Art II Intermediate ARt
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Transcript of Art II Intermediate ARt
ART IIINTERMEDIATE ART
The ART of communication
Welcome to Art YOU WILL be Happy here!
1st Day Agenda
Welcome to Art YOU WILL be Happy here! Cover Syllabus & Mrs. Steffl’s expectations. Student Expectations for Mrs. Steffl Seating chart (M-Th My Chart, Fridays You Pick) Student Inventory Birthdays on Calendar Who am I?
Symbolism Activity DEMO HOMEWORK DUE TOMORROW 5 Symbolic Objects
with CLEVER reasons.
SYMBOLISM
The practice of representing things by means of symbols or of attributing symbolic meanings or significance to objects, events, or relationship.
HOMEWORK DUE TOMORROW 5 Symbolic Objects with CLEVER
reasons.
SYMBOLS & Logos ARE USUALLY:*Instantaneously recognizable.*Memorable.*Can be illustrative in nature, either concrete or abstract.
Tubs/Names Student Inventory Review Expectations Share HOMEWORK SYMBOLS All about you, you, you, you, YOU! SYMBOLISM
The practice of representing things by means of symbols or of attributing symbolic meanings or significance to objects, events, or relationship.
SHARE YOUR 3 to 5 SYMBOLIC items
2nd Day Agenda
ObjectiveTo understand the word symbolism, find symbolic representations of yourself and to look for and understand the meaning of who you are and how it influences YOUR art.
To work on your communication skills of presentation and active listening.
Iconic/Symbolic Logos - Icons and symbols are compelling yet uncomplicated images that are emblematic of a particular company or product. They use imagery that conveys a literal or abstract representation of your organization. Symbols are less direct than straight text, leaving room for broader interpretation of what the organization represents. In order for a symbol to be a truly effective logo it should be:
Logos & Symbols
*Instantaneously recognizable.*Memorable.*Can be illustrative in nature, either concrete or abstract.
What is art??? You will define art individually for five
minutes. This definition will be shared with your group. Your group will collectively redefine the definition to the come up with a SUPER Art definition to be shared with the class on the boards
WE will discuss and take notes on a slideshow defining arts key concepts.
VIEW slideshow “What Is ART?”
REVIEW OF ELEMENTS & PRINCIPLES OF ART & DESIGN
Review Elements & Principles, Discuss & Demonstrate how to complete Worksheet:
Day 4 Agenda
Complete Elements handout. View Elements Slide show
(slideshare) Take notes for all slides. Handout for Elements.
Happy FRIDAY Friday Bellwork
Respond to the question and turn in for credit: (To help you to use higher level thinking & build your communications skills.) When did you know what the artist was painting?
Why do you think it took so long to figure it out? What do you think of Dan Dunn?
Principles of Design Slide Show Take notes for all slides.
Studio Time to Complete handout & Texture Hand drawing.
Intro To Gesture Drawing The Contour LINE
A contour is the line which defines a form or edge - an outline. Contour drawing is the place where most beginners start, following the visible edges of a shape. The contour describes the outermost edges of a form, as well as dramatic changes of plane within the form. 'Blind contour drawing' is when contour drawing is done without looking at the paper.
Gesture Drawing – The essence of a subject
What is this a picture of?
How do you think this was made?
Why would an artist make something like this?
Video Link http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRTqpJMs98E
Gesture Drawing – The essence of a subject
A Gesture drawing is work of art defined by rapid execution (DRAWN QUICKLY). Typically artist draw a series of poses in a short amount of time, often a little as 30 seconds, or as long as 2 minutes
Artists may gesture draw people or animals going about normal activities with no special effort to pause for the artist. For example, drawing from people on the street, performers, athletes, or drawing animals at the zoo.
For ART , a gesture drawing attempts to capture action, basic shapes or movement.
Today you will draw a BIKE!
Look for the obvious shapes…
Circles(wheels and gears)
Triangles(frame) Straight lines
(Handle bars)
Accuracy of the bike form.
Details. Shading, Value &
Realism. EFFORT!!! Focus.
Remember to… You will be graded on …
OBJECTIVE:To learn and apply foundational drawing techniques to improve your artistic skill in drawing the portrait.
Gesture Drawing – The essence of a subject
A Gesture drawing is work of art defined by rapid execution (DRAWN QUICKLY). Typically artist draw a series of poses in a short amount of time, often a little as 30 seconds, or as long as 2 minutes
Artists may gesture draw people or animals going about normal activities with no special effort to pause for the artist. For example, drawing from people on the street, performers, athletes, or drawing animals at the zoo.
For ART , a gesture drawing attempts to capture action, basic shapes or movement.
Week 2 Art II
Bellwork You will begin drawing the
parts of the human face. Review Value Notes. Shading Tips. Today the Eye- Demo Find three (3) eye images
online/or from magazines and draw as accurately as possible DUE Wednesday: 3
EYES fabulously draw.
