elements and-principles

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The Elements and Principles

The Elements of Art

The building blocks or ingredients of art.

LINE

A mark with length and direction. A continuous mark made on a surface by a moving point.

Pablo Picasso

Line

Line

Contour lines- outline the edges of forms or shapes

Gestural lines- indicate action and physical movement

COLORConsists of Hue (another word for color), Intensity (brightness) and Value (lightness or darkness).

Henri Matisse Alexander Calder

ColorColor has three properties:1. The first is HUE.

(this is the name of the colors)

2. The second property of color is

value, which refers to the

lightness or darkness of a hue.

3. The third property of color is

intensity, which refers to the purity

of the hue (called “chroma”)

Neutral Colors These colors are made by adding a

complimentary color (opposite on the color wheel) to a hue. Neutralized hues are called tones.

Tints and Shades

Tints-adding the color white.

Shades- adding the color black.

Warm and Cool Colors

VALUEThe lightness or darkness of a color.

MC Escher Pablo Picasso

VALUEHigh Range in Value

Low Range in Value

SHAPE

An enclosed area defined and determined by other art elements; 2-dimensional.

Joan Miro

ShapeSHAPES CAN BE DESCRIBED AS:

GEOMETRICsquare, triangle, rectangle, rhombus, circle, cone

ORGANICfree form shapes, shapes in nature for example:

leaves, trees, clouds, animals

Organic vs. Geometric

FORMFORMA 3-dimensional object; or something in a 2-dimensional artwork that appears to be 3-dimensional.

For example, a triangle, which is 2-dimensional, is a shape, but a pyramid, which is 3-dimensional, is a form.

Jean Arp Lucien Freud

FORM

Form can be 2-d Form can be 3-d

Robert Mapplethorpe

Claude Monet

S P A C EThe distance or area between, around, above, below, or within things.

Positive (filled with something) and Negative (empty areas)

Foreground, Middleground and Background (creates DEPTH)

Space

How is space being altered? Space is being created how?

TEXTURETEXTURE

The surface quality or "feel" of an object, its smoothness, roughness, softness, etc. Textures may be actual or implied.

Texture

Actual texture – texture that you can feel with your sense of touch

Implied texture – texture that has been simulated in drawing and painting on a smooth surface

The Principles of Design

What we use to organize the Elements of Art,

or the tools to make art.

BALANCE

The way the elements are arranged to create a feeling of stability in a work. Alexander Calder

Symmetrical Balance

The parts of an image are organized so that one side mirrors the other.

Leonardo DaVinci

Asymmetrical Balance

When one side of a composition does not reflect the design of the other.

James Whistler

EMPHASIS

The focal point of an image, or when one area or thing stand out the most.

Jim Dine Gustav Klimt

EMPHASISCAN BE CREATED THROUGH THE USE OF MANY DIFFERENT ELEMENTS AND PRINCIPLES LIKE…

CONTRAST

PROPORTION

COLOR

CONTRAST

A large difference between two things to create interest and tension.

Ansel Adams

Salvador Dali

CONTRAST

…with color …with proportion/scale

RHYTHM RHYTHM RHYTHM RHYTHM RHYTHM RHYTHM

and MOVEMENT

A regular repetition of elements to produce the look and feel of movement.

Marcel Duchamp

RHYTHMand MOVEMENT

IT CAN BE QUICK AND FAST “TEMPO”

RHYTHMand MOVEMENT

…OR SLOWER AND MORE MELODIC

Vincent VanGogh

PATTERNand Repetition

Repetition of a design.

Gustav Klimt

UNITYWhen all the elements and principles work together to create a pleasing image.

Johannes Vermeer

VARIETY

The use of differences and

change to increase the

visual interest of the work.

Marc Chagall

PROPORTION

The comparative relationship of one part to another with respect to size, quantity, or degree; SCALE.

Gustave Caillebotte

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