composition on a page, as in diagramming the proportions of shapes throughout a space.

Read the following book and do a Web search for a load of further information.

Vision and Invention, by Calvin Harlan, Prentice-Hall, Inc., Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1970.

An explanation of the golden section and its applications is found in the following diagrams: 

Explanation: THE GOLDEN SECTION OF A LINE 

What is The Golden Section? The golden section is a line segment divided into two parts. Point C is
positioned such that the ratio of the short half to the long half is equal to the ratio of the long half to the
whole.

The line "A------C---B" represents the ratio CB:AB = AC:AB, or AB^2 = BC x AC

Given:  Line AB

C = The Golden Section 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Given:  Line AB

BC = ˝ AB

AD = BC

CD = AE

E = The Golden Section

Description:  Call the line AB.   Draw a perpendicular line at B.  Take half of AB and mark

this length as C.  Draw the diagonal or hypotenuse AC and then, with point of
compass (or string) at A, swing an arc across AC from ˝ AB.  Then, with compass
point at C, measure off the length CD.  With this measure and the point at A, arc
the original line AB at E, its Golden Section.   In formal language, THE LESSER
PART IS TO THE GREATER AS THE GREATER PART IS TO THE WHOLE.

            Golden Section Geometric Ratio:  (EB/AE) : (AE/AB)

            Golden Section Algebraic Formula:  (a + b) / a = a/b

 

Explanation: The Golden Section Proportion (Extension) of a Line

Given: Line AB

AB = BC

AD = DB

CD = DE

E = The Golden Proportion of AB

Description:  Call the line AB.   Draw a perpendicular from B the same length as AB

(AB = BC).  Mark ˝ AB at point D and draw hypotenuse of triangle BCD.  Then, with
compass point at D (compass width = CD), arc an extension of line AB at E, the Golden
Proportion of AB.  (BE/AB : (AB/AE)


 

The Golden Section of An Area

Explanation: THE GOLDEN SECTION RECTANGLE

Given: Square ABCD

Ae = ˝ AB or (Ae = eB)

Ce = eF

AFGD = the Golden Mean Proportion (Golden Section Rectangle) of square ABCD.

 

The Golden Section of An Area: Dynamic Symmetry

Explanation: THE SQUARE IN THE SEMICIRCLE (The Root – 5 Rectangle)

image018.gif (2071 bytes)

Given: Square ABCD

Ae = ˝ AB or (Ae = eB)

Ce = eF

IFGH = the Root 5 Rectangle (a double Golden Section Rectangle) of square

ABCD, capable of being read both ways: to the right or left from the central square.
More importantly, it can be divided into five equal parts, each having the same
proportions as the parent rectangle.  Parent and children are all so-called Root - 5
rectangles. Division of the rectangle is achieved by drawing a diagonal from corner to
corner of one of the two Golden Mean rectangles and a shorter diagonal from a third
corner, intersecting the first at right angles. The shorter one becomes the principal
diagonal of a Root – 5 rectangle proportional to the original.

Still more divisions can be made within this smaller rectangle; thus, the versatility of
the Golden Mean is recognized, and also its magical connotations.

This diagram illustrates what supposedly was a special delight of ancient Greek architects.

The following diagram further illustrates the Root – 5 divisions of the Root – 5 rectangle IFGH above:

 

Dynamic Symmetry: The 5 equally proportional parts of the Root – 5 rectangle IFGH

image019.gif (4608 bytes)

Note: Picasso’s "Guernica" is almost a perfect Root – 5 rectangle, which divides compositionally into
Juxtaposed and interlocking squares and vertical rectangles.

2.  The FIBONACCI SERIES of NUMBERS. The Fibonacci numbers are:
 
0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34…(add the last two numbers to get the next number in the series).
They were noticed originally (as legend goes) by breeding rabbits. What other insects and animals
breeding histories support this theory? Additionally, the significance of the Fibonacci numbers is
that they can be derived from their appearance in Nature (the spiral of a conch shell, sea shell
shapes, branching plants, flower petals and seeds, leaves and petal arrangements, pineapple
segmentation, apple cores, pine cones and leaf arrangement, etc.) When Fibonacci numbers are
converted to proportionate shapes, the similarity of proportion to the Golden Section of a rectangle
is astounding.  Or is it just coincidence?

Do a Web search for a load of further information.

Also, do a Web search on:

3.  CHAOS THEORY. If you are really curious now, read the book CHAOS: MAKING A
NEW SCIENCE
, by James Gleick, Viking Press. 1987. ISBN 0-670-81178-5. This book will show
you how to make sense of weather patterns, the migration of butterflies, pendulum clocks,
playground swings, the ups and downs of wildlife populations, cloud formations, blood vessels, 
cotton prices, transmission errors, jagged shorelines, decoding color, the flow of fluids, flow and
form in Nature, dripping faucets, the geometry of snowflakes, loaded dice, fractals, analog computers,
measuring unpredictability, and everything else where art and commerce connects with science.

 

DesignSTRUCTURE

A Beginning Guide to Composition in Art

 www.usd.edu/~dnavrat

SPATIAL PRESENTATION

Once you have chosen a basic compositional structure, then it is easiest to choose from among
one or more of these modes of spatial presentation to depict your subject matter:

Deep Space -  Shallow Space -  Two Dimensionality

Volume and Space Dominant -  Transparency/Translucency

Dense -  Sparse -   Dense and Sparse

Straight Edge Dominant -  Curved Edge Dominant -  Straight vs. Curved

Hard versus Soft Edges

Linear, Closed Shapes -  Painterly, Open Shapes

Line Dominant -  Value Dominant -  Texture Dominant -  Color Dominant

 

Part 2: PERSONAL UNDERSTANDING

Recognizing that each human, at any time of life, only partially understands his/her
motives for doing something, then how does the artist or designer approach their
creative process? Being aware of the information mentioned above does not
necessarily make one a successful visual communicator. Among the characteristics
one might hope to find in an artist is sensitivity.  Does the artwork or design project
have a relaxed, human touch? Or is it too forced, mechanical, or self-conscious in its
appearance? Since visual interest often thrives on mysterious visual contradictions,
there are a number of descriptive dichotomies that can be used to frame the
assessment (critical evaluation) process, such as...

Art (form and beauty, aesthetic quality) vs. Design (purposeful, useful plan toward form)

Art (form and beauty, aesthetic quality) vs. Craft (a common, practical, skilled trade)

Art (form and beauty, aesthetic quality) vs. Artificial (art-like but superficial, fake)

Intuition (insight, an emotional hunch toward truth) vs. Reason (logical conclusion
toward truth)

Myth
(historical context - a fictional story of gods and heroes) vs. Fantasy (futuristic
context - bizarre notion or creation)

Real (genuine, actually existing, not imaginary) vs. Romantic (preferring passion
and imagination to proportion and finish)

Subjective (self-centered) vs. Objective (impartial logic)

Insight (imaginative epiphany) vs. Imitation (unimaginative repetition)

Preconception (half-baked idea) vs. Clarity (planned excellence)

Good Taste (professional consensus) vs. Bad Taste (ignorance or parody of
classic style)

Judgment (objective, wise decision) vs. Opinion (subjective, personal thought
or emotion)

Confidence (intelligent, sensitive, skillful) vs. Stubbornness (obstinate,
determined, inflexible)

Confidence (intelligent, sensitive, skillful) vs. Bravado (superficial flourish)

Commitment (purposeful vision) vs. Wasting Time (just getting it done)

Invention (original thought or product) vs.  Mimicry (imitate or make-believe)

Sensitivity (awareness, openness to experience) vs. Confusion (clueless at task)

Creativity (original vision, sale unimportant) vs. Business (for-profit artwork)

Creativity (original, imaginative vision) vs. Busy-ness (superficial, non-purposeful
effort)

 

Applying comparative devices to our critical process will help make these evaluative
concepts more clearly understandable. What they describe, after all, are differences.
Differences which can range from being aware to unaware, between sincerity and
insincerity, between integrity and lack of integrity, between reality and wishful thinking,
or simply between being insightful versus unknowing. Of course there are many
stages in between these perceived extremes, and while a successful image is the
goal of any student, what is desirable is growth in the area of critical judgment. To
do this takes critical consideration, practice and application.

 

COMPOSITION and DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS

To compose or design is to create order from an infinite number of possibilities--to create order from chaos.
To create a composition or design, one must consider all of the following points (as well as others). This
listing does not represent a step-by-step process, but only a means for starting the process. Many of the
points must be considered simultaneously (and after acquiring some experience in designing, the points
will be considered intuitively).

A successful design is dependent upon the following: (1) the designer's aesthetic tastes developed through
a comparative analysis of types of visual communication, an understanding and awareness of art history and
tradition in composition, an understanding of contemporary design, past experience, and sensitivity to life
and nature; and (2) confident, technical skill (craft and patience) in working with materials and art media,
developed by constant studio practice. Imagination leading to creativity functions best when technique and
technical considerations are no longer a concern. Learn by doing. Practice to make perfection.  To create 
good form, consider the following: 

IN THE BEGINNING:

1. Understand the problem, theme, or idea by researching it, thinking about it.

2. Decide which approach to the problem is most appropriate:

a. Deliberate Approach - having a definite idea in mind, developing the idea with preliminary sketches;

or

b. Intuitive Approach - beginning the design process intuitively; developing the idea with the media
and materials, which suggest the solution while working.

Note: Either approach may lead to success.

3. Select medium (or combined media), gather materials, and consider technique.

 

WHILE THE WORK IS IN PROGRESS:

4. Work with the elements of design: POINT, LINE, SHAPE, VALUE, TEXTURE, and COLOR.

5. Utilize the principles of design: HARMONY (rhythm and repetition), VARIETY (contrast and
elaboration), BALANCE, MOVEMENT, PROPORTION, DOMINANCE (emphasis), SPACE, and
ECONOMY. As a guiding factor during the manipulation of the elements and principles of design,
use critical evaluation constantly.

6. Satisfy the basic aims of design organization:

a. A SENSE OF ORDER, UNITY, ONENESS;

b. A SENSE OF BEAUTY.

7. Satisfy the creative aspect of the idea--a lively, vital, subtle, unique, unusual, fascinating,
intriguing, mysterious solution--through critical evaluation.

8. Make use of VARIETY (involving contrast and elaboration) and HARMONY (involving rhythm
and repetition; balance variety and harmony; avoid monotony.

9. Critically evaluate the resulting design; change it to improve it whenever it seems necessary
or appropriate.

IN THE END

Remember that the challenge of art is entirely personal. "Remember that there are parts of what
it most concerns you to know which I cannot describe to you. You must come with me and see
for yourselves.  The vision is for they who will see it." Plotinus
(Translation: Do your homework and you will learn.)

WHEN THERE IS THE UNIVERSE TO CONSIDER,

WHY DO WE LOOK UNDER ROCKS FOR OUR ROLE MODELS?

 

Part 3: FINE ART, APPLIED ART, and the AVANT GARDE

A good rant by Professor Navrat

Artists have always recognized the need to discover and enjoy the Self, and
especially, the Creative Self, which emerges in flashes of insight or inspiration. 
Prior to the 18th Century, Art was subservient to societal needs and beliefs.

During the 18th Century, as a consequence of the industrial revolution and a diminishing
demand for art by religions, governments, and royalty, further thought about the need
for Art lead to a philosophical division of Art into Applied Art and Fine Art.  Applied Art
continued to serve society.  Fine Art became the branch of Art concerned with Beauty
rather than practicality.  In the applied arts, it was believed the artist should function to
serve society, as a worker or craftsman dedicated to the good of society.

In the Fine Arts, it was believed an artist should function as an educator or a
visionary dedicated to a study of the concept of Beauty, for the good of society.
The Fine Arts came to be defined as Painting, Sculpture, Architecture, Literature,
Music, Theatre, and Dance.

In the 1830s, a concept of the avant-garde developed, dedicated to "Art for Art’s
Sake," intended to elevate the study of Aesthetics by reacting to and promoting
rapid change. It began evolving into an expressive activity in the 1860s, further
fueled by advances in medicine and psychology in the 1890s. The avant-garde
represented thought and action in advance of ideas and practices generally
accepted by society. Elitism was an integral part of avant-garde philosophy in art.
The avant-garde was intended to represent advanced thought and taste.

From the 1870s to the 1930s, such change was welcomed by the middle classes
of the world, which generally supported art and artists. In the 1910s, in reaction to
worldwide warfare and mass destruction, Fine Art began evolving toward politics,
in which the product or result of Fine Art became more confrontational, shocking,
unintelligible, or in other ways as equally offensive to society as politics.