To learn and apply foundational drawing techniques to improve your artistic skill in drawing the portrait.
You will understand the proportions of the human face and apply them effectively in your own SELF PORTRAIT.
To CREATE A SELF PORTRAIT YOU LOVE!!!
Agenda Objective
MC Escher EYE -Can you name some parts of the human eye? Draw and label as many as you can in your sketchbook.
Today in Art…
MC Escher’s Eye How we see. Draw and discuss
the human eye.
Draw with DEMO the human eye
Draw two accurately drawn eyes from images given in class. (Draw BIG).
Draw your eye from life using a still life mirror.
Together On your own
How we see…
The eye Process of 'Seeing'
Both the eyes have slightly different fields of vision since they are separated by the nose. Each of these visual fields are divided into the right and left side. The following diagram clearly shows the structure of the human eye and what happens when an object is looked at. Not only do the two eyes see different angles of the object but each individual eye takes in different information, due to the different visual fields. The diagram has given two different colors to the different visual fields to make the process more understandable. Signals from the left visual fields of both eyes are sent to the right visual cortex and vice versa. The information received at one eye is incomplete since only one part of the image is available, therefore both eyes immediately send their information to the brain, so that the information can be combined.
SkullDaVinciHow has he used value?What types of shading do you see (where)?Notice Da Vinci’s writing.Try to write your name so you can read it in the mirror on your table. Will demo after you try.
Please Answer in your Sketchbooks What have you learned as an artist this
week?
Do you believe gesture drawings and contour drawings help you to be a better artist? Why or Why not? Discuss as a table.
Bellwork We will begin
studying the Self Portrait & Portrait Drawing.
To learn and apply foundational drawing techniques to improve your artistic skill in drawing the portrait.
You will understand the proportions of the human face and apply them effectively in your own SELF PORTRAIT.
AGENDA Objective
Facebook settings, privacy, and what you put out on the web.
3 eyes Plus yours from life due FRIDAY.
Today in class draw eyes from sheet, and from life.
To learn and apply foundational drawing techniques to improve your artistic skill in drawing the portrait.
You will understand the proportions of the human face and apply them effectively in your own SELF PORTRAIT.
AGENDA Objective
Please Answer in your Sketchbooks What have you learned as an artist this
week?
Do you believe gesture drawings and contour drawings help you to be a better artist? Why or Why not? Discuss as a table.
Bellwork We will begin
studying the Self Portrait & Portrait Drawing.
To learn and apply foundational drawing techniques to improve your artistic skill in drawing the portrait.
You will understand the proportions of the human face and apply them effectively in your own SELF PORTRAIT.
AGENDA Objective
The NOSE
To the right is the basic lines for the nose, two long lines for the edges of the round "ball" at the tip of the nose, and the nostrils. The nose is made of these simple shapes.
To learn and apply foundational drawing techniques to improve your artistic skill in drawing the portrait.
You will understand the parts and the proportions of the human face and apply them effectively in your own SELF PORTRAIT.
Drawings Due Thursday (3 Noses 1 is your own.) Objective
Today in Art
You are graded on:How it looksEffortUse of ClasstimeHow well you can apply this knowledge to your portraits next week~!
Each face part is worth 40 points.
Complete all parts of the face by Monday before class.
4 eyes, 3 noses, 4 mouths
Demonstrate Photographing Art.
Where and How to SAVE for portfolios.
Studio Time to work on your Noses, mouths.
TomorrowCreating a Wiki for your portfolio
The portrait drawing from an image…
Choose a celebrity portrait to draw. You are working for as much similarity between
the original and your finished art. You will need to have at least 8 values. You must represent texture as it appears. Use your rubric.
OBJECTIVE:To apply the proportions of the human face and practice on drawing the parts of the face to create a realistic portrait drawing from a photograph.
Drawing the portrait - PRE TEST Pre Test..
Draw a face as well as you can from memory. This should take all class. Use what you know from the eyes, noses, and mouth drawings we completed. There should be hair, and a neck and shoulders. Use value. This is worth 20 points and is due at the end of
the hour. This will be our base line for your growth as an artist when drawing the face. Use of class time and effort are worth 5 pts of this. I am not offering help because I want to see where your understanding is at. Have fun. Do your best!
A Self Portrait… BellworkChuck Close Self Portrait Walker Art Center
Tell me about this artwork. How do you think it was made? What is interesting about it?
Celebrity Portraits PM Star Time Today Chuck Close Portrait
Video Demonstrate finding a resource.
2 pics Front centered view Good contrast and compositions Save to YOUR student folder for future reference
Computer lab time.Tommorow Photographing Portrait. Where and How to SAVE for
portfolios. Studio Time to work on your celebrity Portraits.
