Basket Design
http://www.art-devine-slasher.com/images/Etsy/Basket%20maker.jpg
For your next sketchbook assignmnet, I would like you to find a basket that has interesing form, color, and pattern, and draw the basket from observation with a drawing pencil/color pencils.
You will be graded on:
- Composition: Fill the entire page
-Design: Use basic lines, shapes, color, and different values
-Good craftsmanship (keep it neat & invest some time)
-Description: Describe how the basket is used.
Period 1,2,4A,&6: Due on Thursday, 2/4/10
Period 4B: Due on Wednesday, 2/3/10
Artist Inspiration #2
Choose one of the modern artists from the list for your next artist inspiration.
This is a list of modern artists: important artists who have played a role in the history of modern art, dating from the late 19th century until (approximately) the 1970s. Artists who have been at the height of their activity since that date, can be found in the list of contemporary artists.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_modern_artists
Add names in alphabetical order.
A
Ismail Acar
Nadir Afonso
Yaacov Agam
Josef Albers
Pierre Alechinsky
Nathan Altman
Irving Amen
Constantine Andreou
Karel Appel
Félix Arauz
Alexander Archipenko
Jean Arp
David Ascalon
Edward Avedisian
Milton Avery
B
Francis Bacon
Giacomo Balla
Wladimir Baranoff-Rossine
Romare Bearden
Max Beckmann
José Bernal
Joseph Beuys
Umberto Boccioni
Alexander Bogomazov
Pierre Bonnard
Fernando Botero
Louise Bourgeois
Constantin Brancusi
Georges Braque
Marcel Broodthaers
Daniel Buren
David Burliuk
Wladimir Burliuk
C
Alexander Calder
Norman Carlberg
Carlo Carrà
Clarence Holbrook Carter
Mary Cassatt
Carlos Catasse
Elizabeth Catlett
Vija Celmins
Paul Cézanne
Marc Chagall
Giorgio de Chirico
Dan Christensen
Charles Conder
Theo Constanté
Joseph Cornell
Tony Cragg
D
Salvador Dalí
Ronald Davis
Edgar Degas
Devajyoti Ray
Robert Delaunay
Sonia Delaunay
Charles Demuth
André Derain
Jim Dine
Otto Dix
Theo van Doesburg
Jean Dubuffet
Marcel Duchamp
Elizabeth Durack
[edit] E
Aleksandra Ekster
James Ensor
Max Ernst
M. C. Escher
F
Demetrios Farmakopoulos
Paul Feeley
Lyonel Feininger
Pavel Filonov
Alen Floricic
Jane Frank
Helen Frankenthaler
Lucian Freud
G
Naum Gabo
Joaquin Torres Garcia
Paul Gauguin
Nina Genke-Meller
Gunther Gerzso
Alberto Giacometti
Vincent van Gogh
Elias Goldberg
Michael Goldberg
Natalia Goncharova
Arshile Gorky
Cleve Gray
Juan Gris
George Grosz
Oswaldo Guayasamin
İsmet Güney
Philip Guston
H
Elaine Hamilton
Richard Hamilton
Duane Hanson
Raoul Hausmann
Barbara Hepworth
Patrick Heron
Hannah Höch
David Hockney
Frances Hodgkins
Edward Hopper
Istvan Horkay
Ralph Hotere
Friedensreich Hundertwasser
I
René Iché
Leiko Ikemura
Robert Indiana
J
Augustus John
Jasper Johns
Asger Jorn
Donald Judd
K
Frida Kahlo
Wassily Kandinsky
Paul Klee
Gustav Klimt
Ivan Kliun
Oskar Kokoschka
Willem de Kooning
Albert Kotin
Lee Krasner
L
Wifredo Lam
Ronnie Landfield
John Latham
Fernand Léger
Alfred Leslie
Roy Lichtenstein
Charles Logasa
Morris Louis
M
Joseph Patrick "J.P." McMeekin
Stanton MacDonald-Wright
August Macke
René Magritte
Aristide Maillol
Kasimir Malevich
Édouard Manet
Totte Mannes
Piero Manzoni
Franz Marc
Conrad Marca-Relli