As rapid change accelerated in the industrial, technological world, Fine Art became
further branched beyond the study of Beauty, reacting to rapid discovery and
advancement in science, mathematics, and especially reacting to the threat of
nuclear war and outrageous politics.  Perhaps because most artists do not think
as clearly and logically as scientists, the concept of Beauty was lost in the shuffle,
nd replaced by an obsession with the avant-garde, especially in public schools.

It was forgotten that as Fine Art distances itself from the interests of the middle
classes, support for art and artists further diminishes.

IS IT POSITIVE ART or NEGATIVE ART?

Today, artists in search of the avant-garde become engaged in a private contest
with the history of art, striving for critical or public recognition. This self-indulgent
aim may have reached its apex in the middle of the 20th Century, with the
development of American Abstract Expressionism, the most dynamic (and
aesthetically confusing) style of design ever created. AbEx is characterized by
exploration of the Elements and Principles of Art, a process in which dynamic
mark making, to produce Pure Form, appears as nonobjective imagery.

AbEx is an emotional, intuitive approach to Art making. The influence of AbEx
quickly spread worldwide, largely because of political maneuvering during the
Cold War. The CIA, through the auspices of the Museum of Modern Art in New York,
sponsored a tour of AbEx art to communist-leaning countries in order to serve as
an example of Freedom in the United States. The logic went like this: If artists in
America are free to produce images such as these (unintelligible), then surely
Freedom surpasses communism as a political system of society.  In its
appreciation as well as execution, AbEx requires an emotional, rather than
ntellectual, approach.

An interesting consequence of the exportation of AbEx is that it still serves as
inspiration to students in communist countries.  Students from China, for example,
still come to study art in the United States in order to learn how to make
contemporary art.  The sad part of the equation is that the Chinese students have
already mastered the Beauty of Fine Art, and now wish to add the politics of
Fine Art to their mastery.

In contrast, few American student artists have mastered Beauty and Proportion
before they descend into the dark art of politics.

American society as early as the 1960s was seeking reform from repression
(or boredom), and assaulting old bastions of taste and thought.  As a result, our
school curricula today continue to emphasize art study that is self-centered rather
than service-centered.  Fine Art devoted to Beauty has been a dying profession
since the 19th Century.  As consumerism and technology gains momentum, the
influence of Fine Art continues to lose momentum, while further sinking from the
weight of social activism and gender politics.
 

Perhaps it is time to rebel against post-modernism, with its lack of emphasis on
formal excellence, because it is often used as an excuse for the lessening of
historic, aesthetic
standards.  Along with other disciplines, the study of Fine Art
has been deconstructed and degraded.
 

Since 1980, parodies of traditional aesthetics have become so common that
Good Taste (symbolic of Beauty) has been replaced by Bad Taste (symbolic of
a test of tolerance).
 

In the 1990s, as degrees of ugliness (in thought, politics, marketing, economics,
commerce, visual art, and music) supplanted degrees of Beauty, the avant-garde
became aligned with a form of degrading radical extremism rather than with
humanism that elevates the spirit.  The goal of many emerging artists who aspired
to gain the attention of the contemporary art establishment was to shock the
bourgeoisie.  The establishment (university art faculty, contemporary art centers,
major museums, and the liberal art media) promoted radicalism for fear of actually
acknowledging appropriate boundaries of art.  High standards to which aspiring
artists heretofore strove were supplanted by lower standards.  Excellence is not
what it used to be.  Has this hypocrisy diminished the emotional intensity,
authenticity, and integrity of much of contemporary art?  Are art students wasting
time learning abstract art processes that are now more conventional than creative?

On September 11, 2001, in New York City, Washington, D.C., and near Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, terrorists murdered nearly 3,000 innocent people. In the World
Trade Center, the Pentagon, and in the aircraft, the victims were from more than
eighty different countries of the world.  The evil of these horrendous events was
witnessed and condemned worldwide.  Terrorists threatened the concept of
freedom in the United States and in the entire civilized world. The concept of 
Good versus Evil has never been more apparent to billions of human beings
worldwide.  Context changes everything, including our notions of celebrity and
heroism.

It is difficult to consider avant-garde artists who choose to portray Evil rather than
Good "heroic."  Instead of embracing novelty, artists must find voices that heal,
connect, and challenge.  In light of these tragedies, the art establishment must
reconsider its support of negative and decadent art of all dimensions.

Often conflicting with the concept of Beauty, provocative art (Bad art, Ugly art)
legitimately exists because there are good reasons for it. For example, political art,
often provocative or ugly, is a result of ugly government policies that repress and
degrade its citizenry. As long as indignity affects human life, provocative art will
mirror it.  In this context, Art is an expression of the brutal or violent, and, in
developing countries, often a matter of Life and Death.  Political art may or may
not be orderly; most often it is not beautiful.  But should political art equally
degrade humanity?

Much of the avant-garde now glorifies intellectual enigma, emotional chaos, and
sensuous starvation.  But should we celebrate contemporary artists who glorify
societal ills that most of us are desperate to cure?  At best, it is difficult to celebrate
disturbing content, ugly form, and a lack of respect for formal process, no matter
who produces or promotes it.  Who is going to encourage, respect, support, or buy
ugly art?  Follow the money, for now Fine Art is more of an investment in cash than
in aesthetics.

While Bad Art or Ugly Art may possess a sense of formal order, it only tentatively
satisfies an observer’s sense of Beauty.  Most people think that art without Beauty
is not art, but only politics.  When art is not good to humanity, it is not Fine Art.
When art is something less than inspirational, it is not good art.  Yet when art is not
a vehicle of personal or social change, it is ineffective art.  But how can artists
promote change for the better by directly assaulting common sensibilities
and virtues?

Therein lays the enigma of avant-garde art, which can be created either for better
or for worse.

Today, it is "Art for Art's Sake," from the dying branch of the avant-garde still
concerned with Beauty, and "Anything Goes, No Matter How Trite or Vile," from
the withering branch promoting political art.  By vainly maintaining this propensity
toward negativity during the 1990s, contemporary, abstract and nonobjective art
has lost much of its audience.  Only the few who consider themselves elitists or
excessively tolerant people support art that represents negative aesthetics.

Being open-minded and tolerant does not mean being senseless and without virtue.

When and where will you draw the line and take a stand against visual negativism?
How long can you live comfortably in your home while surrounded by negative
symbolism?  Is visual torture as bad as intellectual torture?  Is it the same?

A respectable goal for art education is to balance teaching toward Beauty with the
desire of the avant-garde to promote rapid change.  A continuing problem is that
technological change occurs so rapidly that much avant-garde Fine Art appears
unimaginative in comparison.  More imaginative and creative art today can be
witnessed in television commercials than in art centers and museums.

Since my freshmen students consistently create art equal in "quality" with much
of the decadent art shown in metropolitan art centers and museums, I believe it is
apparent that the avant-garde has successfully migrated from Fine Art to
computer-generated imagery, video, and film – the Applied Arts – and, as
inspirational and creative examples, these media now surpass the Fine Arts as
aesthetic sources of Beauty.

My best students create works of inspired Beauty.  A good test of abstract visual
art is to view it after six months and try to remember why it was so appealing
that you kept it.

Since the 1960s, art critics have been proclaiming the death of the avant-garde,
but the corpse continues to move toward the Applied Arts.  Throughout the early
21st century, as ugly Fine Art becomes less attractive to society, even as decoration,
being an artist means finding or inventing oneself in a positive light.

POSITIVE ART

Why is Art worth the effort?  Art is the epitome of freedom, for it provides the freedom
to choose and pursue ideas, and to discover the Self by means of Art. Art is the best
of therapies, for it provides creative idleness.  As they say, "Fear No Art."  For
creative individuals, as long as Art provides freedom to think, to emote, and to act,
Art will always be a viable alternative to more boring work.  The key is to make of Art,
work that matters to others.

Art begins as an inner dialogue.  While the practice of art allows any manner of
freedom of expression, many students begin with a romantic notion about artistic
expression that seems to value self-indulgence or egocentric invention more than
the opportunity to communicate with a wider audience.  Artist, know thyself.

Art study often begins by exploring the elements of design, stressing dynamics
and subtleties through intuitive, random, expressive, mark making.  This activity
is merely necessary practice, artificial but not Art.  Students should postpone a
desire to display the results until they have accumulated enough ability with
media, and awareness of content, to make their expressions authentic and of
interest to others.

It is prudent to emote to your hearts content, alone, and trash the results until you
recognize significance in your mark making.  Unintelligible personal expression
appeals only on an emotional level, to a very limited audience.  Audiences, like
students and professors, are more impatient now than ever.

An art object, the product of art, is the connecting link between artist and audience.
Beyond oneself, the rest of the world rarely celebrates naturally chaotic
self-expression.  The world is ready and anxious for more unique, beautiful
expressions born of understanding and compassion rather than of disappointment,
hate and hostility.

Art is the skillful interpretation of human experience capable of producing an
aesthetic response.  Meaningful art results when the desire to communicate
exceeds the need to express, or to shock.  The artist must create a need for
his/her work by making it so effective that others will desire it.

The best art appeals on three levels of engagement: Intellectual, Emotional,
and Sensuous.

An image that is intelligent, promotes memory associations, and appears to be
precious will attract the most attention.  Images that appeal on all three levels
will attract the largest audiences.

It is fine artistic strategy to make art that will appeal to more than emotion and the
sense of sight.  How many of the five senses (sight, touch, sound, smell, and taste)
can you engage by making art?  What about the sixth sense - time?  The best art is
always savored over time.  Study video, computer animation, and film production
once you understand art fundamentals.  Remember that practice makes perfect.

What will be your strategy for producing art?  Will your art appeal to the masses
or only to a few close friends?  What are you willing to sacrifice for your art?
Through self-discipline are you willing to forego short-term pleasure for
long-term gain?

The lesson to be learned here is that it is best to learn the rules governing the
creation of beautiful art before you intend to meaningfully break them toward
enigma, ugliness, or politics.  If you substitute politics for beauty, you will not
arrive at a new form of Beauty, but only a different view of politics.

If it is your wish to be political, study the worst forms of politics, but study art for
its Beauty.  When your studies enable you to communicate critical thought in a
positive manner, you can be a successful political artist.

Crave the unexpected and be willing to loathe the unrestrained.  After all, Art is a
process of discrimination savored by elitists.

And finally, it is of utmost importance for you to remember that, from the time you
awake to the time you go to sleep, every thing that you see, wear, hear, use, and
enjoy, has been created by a person educated in Art.  Applied art and design
reates consumer products.  When products are beautiful, functional, and
intellectual, so much the better.

EVALUATING VISUAL ART

Art is both a process and a product. To determine the quality of the effort, begin with
the concept that art is of two types - either like a window through which the artist
sensitively views the outer world  - or like a mirror which reflects inner feelings and
sensibilities. Works of art represent a meld of creative thought, feeling, and skillful
execution.  When such a meld is authoritative and powerful, masterly and influential
art results. With these thoughts in mind, the quality of any work becomes apparent to
artists, and subsequently, to viewers.
 

AESTHETIC RESPONSIBILITY: A PERSONAL CHALLENGE

An artist has undertaken a personal challenge and responsibility toward art - a resolve toward
excellence.  With excellence as a goal, an artist resolves:

To be Visually Knowledgeable (Well-informed of the past in order to understand the present in
order to anticipate the future)

To be thoughtful (Art is intelligence made visible)

To be sensitive (Art is emotion made visible)

To take risks (Art is an exploration of ideas, methods, processes, and materials - by trial
and error)

To be effectively different (Art is an imaginative search for that which does not exist and
has never been seen)

To challenge others (Art is best when it reveals and clarifies something previously unknown,
overlooked, or misunderstood)

How to tell if it is good!

When judging art one looks for the following:

1. Technical Excellence An artist has appropriately mastered the craft of art

2. Sincerity (Authority) An artist confidently shows the essence of the subject

3. Style An artist develops a personally significant and distinctive manner of presenting
imagery

4. Excitement and Enthusiasm An artist mixes brilliance, emotion, and empathy to help
us experience life more intensely.

Good art helps to heighten one’s sense of personal experience by creating an exquisite
moment that can be recalled and enjoyed repeatedly. Sharing art with others gives wings
to all our spirits.

In summary, good art is interesting. It is a meld of visual interest, emotional interest,
and intellectual interest - for both the artist and the observer. In time and with
experience, differences in quality become apparent to an observer who appreciates
the concerns of an artist.
 

Now is the time, more than any other in the past one hundred years, for artists to
celebrate the majesties rather than the malignancies of Life.  Go forth with
confidence rather than confusion and serve humanity beyond yourself.