Chuck Close Emma, 2002http://www.chuckclose.coe.uh.edu/
portraits and self-portraits. In 1988, at the peak of his career,
Close became paralyzed. He regained partial use of his arms, and was able to return to painting after developing techniques which allowed him to work from a wheelchair.
Artist Chuck Close is a wonderful example of an individual who has valued his abilities and who has used his abilities in his own best way. By not letting paralysis or being in a wheelchair stop his already successful career as an artist, Close demonstrates how a "can-do" attitude and approach to life can help us overcome obstacles in order to create even greater possibilities than before.
This 2002 portrait of his niece Emma is actually a woodcut print based on a painting in Close's late signature style. Chuck spent three months on the painting; master printer Yasu Shibata spent two years carving 27 wodblocks to print 113 colors 132 times to make each print. Every aspect of the process is like a miraculous innovation, beginning with Close's secret for getting a toddler to sit still for three whole months.
Chuck Close
Emma, 2002
Drawing Vocabulary
Final Portrait Drawing
Self Portraits Notes Drawing Vocabulary Choose Portrait to draw from. Computer Lab
Helpful terminology:
Value: Element of art that deals with lightness or darkness. Depends on how much light a surface reflects.
Contrast: To place and arrange values or colors so as to set
off or bring out noticeable differences.
Highlights: Small white areas that show the surfaces of the subject that reflect the most light.
Shadows: Shaded areas in a drawing. They show the surfaces of the subject that reflect the least lights. They are used to create the illusion of form (three-dimensional reality).
Studio Time Purpose/Objective (What is the point?)
You will demonstrate your understanding of the proportions of the human face, shading and value by applying realism and accuracy to a personal self portrait.
Portrait drawings Do your best Work with contour lines first, then eyes, and
other features can be completed. Hair should be last along with clothing.
Helpful terminology:
Value: Element of art that deals with lightness or darkness. Depends on how much light a surface reflects.
Contrast: To place and arrange values or colors so as to set
off or bring out noticeable differences.
Highlights: Small white areas that show the surfaces of the subject that reflect the most light.
Shadows: Shaded areas in a drawing. They show the surfaces of the subject that reflect the least lights. They are used to create the illusion of form (three-dimensional reality).
Bellwork - Happy Friday What is your Happy Song? Why?
What was your favorite part of the video?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cxfkg3RaRjs&feature=related
Graffiti Bellwork How illegal is it to vandalize a
wall? Is Graffiti Art or Crime? Does it matter what or where
art/graffiti is placed?
Agenda Celebrity Portraits DUE TO ME You must begin to photograph
everything using the document camera REVIEW OF HOW AND WHERE TO
SAVE! Self Portraits Continue To
Complete… Use the proportions of the face
to correctly draw Your beautiful faces.
Photograph your work FREQUENTLY!
Last week Quarter 1 AgendaRemember to use the proportions
Monday Studio Time to work on self
portraits. Tuesday
Review Worksheet complete and check for accuracy in class.
Wednesday Test
Another Famous Graffiti Artist Keith Harring –AIDS AWARENESS
Website for Elementary: http://www.haringkds.com/index.htmlOfficial Website: http://www.haring.com
What Is Keith Haring saying in this artwork? Subjects message?
Haring's bold lines and active figures carry poignant messages of vitality and unity. His legacy made an impact on late 20th century art and grants us all a vision for the future.
Color Theory…
This is what an A+ looks like for this sheet. Light to dark on the front. Secondary colors are created from using 2 primaries. Example:Red +Blue=Violet
Wasily Kandinskyhttp://youtu.be/BxGG1DtVbW0
WasilyKandinsky 1866-1944 Russian painter, considered the father of
the art movement called abstract expressionism.
Kandinsky was extremely interested in the relationship between visual art and music- even naming his paintings with musical terms.
http://www.hyperhistory.com/online_n2/people_n2/art_n2/kandinski.html
http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/kandinsky/
Kandinsky & Abstract Art
Abstraction 20th Century Art Movement “Works of art that reframe nature for expressive effect
are called abstract. Art that derives from, but does not represent, a recognizable subject is called nonrepresentational or nonobjective abstraction.” National Gallery of Art (2006)
Abstract visual expression in this art movement coincided with changes in science and technology; changes in cities; new lighting, automotive vehicles, and skyscraper buildings; along with Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic theory; and Albert Einstein's theory of relativity.
Artists associated with the abstract movement include:
Alexander Calder; Marsden Hartley; Max Weber; John Marin; Georgia O’Keefe ; Arthur Dove ; Jackson Pollock; Barnett Newman; Roy Lichtenstein; Jim Dine; Frank Stella; and Robert Rauschenberg.