Brice Marden
Marino Marini
Chris Marker
Agnes Martin
Eugene J. Martin
Knox Martin
André Masson
Henri Matisse
Roberto Matta
Gordon Matta-Clark
Vadim Meller
Carlos Merida
Mario Merz
Manolo Millares
Joan Miró
Stanley Matthew Mitruk
Amedeo Modigliani
László Moholy-Nagy
Luis Molinari
Piet Mondrian
Claude Monet
Henry Moore
Giorgio Morandi
Gustave Moreau
Robert Motherwell
Alfons Mucha
Edvard Munch
N
G. P. Nerli
Neith Nevelson
Roy Newell
Barnett Newman
Alexander Ney
Jan Nieuwenhuys
Solomon Nikritin
Kenneth Noland
Emil Nolde
O
Georgia O'Keeffe
Claes Oldenburg
P
Nam June Paik
Eduardo Paolozzi
David Park
Ray Parker
George Passantino
Waldo Peirce
Francis Picabia
Pablo Picasso
Jackson Pollock
Larry Poons
Liubov Popova
Fuller Potter
Q
Piet Mondrian
R
Robert Rauschenberg
Man Ray
Kliment Red'ko
Peter Reginato
Ad Reinhardt
Manuel Rendón
Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Gerhard Richter
Bridget Riley
Alexandr Rodchenko
Auguste Rodin
Olga Rosanova
James Rosenquist
Mark Rothko
Henri Rousseau
Veronica Ruiz de Velasco
Edward Ruscha
S
Egon Schiele
Oskar Schlemmer
Kurt Schwitters
George Segal
Richard Serra
Georges-Pierre Seurat
Charles Sheeler
Sally Sheinman
Harry Shoulberg
David Smith
Robert Smithson
Joan Snyder
Chaim Soutine
Austin Osman Spare
Frank Stella
Joseph Stella
Clyfford Still
Graham Sutherland
Patrick Swift
T
Enrique Tábara
Atsuko Tanaka
Dorothea Tanning
Antoni Tàpies
Vladimir Tatlin
William Tillyer
Jean Tinguely
Alton Tobey
Mark Tobey
Richard Tuttle
U
Nadezhda Udaltsova
Rafael Alfonso Umaña Mendez
V
Victor Vasarely
Aníbal Villacís
Juan Villafuerte
Oswaldo Viteri
Maurice de Vlaminck
Édouard Vuillard
W
Andy Warhol
Jan de Weryha-Wysoczanski
James Abbott McNeill Whistler
Grant Wood
Andrew Wyeth
X
Xul Solar
Y
Taro Yamamoto
Peter Young
Z
Larry Zox
This is a list of modern artists: important artists who have played a role in the history of modern art, dating from the late 19th century until (approximately) the 1970s. Artists who have been at the height of their activity since that date, can be found in the list of contemporary artists.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_modern_artists
Add names in alphabetical order.
A
Ismail Acar
Nadir Afonso
Yaacov Agam
Josef Albers
Pierre Alechinsky
Nathan Altman
Irving Amen
Constantine Andreou
Karel Appel
Félix Arauz
Alexander Archipenko
Jean Arp
David Ascalon
Edward Avedisian
Milton Avery
B
Francis Bacon
Giacomo Balla
Wladimir Baranoff-Rossine
Romare Bearden
Max Beckmann
José Bernal
Joseph Beuys
Umberto Boccioni
Alexander Bogomazov
Pierre Bonnard
Fernando Botero
Louise Bourgeois
Constantin Brancusi
Georges Braque
Marcel Broodthaers
Daniel Buren
David Burliuk
Wladimir Burliuk
C
Alexander Calder
Norman Carlberg
Carlo Carrà
Clarence Holbrook Carter
Mary Cassatt
Carlos Catasse
Elizabeth Catlett
Vija Celmins
Paul Cézanne
Marc Chagall
Giorgio de Chirico
Dan Christensen
Charles Conder
Theo Constanté
Joseph Cornell
Tony Cragg
D
Salvador Dalí
Ronald Davis
Edgar Degas
Devajyoti Ray
Robert Delaunay
Sonia Delaunay
Charles Demuth
André Derain
Jim Dine
Otto Dix
Theo van Doesburg
Jean Dubuffet
Marcel Duchamp
Elizabeth Durack
[edit] E
Aleksandra Ekster
James Ensor
Max Ernst
M. C. Escher
F