 

 

Content Issues

A. Symbolism: Cultural Symbols vs. Discovered Symbols

B. Selectivity: Popular Vision vs. Personal Vision

C. Content: Cliche and Kitsch vs. Integral Personal Development

D. Process: Initiation and Development: Degrees of Completeness and
Visual Evidence of Time

E. Research and Resources: The Boundaries of Our Visual World

F. Analogies and Metaphors: Like/As Relationships, Narrative Overtones

G. Dynamic Meaning: Personality, Animated Character and Emotional Effects
in an Artwork: Figure-Ground Relationships

H. Narration: Depictive Meaning in an Artwork

I. Narration vs. Suggestion vs. Confusion

J. Placement: Physical Center vs. Psychological Center

     Symmetry vs. Asymmetry

     Focal Point, Movement and Stability

 

 CRITICISM

A. Questioning the work of art through visual and intellectual analysis.

B. Developing the ability to give and receive constructive criticism through the following means:

1. Degree of formal clarity and unity.

2. Appropriateness of form relative to content.

3. Sensitivity of expression through the chosen media.

4. Class critiques and discussions. You compare your art to the art of others.

5. Out of class dialogue. You read about art to gain understanding.

CRITICAL ASSESSMENT

Crits, Critiques, Critiquing, or the process of critical evaluation, is to be understood

as an attempt to objectively analyze the appearance of an artwork and its ability to successfully
represent the intentions of the artist/designer. Criticism is a constructive process best achieved
by participation of a group, since many perspectives and insights can be offered to help the artist
as well as other participants in reaching a broad understanding of intention, media, technique, content,
and finally, articulation. It must be understood that only an unsuccessful critique will make the artist feel
debased or personally attacked; however, the process is called criticism, so expect both applause and
disappointment in the interpretation of your work.

An artist or designer must develop a thick skin against negative criticism (because all artists get criticized
at times) and still be confident of his/her insights, abilities, and artistic commitment. Expect to learn
something new for the rest of your life.

CRITICISM (One kind of critique.) Typically public, sent to a remote and unknown audience. One person's critical response to the work being discussed, delivered as a one-way message. No immediate reply possible, so no exchange of views.

Criticism

FORM: Public, sent to an unknown audience. One person's critical response to works of art; a one-way message. No immediate reply possible, so no exchange of views.

AIM: To help people relate to art works by clarifying what they are and what they do.

FUNCTIONS: Partly educational. Partly a consumers' test of works of art, reporting their strong and weak points and overall quality.

METHOD: Critic examines work, describes it and tells his or her own response. This must often contain personal judgments - wonderful, mediocre, terrible, phony, etc.

What is said and how it is said must show that this is the serious opinion of an informed person who has paid full attention to the work.

 



QUALIFICATIONS: A critic must know the medium being discussed, and should not follow fashions or fall for phoniness. she/he must maintain high standards and an open mind. The critic needs courage; he's alone; she's alone.

The critic must use words well and should concentrate on the works of art, not on preaching. A good critic wastes no words trying to seem brilliant, but uses all powers of intelligence to bring out what is seen in the work.

The thing most mercilessly exposed by criticism is the critic; all blind spots and meanness will show in what is written. Read criticism and you will see.

There is no excuse for vicious criticism, though anger is often appropriate. So is delight.

HINT: Be yourself, no matter how hard that is.

DISCUSSION (Another kind of critique.) Typically private, by and for those present. Critical discussion among them of the work being examined. Immediate response from anyone there, and free exchange of views on the spot.

Discussion

FORM: Private, by and for those present. Critical discussion among them of the work being examined. Immediate response from anyone there and free exchange of views on the spot.
AIM: To help artists relate to their own work by showing what it is and does.

FUNCTIONS: Direction-finding and troubleshooting. Identifies areas of strength and weakness; looks for solutions to problems.

METHOD: Everyone talks. Each considers the work, then tells his or her response, truthfully, without flattery or rancor.

It is best to start with visual responses: What feeling does the picture give me? What do I enjoy in it? Is it hot or cold? What is its special quality or flavor?

Value judgments - "I like it" - have their place but are best saved for later. Spoken too early, they tend to cut off perception.

QUALIFICATIONS: Simpler than those for a critic.

A hunger to learn; candor; the courage to say what you feel and think even when it seems foolish; an equal willingness to listen attentively to others, even when what they say seems foolish.

Words: When you have a choice, use plain ones, not fancy ones. It is important to be understood. Any attempt to impress is a serious mistake; a bit foolish. Besides, trying to impress never works.

 




HINT: Faced with a puzzle, don't ask why, ask what; this can be answered.

HINT: Be yourself, no matter how hard that is.

ANALYTIC METHOD

Analysis is the process of dividing a whole into parts in order to understand its nature, functions, and
relationships. Analysis is fundamental to the systematic study of art and a tool commonly utilized in art
history and criticism.

In art history, analysis emphasizes the integration of historical data with form and content considerations.
This fosters an appreciation of the broader social context of art and artists.

The following is one example of a framework for the systematic analysis of a work of art. It serves as a
guideline for the lectures and tests in art history courses. Although awkward, this system prepares the
student to analyze art thoroughly and creatively.

AN ANALYTIC OUTLINE

I.                     PHYSICAL ANALYSIS - Description (What is it?  How is it made?  What is it about?) 

A.  Category:  The primary subdivision of art by type based upon the essential utilization of space: i.e.,
environmental (architecture), volumetric (3D sculpture/crafts), and planar (2D painting/graphics).

B.  Medium:  The material used and its characteristics or nature.

C.  Technique:  Tools and processes used to work the medium.

D.  Subject:  The object depicted in representational art.

 II.            FORMAL ANALYSIS - The organization and use of the elements of visual communication.
 
What does it look like?

A.  The Elements of Art: Line, Shape or Mass, Value, Texture, Color

                Note: Art historians utilize a simplified interpretation of the organization of Form.  In this Design

                 course, the Elements of Art also include the primary visual element, the Point (Pixel).                                                                                                                            Thus, the six Elements of Art are: Point, Line, Shape, Value, Texture, and Color.

B.  The Principles of Art:  Harmony, Variety, Balance, Movement, Proportion, Emphasis, Economy,
and Space.

        Note: In this Design course, the Principles of Art are logically explained as follows:

              C.  The Principles of Formal Organization of Works of Art:

       1.  The objective of organizing or composing form in a work of art is to create order (unity) and beauty
by balancing HARMONY (involving repetition and rhythm), with VARIETY (involving contrast and
elaboration
), by employing other principles of design, which are balance, movement, proportion,
dominance/emphasis, economy,
and space.  (When an artist does not employ the Principles to create
unity and beauty, non-organized form results.  Non-organized form is a category of personal expression,
popularized by Post-Modern Deconstructionists of the 1980s, meant to shock or offend the viewer.
Non-formal, anti-aesthetic, or artificial expression is chaotic, selfish, and communicates little to others
beyond the artist’s confusion, contempt, or lack of skill.)

Thus, to create form, artists govern these twelve principles of artistic composition:

HARMONY (Rhythm, Repetition), VARIETY (Contrast, Elaboration), BALANCE, MOVEMENT, PROPORTION, 
EMPHASIS (Dominance),
SPACE,
and ECONOMY.

  III.                CONTENT ANALYSIS - The purpose and meaning of the artwork.

A.  Function: Purpose or use

B.  Iconography: Conventional or consciously used symbols

C.  Mood: Subconscious expression--the viewer's feeling or emotion about the artwork.

 IV.                HISTORICAL and CULTURAL ANALYSISThe who, what, where, when, and why about the artwork

A.       Identification: Style—representational or non-representational, classical or romantic.  Who was the
artist and when was the art created?

Style...(1)               the general artistic character and form trends of art normally designated as
classical/romantic, representational/non-objective.
 

Classical...art forms which are characterized by a rational, controlled, clear, and intellectual
approach.  The term derives from the ancient art of Greece in the 4th and 5th
Centuries BC.   As a general style classicism is highly organized and
characterized by:

1.                linearity - emphasis on contour and form shape.  Clean outlines and clear figure-
ground contrasts mark it.

2.                planar space - spatial illusion based on planes...movements  back with foreground,
middle ground, and background planes.

3.                closed composition - composition contained to picture plane not implying exterior
activity.

4.                multiplicity - objects are independent, i.e., not interlocked with each other or their
ground.

5.                clarity - the composition and objects are organized in an obvious manner so that
structure is apparent.

The term classic has an even more general connotation, meaning an example or model of first
rank or highest class for any kind of form, literacy, artistic or otherwise.

Classicism is the application of adherence to the principles of Greek culture by later cultural
systems such as Roman classicism, Renaissance classicism, or the art of the Neoclassic
Movement of the early 19th Century.
 

Romanticism...a philosophical attitude toward life which may occur at any time.  In art, the
romantic form is characterized by an experimental point of view which extols spontaneity of
expression, intuitive imagination, and a picturesque rather than a carefully organized, rational
approach.  The Romantic Movement of 19th Century artists such as Delacroix, Gericault, Turner,
and others, is characterized by such an approach to form.

As a general style Romanticism focuses on the formal elements and is characterized by:

1.                painterly quality - emphasis on interior details and form through highlights and
shadows.  It is marked by complex and obscure outline and interacting figure-ground.

2.                recessional space - spatial illusion based on the diagonal.

3.                open composition - composition suggests space and activity outside of the picture
plane.

4.                unity - objects are integrated.

5.                vagueness - the elements dominated and organization is not obvious. 

Style… (2)                the specific artistic character and dominant trends of specific times or
periods in history.

Style… (3)                the expressive character that marks an individual artist's work within broader
styles of the period.

A.       Social Context – The general attitudes and major events of the times that influenced the artist.
Specific facts about the artist and the artwork.

The general political, social, economic, scientific, technological, and intellectual background
that accompanies and influences art-historical events.
 

V.                CRITICAL ANALYSIS – What other people say about the artwork.

A.  Historical Criticism -                Significance of the art in its own time.   

B.  Contemporary Criticism      Significance of the art given by experts today.               

C.  Personal Reaction -                Significance given by you.  Taste.  An individual preference or inclination.

Terms used in the Analytic Process: 

Abstract... a term given to invented forms derived from nature which are recognizable, but have been
simplified, exaggerated, or rearranged.

Nonobjective...        (1)        Abstract art carried to its ultimate extreme eliminating all natural appearing
objects even as subject beginnings.

    (2)        A type of art in which the Elements of Art form the creative act and
become the subject matter.

Representational... (1)       A mode of presentation in art in which details of form or form illusion are
composed in such a way that imaginatively suggests concrete objects, 
persons, or a scene.

    (2)       A means to represent the world of appearances and content in
terms of form.

Illusionist...               (1)        Imitation of visual reality, like a photograph.

    (2)       The method of overcoming the flatness of the picture plane in
painting to create the effect of depth or space.  Perspective,
foreshortening, and chiaroscuro are all potential aides to illusionism.

Naturalism...the doctrine that nature should be represented objectively, without interpretation by the artist,
like a snapshot or documentary photograph.

Realism...a form of expression which intends to interpret and relate universal meanings beneath surface
appearance, but retains the basic impression of visual reality.

 

HISTORY WORKSHEET

 

Name_______________________________________

Title of Work __________________________________

 

Date____________




I. DESCRIPTION--DISCOVERING WHEN, WHERE, AND BY WHOM THE WORK
WAS    DONE

 

 

 

 

II. ANALYSIS--DISCOVERING THE UNIQUE FEATURES OF THE WORK

 

 

 

 

III. INTERPRETATION--DISCOVERING HOW THE ARTIST WAS INFLUENCED
BY THE WORLD AROUND HIM/HER

 

 

 

 

IV. JUDGMENT--MAKING A DECISION ABOUT THE WORK'S IMPORTANCE
IN THE HISTORY OF ART

 

 

 

 

 

COMPONENTS OF VISUAL ART

SUBJECT MATTER

What is it about?

FORM

What does it look like?
How is it made?

CONTENT
(meaning)

What does it mean?
Representational

characteristics:
Naturalistic;Realistic;
relates to perceptual vision;
Any subject.



Composing, designing, or organizing the elements and principles of design (refer to FORM diagram and definitions in Design syllabi);
Recognizable form.

 

Involves Historical awareness and Contemporary awareness;
Usually obvious;
Generally reassuring and comforting.

Abstract

characteristics:
Any recognizable subject matter that undergoes simplification, exaggeration, or rearrangement by the artist/designer.

 

Visually dynamic;
Generally refined and elegant;
Partially recognizable FORM that is simplified, exaggerated, or rearranged by design.