Objective(s):
The student(s) will: •View works of art considered abstract and examples
of fine art by artists like Wasily Kandinsky. Discuss the symbolism in art and the messages
within this art form. Examine how art is all around us- in the views we see
daily. Brainstorm ideas for creating their own emotion
based abstract art. • Students will create their own mixed media
painting based on their Elements & Emotions grid.
Examples to inspire your Emotional Element Grid
Master Recreation & Inspirations Research In Lab Today Complete Art History Research (2
Periods/Styles). Turn in sheet to Mrs. Steffl tomorrow.
Printout your favorite artwork. Research In Lab Today
If your blog is not complete see me in the lab today!
Wednesday November 9th Painting Expectations Brush Care & Paintings Differences between acrylic and tempera Canvas boards handed out. Explanation of your Master “recreation”
or Master “inspiration” Painting Assignment.
Begin researching a style/artist to choose.
Monday November 7th Research In Lab Today First 20 minutes TITLE OF ARTWORK - DATE
Artist – Biographical information. Movement/Style- Time frame, artists and
the what was happening in the world. Painting you have chosen using the
research handout given. (Friday) Then We work on paintings back in the
artroom.
Thursday Today
Finish Kandinsky “How I feel Today” Artworks and critique and turn into 3B drawer.
Find first master/recreation inspiration artwork.
Begin drawing your “underpainting” on your canvas. Due completed by Monday. Underpainting
The basic outlines of your painting. The “guidelines” for where and how your paints will be applied.
WHEN YOU PAINT - GET A GOOD CONDITION BRUSH. TAKE CARE OF IT.
Paint in layers, slowly building up your colors. Paint your black FIRST. Have a small dish of water to occasionally dip
your brush into. Acrylic dries quickly. Your solid colors will need two coats. Take your time there is no prize for first person
finished. CLEAN UP ALL BRUSHES, PALLETTES, AND
TABLES!!!
Tips for Painting
Paintings
YOU MESS IT YOU CLEAN IT
Work on Recreation Paintings Pick up graded work of the gray
drawers where we turn in art. All left works will be recycled today!
If you finish critique and turn into the art drawer.
Begin 2nd CHOICE artwork.
Thursday
Work on Recreation Paintings If you finish critique and turn into
the art drawer. Begin 2nd CHOICE artwork.
You may need to got to the Media Center to get ideas. I want to see a rough draft before you begin your next painting.
Remember to complete your last three sketches SOON!
Monday
Color Quiz – Acrylic Quiz You May use notes work independantly
Work on Recreation Paintings If you finish critique and turn into the art
drawer. Begin 2nd CHOICE artwork.
You may need to got to the Media Center to get ideas. I want to see a rough draft before you begin your next painting.
Remember to complete your last three sketches SOON!
Tuesday 12/12
Work on Recreation Paintings If you finish critique and turn into
the art drawer. Begin 2nd CHOICE artwork.
You may need to got to the Media Center to get ideas. I want to see a rough draft before you begin your next painting.
Remember to complete your last three sketches SOON!
ICON An ICON is particularly in modern
culture, a name, face, picture, edifice or even a person readily recognized as having some well-known significance or embodying certain qualities: one thing, an image or depiction, that represents something else of greater significance through literal or figurative meaning, usually associated with religious, cultural, political, or economic standing.
TODAY IN ART View Pop Art Intro and Warhol biography
WORKSHEETS DUE: Get COLOR MIXING SHEET RULES AND EXPECTATIONSYOU MESS IT YOU CLEAN IT WE PAINT
Intro to Painting. Paint Using Tempera Review color from 7th grade art.
WHO IS YOUR ICON & WHO DO YOU WANT TO PAINTING
Does Art create culture? OR Do cultures create Art?Discuss in at least three well thought sentences with examples.
“Un”Birthday Box Project DUE
To learn about an artist, his or her time period, and learn what he/she would have valued in his/her lifetime.
To create a “box” using your own creativity and open-ended critical thinking skills.
TO BEGIN… Find a large square
box preferably lidded- boxes from reams of paper work great- ask at Office Max or your grocery stores.
Decorate your box in the “Style” of your artist. It should be fabulous!!!
The BOXTo get an A: Neatly wrapped/decorated/painted box, with clever
conceptual idea or very neatly done rendition of artist’s style/work. Artwork is rendered with care and precision. Presents inside show a deep understanding of the artist, and reflects a connection on a personal level. An index card accompanies each present, making the connection clear for the viewer. (Example: “TO: Monet FROM: Mrs. Steffl Happy Birthday! I know you are having difficulty seeing as you approach your 80th. It must be painful to paint your beautiful water-lilies when you can’t see properly. I hope these eyeglasses help!”) Presentation is outstanding, flawless, neat, and created with pride and care, idea is original and unique. Student may have “gone the extra mile” to create a birthday atmosphere - issuing invitations to staff.
An A+ Andy Warhol Box
DUE TOMMORROW