 

"Heightened" meaning;
Extraordinary;
Unusual;
Uncommon;
Remarkable.

Non-Objective

characteristics:
Little resemblance to perceptual vision;
relates to "pure" FORM;
Visually and mentally challenging visual phenomena;
Cerebral/emotional connections to real or imagined reality.
Refined or Elegant.

 

"pure;"
"unrecognizable;"
Process is subject matter is form is meaning.
Exploring the Elements and Principles of Design to perfection.

 

Psychological implications;
Cerebral;
Imaginative;
Symbolic
Allegorical
Generally mysterious,
Anxious;
"Angst"-ridden;
Unique;
"Unknown;"
Emotional.

 

A successful composition or design is dependent upon the deliberate and sensitive use of
the elements of design structure guided by the principles of design organization.
  You must
be selective, especially near the end of the process of designing. 

Self-Evaluation of Your Work: Some first questions to ask of yourself:

- Does the artwork do what you meant it to do?

- Does it do something different - but perhaps equally important from what you meant?

- Is there a confusion or a contradiction between your intent and what the artwork
actually says?  There may be a conflict here because the artwork may have been
done on an intuitive level, while the meaning (the meaning you are trying to verbalize),
is on a conscious level.

- Might this artwork (which came about from an intuitive process) have a better
message than your original intended message?

- Can you change or improve the form of this artwork to help make the meaning
become clear?

 

Some basic problems that arise and the relevant questions they pose:

- Are the number of techniques and characteristics employed within a single artwork
compatible with each other and the overall idea of the artwork?

- Is there an abrupt change in style or combination of unrelated styles that cause an
inconsistency that is somehow disturbing to the viewer?

 

Failure to determine basic structure:

- Can the basic structure be distinguished? How easily? Is it too obvious?

- Is there a major and minor theme in the artwork?

- What is the relationship of parts to each other? Which are subordinate and which
are dominant?  Is the intention of the artwork compatible with these distinctions?

 

Ignoring negative space:

- Is negative space ignored at the expense of too much attention to the objects
being depicted?

- Is negative space a consideration in the structure of the artwork and the placement
of the image on the page/surface?

- Can the negative space be used more effectively in relation to the structure and the
intent of the artwork?

 

Underdeveloped value range and value transitions:

- Has illumination of the space portrayed been adequately considered? Have the
elements of light been considered uniformly throughout the image?

- Are the values accurately used to create dimensionality?

- Is the value range used appropriate for the idea of the artwork, or could it be
altered to be more effective?

- Is the value range too complex, too contradictory, or too boring for the artwork’s
intent?

Failure to observe correctly:

- Is there a concentrated and committed effort to observe what is seen rather than
what is known or believed?

- Is there a generalization being used as an inappropriate substitute for the actual
subtlety that can be observed?

 

Some broader questions to consider when having problems determining what
the difficulties are in a particular artwork, of any media, on which you are working
:

- What is the subject?

- Which media is used (or should be used) and on what surface?

- How does the composition relate to the page/picture plane?

- Is it a small image on a large page or a large image on a small page? Is it
appropriate?

- What kind of light is being used?

- What kind of space is being used?

- Do the values define space, weight, and mass? Or are they ambiguous?

- Can they be divided into different and specific values? Light? Medium? or Dark?

- How are these values distributed throughout the design?

- Is value used in both positive and negative space?

- How much harmony is present?

- How much variety is present?

- How do the elements of art relate in terms of unity, with intent to balance harmony
and variety?

- What kind of lines are used? Is there variety of line, such as thin, thick, light, dark,
curved, diagonal, horizontal, vertical, contoured, scribbled, etc.?

- How are these lines distributed?

- What kind of shapes predominate?

- Do the shapes define forms or planes?

- Are the shapes flat or tending toward volumetric forms?

- What is the relationship of shapes, one to another, and to the picture plane edges?

- Are the shapes geometric, curvilinear, machined, organic, or anthropomorphic?

- Are the shapes repeated or combined?

- What qualities of texture and pattern are present?

- Is the texture invented, simulated, or actual?

- How are these textures created and how are they used?

GLOSSARY of ART TERMINOLOGY

Abstract, abstraction.  A term given to forms created by the artist but usually derived
from objects actually observed or experienced.  Abstraction usually involves a
simplification and/or rearrangement of natural objects to meet needs of artistic
organization or expression.  Sometimes there is so little resemblance to the original
object that the shapes seem to have no relationship to anything ever experienced in the
natural environment. 

Abstract Texture.  A simplified imitation of an actual texture. 

Academic.  A term applied to any kind of art that stresses the use of accepted rules for
technique and form organization.  As a system of art education, it proposes the mastery
of technical control prior to the freedom of personal expression. 

Achromatic.  Hueless, one-dimensional, neutral colors, such as black, gray, and white,
that possess only one color property -- value.  Black, grays, and white are colors,
but not hues.
 

Acrylic Polymer Paint.  The most widely used artists' colors based on synthetic resins,
made by dispersing pigment in an acrylic emulsion.  This nontoxic, fast-drying, extremely
versatile paint thins with water, but dries as a flexible, waterproof coating.  Acrylics can be
painted on any non-oily surface.
To avoid wasting colors and ruining brushes, the palette and brushes must be kept
moistened during the painting process.  Spritz it or lose it!
 

Addition.  In sculpture, a building up, an assembling, or a putting on, of forms. 

Advancing color.  Color which seems to "come forward," depending upon the color
context in which it is placed.
 

Afterimage.  A “ghost” image, or illusion of color and shape, generated by the eye in
response to stimulation and intense concentration.  A positive afterimage is the same
color as the original.  A negative afterimage is its complementary color.
 

Analogous colors.  Colors that are closely related in hue.  They are usually adjacent to
each other on the color wheel, such as red, red-orange, and yellow.
 

Approximate symmetry (Near Symmetry).  The use of similar forms on each side of a
vertical axis to achieve balance within the visual format.  The forms may give a feeling of
the exactness of equal relationship but are sufficiently varied to prevent visual monotony. 

Area Texture.  A discernable pattern of density of lines, shapes, or masses in a particular
area of work.
(i.e., a chain-link fence, a paisley blouse, etc.)
 

Asymmetrical balance.  The use of dissimilar forms on each side of a vertical axis to
achieve balance within the visual format.  A type of balance attained when unequal visual
units are placed in positions within the pictorial field to create a "felt," or sensed, equilibrium. 

Atectonic.  The opposite of tectonic.  A quality of openness in three-dimensional forms,
usually complex, involving considerable extension into space.
 

Atmospheric (aerial) perspective.  The illusion of deep space produced in graphic
works by lightening values, softening contours, reducing value contrasts, and neutralizing
colors in objects as they recede.
 

Atmospheric Tone.  The value on an object dependent upon the type, amount and
placement of an illuminating source.


BALANCE.
  A principle of design organization achieved by development of a feeling of
equality in weight, attention, or attraction of the various visual elements within an artwork
as a means of accomplishing organic unity.  A sensing of a state of equilibrium in an
artwork in which every visual effect is arranged in such a way to create a sensing that the
components of the image possess overall stability.

Balance needs variation to be interesting, but variation needs balance to be coherent. 

TWO FUNDAMENTAL MODES OF ACHIEVING BALANCE - 

SYMMETRY  (Symmetrical balance) – Artwork in which identical visual material is
duplicated on each side of a vertical centerline of the picture plane.  With symmetrical
balance, the balance is measurable, because it is created by identical duplication. 

ASYMMETRY  (Asymmetrical balance) - An arrangement of unlike visual effects on
each side of a vertical centerline of the picture plane.  In asymmetrical balance, the
balance is sensed, rather than measurable. 

Bauhaus.  Originally a German school of architecture that flourished between World War I
and World War II.  The Bauhaus attracted many of the leading experimental artists of both
the two- and three-dimensional fields.
 

Beauty.  A combination of qualities that cause delight or pleasure.  A sense of Beauty is
a universal aim of the process of design and art, as is a sense of Order.
 

Bezold Effect.  An effect in which all colors in a composition appear lighter by the addition
of light outline, or darker by addition of a dark outline.  Also, an effect in which a colored
ground appears lighter because of a surface linear design in light line, or darker because
of a surface linear design in dark line.
 

Brilliance.  The combined qualities of high light-reflectance and strong hue, typically found
in saturated colors and strong tints. 

Broken color.  Color that is varied, or mottled, by other colors in and around it. 

Calligraphy.  The use of flowing rhythmical lines that intrigue the eye as they enrich
surfaces.  Calligraphy is highly personal in nature, similar to the individual qualities found
in handwriting.
 

Casting.  A sculptural technique in which liquid materials are shaped by pouring into a mold. 

Chiaroscuro.  A technique of representation that concentrates on the effects of blending
the light and shade on objects to create the illusion of space or atmosphere. 

Chroma.  The saturation, intensity, or strength of a color determined by the quality of light
reflected from it, ranging from high/bright to low/dull.
 

Chromatic.  Any color other than black, gray, and white. 

Closure.  The tendency of the eye to complete a line, shape, or form that is only suggested
by the careful placement of key elements.  Closure is born of the need to complete the
"striving" of lines, edges, or shapes that by their alignment or proximity strongly suggest
the possibility of meeting to form a simpler structure or resolution to the situation.  A visual
force often used as a strategic device by designers and artists.
 

Collage.  An art form in which the artist creates the image, or a portion of it, by adhering
real materials that possess actual textures to the picture plane surface.
 

COLOR.  An element of art represented by the character of a surface that is the result of
the response of vision to the wavelength of light reflected from that surface.  Color is a
phenomenon of light (such as red, brown, pink, or gray) or visual perception that enables
one to differentiate otherwise identical objects.  The aspect of objects and light sources
that may be described in terms of hue, value (or lightness), and saturation for objects, and
hue, brightness, and saturation for light sources.  Relative to pigment mixture, color has
three major properties: hue, value, and intensity (chroma,saturation). 

Color Cycle.  A period of time or stage in consumer preference for certain palettes.  The
prevalence of certain colors in the context of a particular time. 

Color Forecasting.  A service that provides manufacturers and vendors with information
and guidance on upcoming consumer interest in certain colors and palettes.

Color Schemes.  Proportional relationships of color as determined on a color wheel,
such as:

            Achromatic – without hue, using only variations of white, grays, and black.           

Analogous – uses any three consecutive hues on the color wheel, or any of their
tints, tones, and shades.

Clash Scheme – combines a color with the hue to the right or left of its complement
on the color wheel.

Complementary – uses any color on the color wheel and its direct opposite, in
combination with any neutralization of the two complementary colors.

Duad – uses any two colors in combination with any neutralization of the two colors.
Two hues, and their variations of value and chroma, exclusively used in a design.
 

Double-Complement – uses any two pairs of complementary colors and any
neutralization of the pairs.

Monochromatic – uses one hue in combination with any or all of its neutralization
(tints, tones, and shades).

Neutral Scheme – uses a hue that has been diminished or neutralized by the
            addition of its complement or black.

Primary Scheme – a combination of Red, Yellow, and Blue in combination with
            any neutralization of the three primaries.

Secondary Scheme – a combination of the secondary hues of Green, Violet, and
            Orange, in combination with any neutralization of the three secondary hues.

Split-Complement – consists of a hue and the two hues on either side of its
            complement, in combination with any neutralization of the three hues.

Tertiary Triad – using one of two combinations of equidistant hues on the color
            wheel: Red-orange, Yellow-green, and Blue-violet, or Blue-green, Yellow-Orange,
            and Red-Violet.  A tertiary scheme includes neutralization of the three hues.

Tetrad – uses four colors with a logical relationship on the color wheel in terms of
            their spacing, including any neutralization of the four hues.

Triad – uses three equidistant hues on the color wheel. 

Color Spectrum.  The band of individual colors that results when a beam of light is
broken into its component wavelengths of hues.  The colors of a rainbow (Red, Yellow, 
Green, Cyan, Blue, Magenta).
 

Color tonality.  An orderly planning in terms of selection and arrangement of color
schemes or color combinations; involves not only hue, but also value and intensity
relationships.
 

Color triad.  A group of three colors spaced an equal distance apart on the color wheel. 

Color Wheel.  A circular, two-dimensional model showing color relationships,
originating from Sir Isaac Newton’s bending of the straight array of Spectral Hues, into a
circle.  A circle depicting color relationships.  A color diagram representing the visible
spectrum. 

Cool Colors.  Green, Blue, and Blue-Violet.  The green and blue range of colors on the
color wheel symbolic of cool temperature and psychological calmness.
 

Content.  -  The essential meaning, significance, or aesthetic value of an art form.
Content refers to the sensory, psychological, or emotional properties that we tend to feel
in a work of art as opposed to the perception of mere descriptive aspects. 

Continuity.  (also see Direction)  A visual force often used as a strategic device
representing a unifying alignment of elements to create visual movement in a composition.
 

CONTRAST.  A principle of art and design organization represented by extreme differences
or juxtapositions of dissimilar elements (such as color, tone, shape, texture, value, line,
or emotion).  Contrast, as well as Elaboration, is strategically used by artists and designers
to create a sense of VARIETY.
 

Craftsmanship.  Aptitude, skill, or manual dexterity in the use of tools and materials. 

Cubism.  A term given to the artistic style that generally uses two-dimensional geometric
shapes. 

Decorative.  The quality that emphasizes the two-dimensional nature of any of the
visual elements.  Decoration enriches a surface without denying the essential flatness
of its nature.
 

Decorative shapes.  Two-dimensional shapes that seem to lie flat on the surface of the
picture plane.
 

Decorative value.  A term given to a two-dimensional dark and light pattern.  Decorative
value usually refers to areas of dark or light definitely confined within boundaries, rather
than the gradual blending of tones.
 

Decorative space.  A 2-D planar concept in which pattern and visual elements are
predictable and unvarying.
 

Depictive Meaning.  A narrative story being told in an image or object. 

Dynamic Meaning.  The emotional sense of what is happening in an image or object.
The various movements, tensions and balances presented by the sensitive use of form,
bring this about.
 

Design.  A framework or scheme of pictorial construction on which artists base the
formal organization of their work.  Also, a product of the design process.  In a broader
sense, design may be considered synonymous with the term form.   

Dilution.  Changing or muting a pure or saturated hue by lightening, darkening, or dispersing. 

Directed Action.  The purposeful movement of the viewer’s eyes across or through a
work of art/composition caused by the choices of the artist/designer.  In a well-balanced
composition every directed action is always countered in some way that returns stability
to the whole.

Directional Axis.  A generalized line of eye movement over complex lines and shapes.

Direction, also Directed Movements.  The alignment of forms in such a way as to lead
the eye across a page forming a pattern of movement.  The unifying force of a common
movement among differing parts can override powerful differences.
 

DOMINANCE (also Emphasis).   A principle of design achieved by emphasizing an area
of a composition more than the rest
.  Giving unique visual weight to one or more areas in
composition.
The principle of visual organization that suggests that certain elements should assume
more importance than others in the same composition.  Dominance contributes to organic
unity because one main feature is emphasized and other elements are subordinate to it.
The principle applies in both representational and non-representational art.

Drawn Line.  A moving point whose expressive nature is dependent on its character and
its configuration, whether by media or type of action, or both.  All drawn lines express some
attitude or mood. 

ECONOMY.  A principle of design organization achieved by the efficient and concise use
of the elements of art.  Economy represents the design philosophy of “Less is More.”
 

ELABORATION.  Interesting fullness of detail, complexity, or intricacy in a work of art or
design.  Elaboration is a principle of design organization, along with Contrast, strategically
used by artists and designers to create a sense of VARIETY.

Elements of Art Structure.  The basic visual signs as they are combined into optical
units used by the artist to communicate or express creative ideas.  The combination of
the basic elements of point, line, shape, value, texture, and color represent the visual
language of the artist.  The six elements of art are:

Point -  (a unit, pixel, or individual detail which attracts attention and anticipates
            movement);

Line - a solid row of points creating visual movement;

Shape - a two-dimensional, flat object bounded by an actual or implied line;

Value - the degree of lightness or darkness of color; its tone relative to a gray
            scale rated one (black-the absence of light) through ten (white-light itself, the
            lightest value);

Texture- the visual or tactile surface characteristics and appearance of something;

Color - a phenomenon of light (as red, brown, pink, gray) or visual perception that
enables one to differentiate otherwise identical objects.  The aspect of objects and
light sources that may be described in terms of hue, value (or lightness), and
saturation
for objects, and hue, brightness, and saturation for light sources.
 

EMPHASIS (also Dominance).  A principle of design achieved by giving unique visual
weight to one or more elements in a composition in varying amounts as is necessary to
achieve the dynamics of the artistic statement.  A principle of design achieved by
emphasizing an area of a composition more than the rest
.  Giving unique visual weight to
one or more areas in composition.  The principle of visual organization that suggests that
certain elements should assume more importance than others in the same composition.
Emphasis/Dominance contributes to organic unity because one main feature is
emphasized and other elements are subordinate to it.  The principle applies in both
representational and non-representational art.
 

Equilibrium.  An involuntary, physiological state of rest that the eye seeks.  Equilibrium
occurs when all three (additive or subtractive) primary colors are present within the field
of vision, and balanced by warm/cool color temperatures.
 

Figure/Ground Relationship  - Refers to the relationship of activity between dominant
foreground (figure) shapes to subordinate background (ground) shapes in a design or
composition,
or vice versa. 

Figure/Ground Reversal, also Positive/Negative Relationship - the spatially
dynamic phenomenon, caused by visual tension evoked by extreme contrast, of some
shapes momentarily taking on substance while others subside into background; then
some background shapes take on substance while foreground shapes become
background, even in a two-dimensional setting.  In patterning, figure-ground reversal is
known as Counterchange

Foreshortening.  An application of linear perspective to organic forms such as humans,
animals, trees, rocks, etc.

FORM.  A 3-D object or a 2-D illusion of a 3-D object.  A volume. The organization
or inventive arrangement of visual elements according to principles that develop organic
unity in a work of art.  The total organization of a work of art.

Four-dimensional space.  A highly imaginative treatment of forms that gives a sense of
intervals of time or motion. 

Fractional representation.  A device used by various cultures (notably the Egyptians)
in which several spatial aspects of the same subject are combined in the same image.
 

Fluorescent.  An emission of electromagnetic radiation by a pigment or hue. 

Genre.  Subject matter that concerns everyday life, domestic scenes, sentimental family
relationships, etc.
 

Gesso.  A white, chalky, liquid applied as a coating, or ground, to surfaces in order to
give them the correct properties for receiving painting, gilding, or other decoration.
Gesso is commonly applied to paper, cardboard, wood, panels, canvas, picture frames,
and furniture.
 

Gestalt.  A situation in a work of art where the whole is greater than the sum of its parts
because it contains dimensions of meaning not found among the parts, even though each
part carries the seeds of these meanings.  Gestalt is similar to unity in that all parts are
necessary to the content and excesses detract from the content/meaning.  In the same way
in a work of art that exhibits a gestalt, nothing can be removed without detrimentally
affecting the work's content.  Gestalt is represented by a sensing in a work of art that the
whole is greater than the sum of its parts; instantaneous recognition of significance;
a sensing that the art work has meaning beyond its appearance.
 

Glazing.  A process of painting in which thin, transparent washes of color are applied in
successive layers which overlap one another, thus forming a transparent, optical mixture
of a differing color.  The process begins with the lightest hue, which, when dry, is then
layered over with a darker hue.  The glaze increases the color and brightness of the
underpainting rather than obscures it.
 

Glyptic.  A term related to carving or engraving. 

Gouache (Say what? Say "gwash").  Opaque, chalky watercolor pigments and a technique
of opaque painting.
 

HARMONY, also Synthesis.  A principle of design organization representing the unity of
all visual elements in a composition.  Harmony is the result of causing each emphatic
feature of an artwork to show visual connections with other features that causes them to be
seen as integrated members of the whole.  Harmony involves RHYTHM and REPETITION.
Harmony is achieved by repetition of characteristics that are the same or similar. 

Hierarchy.  A ranking of visual themes in a composition in order of their importance to a
work's depictive and dynamic meanings.  Hierarchy deals with how the overall content of
a work is brought about through the interplay of major and minor themes and the interlacing
of major and minor movements.  A subdividing of a work's parts into large visual themes of
differing degrees of importance.  It differs from emphasis in that emphasis is used in
specific places where a touch of visual dominance will help arrange, balance, or punctuate
the visual movement or unity of a work.
 

Hue.  Used to designate the common name of a color (such as magenta, cyan, and yellow)
and to indicate its position in the spectrum or on the color wheel.  Hue is determined by the
specific wavelength of the color in a ray of light.  One of the three properties of color.
 

Illusionism.  The imitation of visual reality created on the flat surface of the picture plane
by the use of perspective, light-and-dark shading, etc.
 

Impasto.  A relatively thick or heavy use of paint, imbuing a tactile quality, in either a portion
of a painting or the entire work.
 

Infinite space.  A pictorial concept in which the illusion of space has the quality of
endlessness found in the natural environment.  The picture frame has the quality of a
window through which one can see the endless recession of forms into space.
 

Interpenetration.  The movement of planes, objects, or shapes through each other,
locking them together within a specific area of space.
 

Intuitive space.  The illusion of space resulting from the exercise of the artist's instincts in
manipulating certain space-producing devices, including overlapping, transparency,
interpenetration, inclined planes, disproportionate scale, fractional representation, and
the inherent spatial properties of the art elements.
 

Intensity, Chroma, Saturation.  The saturation or strength of a color determined by the
quality of light reflected from it.  It is the brightness or dullness of a hue.  A vivid color is of
high intensity; a dull color, of low intensity.  One of the three properties of color.
 

Intuitive space.  A pictorial spatial illusion that is not the product of any mechanical
system but that relies, instead, on the physical properties of the elements and the instincts
or feelings of the artist.

Law of Areas.  Law of Backgrounds.  A guide to vivid color effect that implies that
the majority
of the background area of a design should be of neutralized or dull
coloration, contrasted with
smaller areas of color
of high intensity.  This “Law”
seems to be one of Nature, where visual
feasts of color are rationed to us (such
as the brilliant coloration of birds, plants, insects,
tropical fish, animals, minerals,
and atmospheric phenomena).

Light.  Radiant energy or electromagnetic radiation capable of promoting the sensation
of vision.
 

The six Elements of Light:

1. HIGHLIGHT    - The lightest value on a form; The area of a represented shape that
receives the greatest amount of direct light.

2. LIGHT TONE  - The next lightest value on a form.

3. HALF TONE (mid-tone) - The third lightest value on a form.

4. BASE TONE - The darkest value on a form.

5. REFLECTED LIGHT - Light cast on a form after being reflected from another form.

6. CAST SHADOW - The dark tones resulting from the blocking of light rays by solid
bodies; The dark area created on a surface when another form is placed so as to prevent
light from falling on that surface. 

LINE.  An element of art represented by a moving point or the path of a moving point
(a solid row of points or pixels) creating visual movement; that is, a mark made by a tool
or instrument as it is drawn across a surface.  It is usually made visible by the fact that it
contrasts in value with the surface on which it is drawn. 

VARIETIES OF LINE - 

DELINEATING LINE.  A line that establishes the boundaries of a form. Types of
delineating lines include outlines and contour lines.
 

OUTLINE.  A line that creates a boundary separating an area of space from its
surrounding background.
 

CONTOUR/CROSS-CONTOUR.  A line that carefully follows the edges and inner
surfaces of an object, thus indicating both boundary and volume.
 

DIAGRAMMATIC LINE.  Investigates, expresses analytic energy, inquires into the
structure of an image, and clarifies.  Akin to the girder framework of a building. 

STRUCTURAL LINE.  Analyzes and deliberately explains shape, dimension,
direction, space, and volume.  The chief function is to move upon a volume's
changing terrain, and by the turnings, explain the volume's surface character by
emphasizing mass rather than contour. 

GESTURE LINE.  Animated lines of an empathic, spontaneous, quick, sketch-like
            character. 

CALLIGRAPHIC LINE.  Animated lines of a rhythmic deliberate character. 

IMPLIED LINES, LOST-AND-FOUND LINES.  Lines we sense in an alignment
of forms or in an alignment of edges.  They also serve as 'lines' of directed
movement and must be taken into account as compositional factors. Lines that
emerge from an alignment of shapes or tones, or come about through continuity,
directed action and closure.  See also DIRECTIONAL AXIS. 

Line Density.  The varied distribution of lines in a drawing, either in close proximity or
farther apart.  The more densely massed lines become, the more such areas are seen as
shapes of value rather than dense masses of line.
 

Linear perspective.  A mechanical drawing technique for creating the illusion of a three-
dimensional space on a two-dimensional surface by employing a fixed eye level, a horizon
line, and vanishing points toward which all parallel lines appear to converge.
 

Local Tone.  The value of the object itself, excluding any effects of light. 

Local Value.  The natural or characteristic value of a shape that is determined by the
shape's normal color independent of any effect created by the degree of light falling on it. 

Local (objective) color.  The naturalistic color of an object as seen by the eye (green
grass, blue sky, red fire, etc.). 

Luminance.  The degree of lightness or darkness in light mixtures, corresponding to
value
in pigments. 

Luminosity.  In pigments, the light-reflecting quality of a color.  Luminous colors reflect
light.  Non-luminous colors absorb light.
 

Mandala.  In Oriental art and religion, any of various designs symbolic of the universe.

Manipulation.  To shape by skilled uses of the hands; sometimes used to mean
modeling (see definition of "modeling").
 

Mass.  A three-dimensional form or body that stands out from the space surrounding it
because of difference in color, value, or texture; the physical bulk of a solid body of
material.  On a two-dimensional surface, mass is always an illusion created by the use of
the visual elements in special ways to represent physical form. 

Media, mediums.  The materials and tools used by the artist to create the visual elements
perceived by the viewer of the work of art.
 

Media Textures.  The actual texture of the various materials used in drawing and paintings.
See ARTIFICIAL TEXTURES. The illusionary textures made by the use of various media
and mark-making systems.  See INVENTED TEXTURE.
 

Medium.  Usually has two different meanings: (a) the general category of materials used
to make the work of art, such as oils, acrylic, or watercolor, and (b) the various liquids
mixed into the paint in order to affect its handling or appearance, such as water (tempera
and watercolors), glycerine (watercolor), stand oil (oils), and Roplex or polymer medium
(acrylic polymers).
 

Metamerism. The phenomenon that occurs when two objects that appear to match under
one set of lighting conditions do not match under a different set of lighting conditions.
 

Modeling.  The technique of applying variations of tone or value to create an appropriate
degree of surface detail and/or three-dimensional illusion (See CHIAROSCURO).  A
sculpture term meaning to shape a pliable material.
 

Monochromatic.  A painting executed basically through the use of variations of one color,
by tinting, toning, and shading.
 

Motif.  A visual element or a combination of elements repeated often enough in a
composition to make it the dominate feature of the artist's expression.  Motif is similar to
theme or melody in a musical composition.
 

MOVEMENT.  A principle of design represented by organizing the design elements in
such a way that
the quality of motion is achieved, represented, or suggested (as in a
painting or sculpture).
 

Movement in a Direction.  An attribute of the effect both visual weight and physical
weight have on the viewer.  A sense of movement across a space caused by the
attraction of a contrasting form in a composition or by our expectation of what a form in
gravity will do.
 

Muddy Color.  An unattractive color resulting from “value inversion” which occurs when
the colors yellow, yellow-red, and yellow-green are consistently darker than others in the
color field. 

Negative areas.  The unoccupied or empty space left after the artist has laid down the
positive shapes.  However, because these areas have boundaries, they also function as
shapes in the total pictorial structure.
 

Narrative Unity - See Thematic Unity 

Naturalism.  An approach to art in which all forms used by the artist are essentially
descriptive representation of things visually experienced.  True naturalism contains no
interpretation introduced by the artist for expressive purposes.  The complete recording
of the visual effects of nature is a physical impossibility, and naturalistic style thus becomes
a matter of degree. 

Natural texture.  Textures that are created as the result of natural processes. 

Neutralized color.  A color that has been grayed or reduced in intensity by mixture with
any of the neutrals or with a complementary color.
 

Neutrals.  The hueless colors white, gray, and black.  Surface hues that do not reflect any
single wavelength of light but rather all of them at once.  No single hue is noticed, only a
sensation of light or dark, such as white, gray, or black.  Achromatic or hueless.  Black,
white, and gray are one-dimensional colors, possessing only value, but not hue and chroma.
Neutrals are powerful in art-making, because…

            WHEN BLACK SURROUNDS A HUE, CHROMA INCREASES,

            WHEN WHITE SURROUNDS A HUE, CHROMA DECREASES,

            WHEN GRAY (OR BROWN) IS INTERMIXED WITH HUES, CONTRAST IS
            NEUTRALIZED.
 

Nonobjective.  A style of art in which visual signs are entirely imaginative and not derived
from anything seen by the artist.  Elements of design (point, line, shape, value, texture,
color), their organization, and their treatment by the artist are entirely personalized and
consequently not easily associated by the observer with any previously experienced
natural form.  In nonobjective art, form is the subject matter, and form is more important
than meaning. 

Opaque color.  Color that reflects light from its own surface and not from the color
beneath it.  It hides the color under it. 

Opponent Theory.  A model proposed by Hering that uses the psychological primaries
Red, Yellow, Green, and Blue to account for color vision by means of hypothetical pairs
(Red and Green, Blue and Yellow, and Black and White) of receptors in the visual cortex
responding to opposing colors.  If the receptor-pair responds to one color, the opposite
color is inhibited, to prevent optical stress.  This theory accepts that vision is involuntary
and explains the phenomenon of afterimages as a symptom of deliberate optical stress.
 

Optical Mix.  A new color that is seen as a result of the close juxtaposition of small areas
of two or more differing colors.
 

Optical perception.  A way of seeing in which the mind seems to have no other function
than the natural one of providing the physical sensation of recognition of form.  Conceptual
perception, on the other hand, refers to the artist's imagination and creative vision.
 

Orthographic drawing.  A two-dimensional graphic representation of an object which
depicts a plan, a vertical elevation, and/or a section.
 

Paint.  Liquid colors consisting of a tinting agent and a binding agent suspended in a
liquid vehicle.  A dried layer, or coating, of paint.
 

Paint quality.  The use of paint to enrich a surface through textural interest.  interest is
created by the ingenuity in handling paint for its intrinsic character.
 

Papier-collé.  A technique of visual expression in which scraps of paper having various
textures are pasted to the picture surface to enrich or embellish areas.
 

Patina.  A film, usually greenish in color, that results from oxidation of bronze or other
metallic material; colored pigments, usually earthy, applied to a sculpture surface.
 

Pattern.  The obvious emphasis on certain visual form relationships and certain directional
movements within the visual field.  Pattern also refers to the repetition of elements or the
combinations of elements in a readily recognized systematic organization.  Patterning is
the simplest and most harmonious compositional structure.  Patterning is considered a
decorative art form, as it lacks compositional Variety, Expression, and Meaning. 

Phantom Colors.  Colors that spread beyond their physical boundaries causing illusory
color sensations on adjacent neutral surfaces. 

Physical Weight.  The impression that forms in a work, whether familiar, recognizable
ones, or unfamiliar, invented ones, have the kind of weight we can measure on a scale.
 

Picture Frame.  The outermost limits or boundary of the picture plane. 

Picture plane.  The actual flat surface on which the artist executes a pictorial image.  In
some cases the picture plane acts merely as a transparent plane of reference to establish
the illusion of forms existing in a three-dimensional space.
 

Pigments.  Color substances, usually powdery in nature, used with liquid vehicles to
produce paint. 

Pixel.  An element of art and design.  One of the points of light that make up the picture on
a computer, digital camera, television, or video screen.  The word is short for “picture
element.”  The pixel is the basis for 20th Century visual technology and visual communication. 

Plane.  A shape that is essentially two-dimensional but whose relationships with other
shapes may give an illusion of a third dimension. 

Plastic.  A quality that emphasizes the three-dimensional nature of shape or mass.  On
a two-dimensional surface, plasticity is always an illusion created by the use of the visual
elements in special ways.
 

Plastic shapes.  Shapes that are indicated by the artist as being "in the round" and
surrounded by space; shapes displaying the third dimension of depth.
 

Plastic space.  A concept in which the visual elements on the surface of the picture
plane are made to give the illusion of having relationships in depth as well as in length
and breadth.
 

POINT.  An element of design representing a single dot of visual emphasis.  See Pixel. 

Positive shapes.  The enclosed areas that represent the initial selection of shapes
planned by the artist.  Positive shapes may suggest recognizable objects or merely be
planned nonrepresentational shapes.
 

PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN ORGANIZATION - fundamental ingredients used to organize
the elements of art structure, necessary to the process of making and of analyzing art. 
The twelve principles of design organization are:

HARMONY -  the result of causing each emphatic feature of an artwork to show
visual connections with other features which causes them to be seen as integrated
members of the whole; harmony involves REPETITION and RHYTHM

Repetition -  the use of the same visual element a number of times in the same
composition.  Repetition may accomplish a dominance of one visual idea, a feeling
of harmonious relationship, an obvious planned pattern, or a rhythmic movement  

Rhythm -  a continuance, a flow, or feeling of movement achieved by repetition of
regulated visual units; the use of measured accents

VARIETY -the quality or state of having differing parts creating visual interest;
            variety involves CONTRAST and ELABORATION

Contrast -  extreme differences; a juxtaposition of dissimilar elements (as color,
tone, or emotion) in a work of art

Elaboration -  interesting fullness of detail, complexity, intricacy

BALANCE -       a sensing of equilibrium in a work or art

MOVEMENT -  the quality (as in a painting or sculpture) of representing or
suggesting motion

PROPORTION -  a sensing of harmonious relation of parts to each other or
the whole

DOMINANCE/EMPHASIS -  giving unique visual weight to one or more areas in
composition

ECONOMY -  the efficient and concise use of the elements of art

SPACE -  in 2-D art, illusions of depth throughout the picture plane; in 3-D art,
measurable, physical mass.
 

Primary Color. .  A primary color is complementary to a secondary color that is a mixture
of the two remaining primaries.
 

PRIMARY COLORS/PRIMARY HUES.  Primary hues are those indivisible hues from
which all others can theoretically be mixed.  In refracted colors (colors within visible sunlight),
the primary hues are red, green, and blue.  In reflected colors (colors seen when light is
reflected
from a pigmented surface, the primary hues are red, yellow, and blue.  In the
graphic arts
(color printing industry), the primary hues or process colors are magenta
(red-violet), cyan (blue-green), and yellow.  In psychology, the primary hues are red,
yellow, green,
and blue.  In general, the elemental, indivisible, chromatically pure hues
are red, yellow, blue, green, and violet (purple).

            Additive Primaries.  The primary colors of light: Red + Green + Blue = White Light 

            Subtractive Primaries.  The primary colors of pigments (RYB): Red + Yellow +
            Blue = less intense gray/brown. 

PROPORTION.  A principle of design organization represented by a sensing of
harmonious relation of parts to each other or the whole.
 

Proximity.  The tendency of dissimilar forms, when they form a subdivision in a
composition, to be seen as a common group because of closeness to each other.  A
visual force often used as a strategic device in art and design.
 

Pure Color.  An undiluted tube or cake pigment color of maximum
saturation/chroma/intensity.
 

REPETITION – A principle of design achieved by the use of the same visual element a
number of times in the same composition.  Repetition may accomplish a dominance of
one visual idea, a feeling of harmonious relationship, an obviously planned pattern, or a
rhythmic movement.
 

Realism.  A form of expression that retains the basic impression of visual reality but, in
addition, attempts to relate and interpret the universal meanings that lie underneath the
surface appearance of natural form.

Rectilinear shapes.  Shapes whose boundaries consist entirely of straight lines. 

Relationships.  A factor of measuring the effect of certain elements in a composition on
others and on the whole relative to an artwork's content.  All relationships depend on
similarities of some kind but depend on contrasts to be effective.
 

Representation.  A manner of artistic expression in which subject matter is presented
through the visual elements so that the observer is reminded of actual forms, as in a
photograph.
 

RHYTHM – A principle of design representing a continuance, a flow, or a feeling of
movement achieved
by repetition of regulated visual units or the use of measured accents. 

Saturated color (High Chroma).  The extensive use in a painting of a given hue at its
maximum intensity.
 

Saturation.  The degree of purity of a color ranging from high/intense/bright/vivid to
low/dull.  A fully saturated color can contain one or two of the primary colors but never the
third.  Saturated color does not contain any black, white, or gray. 

Scumbling.  A process of painting in which successive layers of pigment overlap one
another, with each different hue visible in part, thus forming a richly colored and textured
area.  Scumbling usually involves the use of opaque pigments, and implies the use of light
or pale tints over darker ones.
 

Sculpture.  The art of shaping expressive three-dimensional forms.  "Man's expression
through three-dimensional form." (Jules Struppeck)
 

Secondary Colors.  Colors made up of two primary colors: Orange (red + yellow),
Green (blue + yellow), and Violet (red + blue).
 

Shade, Shading.  Mixing black with another color to lower its value and its chroma.

Shading.  The darker value on the surface of a form that gives the illusion of that portion
of the form turning away from the imagined source of light.

Shallow space.  Sometimes called "limited depth" because the artist controls the use of
the visual elements so that no point or form is so remote that it does not take its place in
the pattern of the picture surface.

SHAPE.  An element of art structure represented by an area that stands out from the
space next to or around it because of a defined boundary or because of difference of
value, color, or texture.  A two-dimensional, flat object bounded by an actual or implied line.

Two basic types of shape:

1.  GEOMETRIC or ANGULAR SHAPES.  Shapes created by the exact mathematical
laws of geometry.  They are usually simple, such as the triangle, the rectangle, and the circle.
They are categorized as classical shapes.

 

 

 

2.  CURVILINEAR, ORGANIC or BIOMORPHIC SHAPES.  Shapes commonly found
in natural living organisms; Irregular shapes that resemble the freely developed curves
found in live organisms.  They are categorized as romantic shapes.

 

 

 

 

 


Ambiguous Shapes.  Shapes that are atmospheric, suggestive of space, fluidity, and
light because of the nature of the subject matter and the artist's treatment of it.
 

Spatial Order.  The patterns and fields of space that lines, shapes and volumes create.
Our being able to discern in a work what is near and what is far depends on considering
both two- and three-dimensional space phenomena and its part in a work's spatial order.

Silhouette.  An area existing between or bounded by the contours, or edges, of an object.
A total shape. 

Similarity.  A principle of organization in which integrating associations are made due to
like or similar elements being found in various places within a composition.  This principle
adds to the sense of unity within a work of art.
 

Simplicity.  The result of eliminating all but the most essential characteristics in a
composition, so that the heart of its content is revealed.
 

Simulated texture.  The copying, or imitation, of object surfaces.

Simultaneous contrast.  Intensified contrast that results whenever two extremely different
colors, such as
complementary colors, come into direct contact.  The eye, seeking
equilibrium, generates a "ghost" that is the complement of the stimulating color.  It is a
spontaneous color effect that results from a physiological response of the eye to stimulation
while viewing the contiguous edge between two extremely different colors.  Contrast is
seemingly intensified by one color, then the other, and vice versa.

Sinking-in (Sunken color).  Oil or acrylic polymer colors that have not been mixed with an
oil medium or a polymer medium that appear dull or matte upon drying.  This is usually an
undesirable attribute of paint that can be offset by using a medium or a varnish.
 

SPACE.  A principle of design organization represented by an illusion of depth in a 2-D
artwork, or, in a 3-D artwork, actual, physical, measurable mass.  Space may also be
characterized as a boundless or unlimited extension in all directions.  Space may be void
of matter.  Artists use the term to describe the interval or measurable distance between
pre-established points.
 

Spectrum.  The band of individual colors that results when a beam of light is broken into
its component wavelengths of hues.  The colors of a rainbow: R, Y, G, B-G, B-V, R-V
(additive light mixture).
 

Split-complement.  On a color wheel, a color and the two colors on either side of its
complementary color.
 

Style.  The specific artistic character and dominant form trends noted in art movements
or during specific periods of history.  Style may also mean artist' expressive use of the
media to give their works individual character. 

Subdivision.  The result when a number of elements in a composition have enough
characteristics in common that they tend to be linked together visually to a greater extent
than they tend to be linked visually to other elements in the composition.
 

Subject matter.  This term in a descriptive style of art refers to the persons or things
represented, as well as the artists' experience, which serve as inspiration.  In abstract or
nonobjective forms of art subject matter refers merely to the basic character of all the visual
signs employed by the artist.  In this case the subject matter has little to do with anything
experienced in the natural environment.
 

Subjective colors.  Colors chosen by the artist without regard to the natural appearance
of the object portrayed.  Subjective colors have nothing to do with objective reality but
represent the expression of the individual artist. 

Substitution.  A sculptural term meaning the replacement of one material or medium by
another; casting (see definition of "casting"). 

Subtraction.  A sculptural term meaning to carve or cut away materials. 

Successive Contrast.  The color phenomena observed as a negative afterimage when
differently colored areas are viewed one after the other, as in looking at a white area after
staring at a red one.  If the initial image (red) is highly saturated, its complementary color
will seem to momentarily appear in the second (white) area.  This illusion occurs when any
other highly intense color is used in the same manner.
 

Surrealism.  A style of artistic expression that emphasizes fantasy and whose subjects
are usually the experiences revealed by the subconscious mind.
 

Symmetrical balance.  A form of balance achieved by the use of identical compositional
units on either side of a vertical axis within the confining pictorial space, as in a mirror image.
 

Synthesis (also HARMONY).  A result of design organization representing the unity of all
visual elements in a composition.  Synthesis is the result of causing each emphatic feature
of an artwork to show visual connections with other features that causes them to be seen
as integrated members of the whole.
 

Tactile.  A quality that refers to the sense of touch. 

Tactile Textures.  The textures of the actual things our paintings and drawings are derived
from, such as wood, hair, stone, etc., that we may experience through touch.  See ACTUAL
TEXTURE, See NATURAL TEXTURE. Also, the characteristic of painted and drawn
images that resemble things we know of that have actual textures.  See SIMULATED
TEXTURE.
 

Technique.  The manner and skill with which artists employ tools and materials to achieve
a predetermined, expressive effect.  Various technical ways of using media have an effect
on aesthetic quality of an artwork. 

Tectonic.  Pertaining to the quality of simple massiveness; lacking any significant extension. 

Tempera.  Opaque, aqueous, water-soluble pigments.  The common name for school
pigments, although the correct name is poster colors or show card colors. 

Tenebrism.  A style of painting that exaggerates or emphasizes the effects of chiaroscuro.
Larger amounts of dark value are placed close to smaller areas of highly contrasting lights
in order to concentrate attention on certain important features. 

Tension.  In a composition or work of art, the sense of parts or elements threatening
change, striving to meet or repel each other, or to alter their shape or location.  Tension
is a visual force or strategic device sensed when directional actions are ambiguous or
in conflict.
 

Tertiary Colors.  The colors created by mixing a primary and an adjacent secondary hue;
intermediate colors.  Also, colors made of any mixture of the three primaries, such as
“brown” or chromatic neutrals.
 

Tetrad.  Four colors, and variations of value and chroma, exclusively used in a design. 

Tessellation.  The process of forming into a pattern, such as a mosaic, in which attention
is drawn simultaneously to both figure and ground.

TEXTURE.  An element of art represented by the surface character of a material that may
be experienced through touch, or the illusion of touch. The visual or tactile surface
characteristics and appearance of something.  Texture may be produced by natural forces
or through an artist's manipulation of the art elements.

Three types of texture:

1.  ACTUAL TEXTURE - A surface that may be experienced through the sense of touch
(as opposed to surfaces often "imitated" by the artist); see natural texture.

2.  ARTIFICIAL TEXTURE - Any actual texture created by humans; see simulated texture.

3.  INVENTED TEXTURE - Patterns created by the repetition of lines or shapes on a
small scale over the surface of an area.  The repeated motif may be an abstraction or an
adaptation of nature patterns used in a more regular or planned fashion.
 

Thematic Unity.  A unity of things having a common purpose or idea. (i.e., kitchen utensils,
articles of clothing, souvenirs of a vacation, etc.)
 

Three-dimensional shape.  The outline of a solid, or the illusion of a solid. 

Three-dimensional value pattern.  Value relationships that are planned to create an illusion of objects
existing in depth back of the picture plane.
 

Three-dimensional space.  In 2-D art illusion, a sensation of space that seems to have volume
composed of thickness and depth, as well as length and breadth.  In 3-D art, the physical space occupied
by an object.
 

Three-Dimensional Strategy.  Calculated means by which the viewer is made to feel that he or she can
move into and through a two dimensional composition in a specific manner related to the artwork's content.
 

Tint, Tinting.  Mixing white to another color to raise its value and lower its chroma. 

Tone, Toning.  Mixing gray with another color to lower its value and its chroma. 

Tortured color (Mud, Tormented, Drowned).  Color that has been mixed to excess, the result of using
too many hues while mixing.  Tortured color can be quickly healed by adding white or gray to the mess.
 

Translucent.  Allowing light to pass through, but not transparent. 

Transparent color.  Color that does not completely hide the color of the surface over which it is painted.
Mixing white into a transparent color will make it opaque.
 

Transparency.  A situation in which a distant plane or shape can be seen through a nearer one. 

Tri-Chromatic Theory (Young-Helmholtz).  A physical and Newtonian model for vision that declares that
in the retina are three receptor-types: Red, Green, and Blue.  Yellow is sensed when the retinal receptors
red and green are equally stimulated.  Magenta (red-violet) is sensed when the receptors red and blue are
equally stimulated.  Cyan (blue-green) is sensed when the receptors blue and green are equally stimulated.
White is perceived when all receptors are equally and intensely stimulated.  Black is sensed as the absence
of retinal stimulation.  This theory explains successive contrast and simultaneous contrast.
 

Trompe l'oeil.  A technique involving the copying of nature with such exactitude that the subject depicted
may be mistaken for natural forms.
 

Two-dimensional shape.  An area confined to length and width and set apart by contrasts of value or color. 

Two-dimensional space.  Measurable distances on a surface that shows length and breadth but lack any
illusion of thickness or depth.
 

Two-Dimensional Strategy.  The calculated means by which the viewer's eyes are made to move across
or over a two dimensional composition in a specific manner related to the artwork's content.
 

Two-dimensional value pattern.  Value relationships in which the changes of light and dark seem to
occur only on the surface of the picture plane.
 

UNITY (ORDER, ONENESS, GESTALT)  - The sense, in a work of art that all the parts are working together
to make an orderly statement, that each element included is necessary, and that the artist's intent and the
artwork's content are cohesive.  An overall oneness exists in a work that has unity.  The whole or total
effect of a work of art that results from the combination of all component parts, including the assigned ratio
between harmony and variety.  A sense of order or unity is a basic aim of the process of making art.

Value.  An element of art represented by the degree of lightness or darkness of tone; its color relative to a
gray scale rated one (black-the absence of light) through ten (white-light itself, the lightest value); The
characteristic of a color in terms of the amount of light reflected from it.  Value refers to the relative lightness
or darkness of tone, not to color quality.  One of the three Properties of color. 

Value pattern.  The total effect of the relationships of light and dark given to areas within the pictorial field. 

VARIETY.  A principle of art represented by the quality or state of having differing parts creating visual
interest.  Variety involves CONTRAST and ELABORATION and is used to balance HARMONY in a design
or work of art.
 

Visual Weight.  A degree of eye appeal based on an element's contrast with other parts or elements in
the work or on its particular orientations, tilt or direction on the picture plane.
 

Visual Forces / Visual Devices.  Dynamic visual effects used in design.  The four effects are:

            Tension -  a sensing of parts in a composition threatening change

Proximity -  closeness of elements in a composition which tend to form a subdivision, or group

Continuity -  a unifying alignment of elements to create visual movement in a composition

Closure -  the tendency of the viewer to complete a suggested shape or form 

Visual Unity.  A creation of a coherent composition by the sensitive application of structural elements of
design, visual forces, and the principles of design organization.

Void.  A penetration of an object to its other side, thus creating an open, empty space.  An enclosed
negative shape.
 

Volume.  A three-dimensional shape that exists in space.  On a flat surface the artist can only create
the illusion of a volume. 

Warm Colors.  Red, Orange, Yellow, Yellow-Green, and sometimes Green. The red and yellow range of
colors on a color wheel symbolic of fire, heat and psychological warmth. 

Watercolor.  Transparent pigments ground in an aqueous solution of gum arabic.  Transparent watercolor
painting is similar to staining and utilizes the white of the paper for brilliant light effects, and superimposed
layering of color called glazing.  Opaque watercolor painting utilizes white pigment mixtures.  A low-cost,
nontoxic technique of painting universally used as an introductory technique for children and beginners.
Professional watercolor painting calls for a considerable degree of technical skill and a well-developed technique.

*****      TWO BASIC LAWS OF PERCEPTION and of STRATEGIC COMPOSITION - (Physiological
not sociological): 

1.         The eye, as an extension of the mind, automatically picks out things of similar character
in a visual system, in an attempt to make order out of chaos. 

2.         The eye is attracted to forms in a visual system that are unique. 

Tip: Visual balance needs variation to be interesting, but variation needs balance to be coherent.

 

SHAPE

SHAPE. An area that stands out from the space next to or around it because of a defined boundary or
because of difference of value, color, or texture.  A 2D, flat object.

Two basic types of shape:

1. GEOMETRIC or ANGULAR SHAPES. Shapes created by the exact mathematical laws of geometry.
They are usually simple, such as the triangle, the rectangle, and the circle. They are categorized as
classical shapes.

image021.gif (1510 bytes)


2. CURVILINEAR, ORGANIC or BIOMORPHIC SHAPES. Shapes commonly found in natural living
organisms; Irregular shapes that resemble the freely developed curves found in live organisms. They are
categorized as romantic shapes.

image022.gif (1924 bytes)

AMBIGUOUS SHAPES. Shapes that are more atmospheric, suggestive of space, fluidity, and light because
of the nature of the subject matter and the artist's treatment of it.

 

RECOMMENDED READING

Acknowledgement Statement: Many of the course concepts applied throughout this Study Guide are found
in the recommended textbooks and the following publications.  Professor Navrat, throughout his forty years
of teaching experience, credits the following authors, and his teaching colleagues, for many ideas
interpreted, used, and compiled in this Study Guide. 

PRINCIPLES OF FORM AND DESIGN, by Wucius Wong; Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York: 1993.
 
ISBN 0-442-01405-8

ARTSPEAK, by Robert Atkins

ARTSPOKE, by Robert Atkins 

FUNDAMENTAL ART and DESIGN TEXTS:

Design and Composition, by Nathan Goldstein; Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: 1989. ISBN 0-13-199910-9.

Design Basics, by David Lauer and Stephen Pentak

Design Dimensions, by Cynthia Maris Dantzic

Design Principles and Problems, by Zelanski and Fisher

Design Concepts and Applications, by Cheatham/Cheatham/Owens

ARTSTRANDS, by Hubbard/Zimmerman

Basic Design/systems, elements, applications, by Richardson/Coleman/Smith

A Design Manual, by Shirl Brainard

Design: A Creative Approach, by Sybil Emerson

Design: An Introduction, by Janet K. Smith

Design: A Search for Essentials, by Elizabeth Adams Hurwitz

Design and Form: The Basic Course at the Bauhaus, by Johannes Itten

Elements of Design, byDonald M. Anderson

Artforms, by Duane and Sarah Preble

The Universal Traveler/ a companion for those on problem-solving journeys and a soft-systems guidebook
to the process of design
, by Don Koberg and Jim Bagnall

Search for Form: A Fundamental Approach to Art, by Eliel Saarinen 

REFERENCES and ADVANCED READING:

Twentieth Century Design, by Jonathan M. Woodham (1997)

Borrowed Design: Use and Abuse of Historical Form, by Steven Heller (1993)

Design Discourse, by Victor Margolin

Design Since 1945, by Peter Dormer

Design Form and Chaos, by Paul Rand

Design by Accident, by James F. O`Brien

Chaos: Making a New Science, by James Gleick (1987)

The Artists Handbook, by Ralph Mayer

Art As Experience, by John Dewey

Search for the Real, by Hans Hofmann

The Courage to Create, by Rollo May

Concerning the Spiritual in Art, by Wassily Kandinsky

The Shape of Content, by Ben Shahn

Ways of Seeing, by John Berger

Femininity and Masculity in Eighteenth Century Art and Culture, edited by Perry & Rossington (1994).

Art, Experience and Criticism, by William T. Squires

Re-Visions: New Perspectives of Art Criticism, by Howard Smagula

Infinite Dynamics: The Golden Key to Art, by Walter B. Adams [USD I.D. Weeks Library - s.l.: s.n., 1959]

Glossary of Art, Architecture, and Design Since 1945:Terms and Labels Describing Movements Styles and
Groups Derived from the Vocabulary of Artists and Critics
, by John A. Walker (1969)

Glossary of Art, Architecture, and Design since 1945, by John A. Walker (1992)

High Styles: 20thC American Design, by David A. Hanks & others (1985)

A History of Design from the Victorian Era to the Present: A Survey of the Modern Style in Architecture,
Interior Design, Industrial Design, Graphic Design, and Photography
, by Ann Ferebee (1970)

Making the Modern: Industry, Art, and Design in America, by Terry E. Smith (1993)

The Natural History of the Traditional Quilt, by John Forrest (1995)

Paul Rand: A Designers Art, by Paul Rand (1985)

Peasant Designs for Artists and Craftsmen, by Ed Sibbett (1977)

Pioneers of Modern Design: From William Morris to Walter Gropius, by Nikolaus Pevsner (1979)

Studies in Art, Architecture and Design: Victorian and After, by Nikolaus Pevsner (1982)

Thoughts on Design, by Paul Rand (1970)

Transformations in Design: A Formal Approach to Stylistic Change and Innovation in the Visual Arts, by
Terry W. Knight (1994)

Art Forms in Nature: Enlarged Photographs of Plant Forms, by Karl Blossfeldt (1967)

Art Nouveau: Art and Design at the Turn of the Century, by Peter Howard Selz (1975)

Art & Design in Europe and America, 1800-1900, by Simon Jervis (1987)

Art/Design: Communicating Visually, by Gilbert Clark

Collections of Dakota Sioux Designs, by Mable Arconge Rooks, Nemo, SD (1958)

Domestic Animals: The Neoprimitive Style, by Andrea Branzi (1987)

Visual Puns in Design: The Pun Used as a Communications Tool, by Eli Kince (1982)

Vision and Design, by Roger Fry (1924)

Research: Design in Nature, by John Gilbert Wilkins (1925)

TAKE-HOME FINAL EXAM

The purpose of the test questioning is to summarize the most important course theory, terminology, artistic
guidelines, and media procedures presented throughout the semester.  Test questions will review and
emphasize information found in the Study Guide and from class sessions, including your notes. Most test
questions will require you to think, to interpret relationships of terminology, and to synthesize related
information. 

You are encouraged to work with other students to discuss the test questions and prepare answers.

It is estimated that three hours of research and discussion are required to complete the final test. 

The website: http://www.usd.edu/~dnavrat/syllabi/Art121 is updated throughout the semester and will
contain more information and diagrams than the printed study guide.  Use the website as well as the
Study Guide in preparation of your answers. 

The test is composed of objective questioning including true/false, multiple choice, matching, short answer,
and diagramming.  Test questions relate to essential, basic, fundamental terminology used in class sessions
as well as listings, procedures, components, media, techniques and effects of art fundamentals, basic
design and composition.

Study for the test questions by reviewing your notes and information in the study guide.

The printed study guide presently contains more information and diagrams than the website:

http://www.usd.edu/~dnavrat

The test is composed of objective questioning including true/false, multiple choice, matching, and short
answer. Test questions relate to essential, basic, fundamental terminology used in class sessions as well
as listings, procedures, components, media, techniques and effects of art fundamentals, basic design
and composition.

The exam emphasizes the following: Components of the design process; Components of visual art; 

Glossary of art terminology; The Elements of Art Structure; The Principles of Art Organization;
Evaluation criteria

(qualities of art); Dynamic visual forces/Visual devices/Visual energy devices; Goals of making 

art; Basic laws of visual perception applying to composition; The elements of light; Basic 

compositional structures; Varieties of line; Methods of creating illusion of space; Types of 

texture; Design considerations; Historic styles of art; Critical analysis; Self-evaluation of your work 

The Take-Home Final Exam will receive three grades.  The grades will be averaged with all other grades
you earned in the course.  The Final Exam will constitute 10% of your final grade for the course.

 

LINEAR PERSPECTIVE DRAWING

In pencil, enlarge and draw each of the following:

PROBLEM 1 One-point parallel perspective.

Which of the five cubes is drawn in one-point linear perspective?





 

PROBLEM 2 Two-point linear perspective.

Locate the vanishing points for each of the three cubes.

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PROBLEM 3 Multiple-point perspective.

Locate the vanishing point on the horizon line for each of the five planes.

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PROBLEM 4 Two point and inclined planes multiple-point perspective.

Locate the vanishing points for the box and each of its flaps.

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PROBLEM 4 Perspective of the circle

- drawing ellipses.

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WINDOW-MATTING INSTRUCTIONS

Drawings, Collages, Watercolors, Acrylic Painting on paper or
paper board
(Other matting formats are acceptable)


 

 

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MATERIALS NEEDED
:

4 ply or 14 ply mat board or mounting board (archival quality is best), usually 28"x44" or 32" x 40"; backing board (usually foamcore board); pencil, yardstick or 24" rule; utility knife; 1" or 2" wide, gummed paper tape (not masking tape).

1. On the mat board, measure 3" from two sides along any corner of the board and draw the lines to make one 90 degree corner of the mat. This allows for the mat margin to be 3" wide. Measurements for the mat opening are begun 3" from the edge of the mat board.

2. Measure the art work to be matted allowing for at least 1/4" of each edge of the art work to be covered by the mat opening. Draw light pencil lines on the mat board to indicate the dimensions of the mat opening.

3. Measure for the other two sides of the mat opening and connect the lines to form the rectangular mat opening to be cut away.


4. Measure 3" for the other mat margin, and 3-1/2" for the bottom mat margin; draw light pencil lines to indicate the size of the entire mat. Other margins are appropriate, but avoid less than 3" for the most professional appearance.

5. Cut excess mat board away. Use a metal edge for cutting. Do not use too much pressure when cutting thick paperboard. Instead, always scribe lightly many times to make a neat and clean cut.


6. Measure and cut backing board to exact size as the mat.

7. Cut out mat opening.

8. Paper tape inside of mat board to backing board as shown to make a hinged mat with protective backing.

9. Center artwork in mat opening and paper tape top edge only to the backing board (to avoid future wrinkling of the artwork caused by expansion/contraction due to temperature and humidity changes).

10. If desired, with pencil only (not ink), title artwork and sign and date the artwork on the bottom margin of the artwork.

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MID-TERM STUDENT SURVEY

Mark each statement as True or False:

___

   This semester I am enrolled in courses other than Design I.
___    The amount of work and time required for Design I is about the same in comparison with my
other courses.
___    This course requires more work and time than my other courses this semester.
___    I have enrolled in or completed other art courses at the college level.
___    The amount of work and time required for Design I is about the same in comparison with other
art
courses I have taken.
___    This course requires more work and time than other art courses I have taken.
___    The course emphasis is balanced between quality and quantity.
___    The course emphasizes quality over quantity.
___    The instructor challenges my way of thinking about design and art.
___    The instructor helps me think more creatively about design.
___    Emphasis on the creative process is nearly balanced by emphasis on the creative product.
___    Emphasis on the creative product is greater than emphasis on the creative process.
___    Lab time is important to me during class meetings.
___    The course is fulfilling my expectations of a basic study in design.
___    I am learning more about design than I had expected to learn.
___    Design is (or will be) important to me in a future job or profession.
___    I am satisfied with the quality of my work at this time.
___    I feel my work will be improving during the rest of the year.


COMMENTS OR SUGGESTIONS FOR IMPROVING THE COURSE:





MID-TERM STUDENT SURVEY


Please give the instructor feedback regarding your opinion of this course in relation to other courses you are taking from
other instructors.

This form uses a visual analog scale. For each question, please make a single vertical mark on the scale somewhere
between the two extremes of poor and excellent.

The last question is open-ended. Please make any comments you wish about the course and the instructor. Thanks
for your help in evaluation of the course.



Rate information you received throughout the course

Poor-------------------------Adequate------------------------Excellent

Rate technical assistance throughout the course

Poor-------------------------Adequate------------------------Excellent

Rate artistic/creative assistance throughout the course

Poor-------------------------Adequate------------------------Excellent

Rate willingness and availability of the instructor to help you

Poor-------------------------Adequate------------------------Excellent

How useful were the explanations and technical information

Poor-------------------------Adequate------------------------Excellent

How were the explanations of artistic/aesthetic performance?

Poor-------------------------Adequate------------------------Excellent

How do you regard access to the studio as helpful in completing the course?

Poor-------------------------Adequate------------------------Excellent

How is the course holding up to your overall expectations?

Poor-------------------------Adequate------------------------Excellent

Overall, how is the course rating in comparison with your other courses?

Poor-------------------------Adequate------------------------Excellent

 

 

"QUIZ" - FIRST DAY STUDENT INFO



NAME_______________________________________________

 

Email address_____________________________________

1. What is your background in art? List the art courses you have taken (include high school
and college courses):

2. Explain your interest in visual art (Why are you interested? Who influenced you most?
What type of art most interests you?):
3. What is your strongest talent or ability in visual art?
4. Name your favorite artist or artists:
5. Name your favorite color:____________________________________
6. Do you plan to be an art major? If YES, explain why:
 
7. Are you right-handed, left-handed, or ambidextrous?____________________________________
8. Describe your experience and proficiency with computers:
9. How often do you use a computer? (circle one):       Daily           Several Times a Week           Once a Week or Less frequently
10. How often do you research the Internet for your coursework?
11. How often do you research in the library? ____________________________________
12. What are your goals for this course?
13.  How many hours of homework per week do you expect in this course? 
14. Knowing that an above-average grade requires above-average effort, what grade do you want to earn in this course? ____________