Demetrios Farmakopoulos
Paul Feeley
Lyonel Feininger
Pavel Filonov
Alen Floricic
Jane Frank
Helen Frankenthaler
Lucian Freud
G
Naum Gabo
Joaquin Torres Garcia
Paul Gauguin
Nina Genke-Meller
Gunther Gerzso
Alberto Giacometti
Vincent van Gogh
Elias Goldberg
Michael Goldberg
Natalia Goncharova
Arshile Gorky
Cleve Gray
Juan Gris
George Grosz
Oswaldo Guayasamin
İsmet Güney
Philip Guston
H
Elaine Hamilton
Richard Hamilton
Duane Hanson
Raoul Hausmann
Barbara Hepworth
Patrick Heron
Hannah Höch
David Hockney
Frances Hodgkins
Edward Hopper
Istvan Horkay
Ralph Hotere
Friedensreich Hundertwasser
I
René Iché
Leiko Ikemura
Robert Indiana
J
Augustus John
Jasper Johns
Asger Jorn
Donald Judd
K
Frida Kahlo
Wassily Kandinsky
Paul Klee
Gustav Klimt
Ivan Kliun
Oskar Kokoschka
Willem de Kooning
Albert Kotin
Lee Krasner
L
Wifredo Lam
Ronnie Landfield
John Latham
Fernand Léger
Alfred Leslie
Roy Lichtenstein
Charles Logasa
Morris Louis
M
Joseph Patrick "J.P." McMeekin
Stanton MacDonald-Wright
August Macke
René Magritte
Aristide Maillol
Kasimir Malevich
Édouard Manet
Totte Mannes
Piero Manzoni
Franz Marc
Conrad Marca-Relli
Brice Marden
Marino Marini
Chris Marker
Agnes Martin
Eugene J. Martin
Knox Martin
André Masson
Henri Matisse
Roberto Matta
Gordon Matta-Clark
Vadim Meller
Carlos Merida
Mario Merz
Manolo Millares
Joan Miró
Stanley Matthew Mitruk
Amedeo Modigliani
László Moholy-Nagy
Luis Molinari
Piet Mondrian
Claude Monet
Henry Moore
Giorgio Morandi
Gustave Moreau
Robert Motherwell
Alfons Mucha
Edvard Munch
N
G. P. Nerli
Neith Nevelson
Roy Newell
Barnett Newman
Alexander Ney
Jan Nieuwenhuys
Solomon Nikritin
Kenneth Noland
Emil Nolde
O
Georgia O'Keeffe
Claes Oldenburg
P
Nam June Paik
Eduardo Paolozzi
David Park
Ray Parker
George Passantino
Waldo Peirce
Francis Picabia
Pablo Picasso
Jackson Pollock
Larry Poons
Liubov Popova
Fuller Potter
Q
Piet Mondrian
R
Robert Rauschenberg
Man Ray
Kliment Red'ko
Peter Reginato
Ad Reinhardt
Manuel Rendón
Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Gerhard Richter
Bridget Riley
Alexandr Rodchenko
Auguste Rodin
Olga Rosanova
James Rosenquist
Mark Rothko
Henri Rousseau
Veronica Ruiz de Velasco
Edward Ruscha
S
Egon Schiele
Oskar Schlemmer
Kurt Schwitters
George Segal
Richard Serra
Georges-Pierre Seurat
Charles Sheeler
Sally Sheinman
Harry Shoulberg
David Smith
Robert Smithson
Joan Snyder
Chaim Soutine
Austin Osman Spare
Frank Stella
Joseph Stella
Clyfford Still
Graham Sutherland
Patrick Swift
T
Enrique Tábara
Atsuko Tanaka
Dorothea Tanning
Antoni Tàpies
Vladimir Tatlin
William Tillyer
Jean Tinguely
Alton Tobey
Mark Tobey
Richard Tuttle
U
Nadezhda Udaltsova
Rafael Alfonso Umaña Mendez
V
Victor Vasarely
Aníbal Villacís
Juan Villafuerte
Oswaldo Viteri
Maurice de Vlaminck
Édouard Vuillard
W
Andy Warhol
Jan de Weryha-Wysoczanski
James Abbott McNeill Whistler
Grant Wood
Andrew Wyeth
X
Xul Solar
Y
Taro Yamamoto
Peter Young
Z
Larry Zox
Mid-term Review
• Elements of Art
- Line - a long narrow mark or stroke made on or in a surface
- Shape-it is an enclosed space
- Color - the element of art produced when a wavelength of light strikes an object and reflects back to the eyes.
- Texture- the surface quality of how something feels
- Form – a three-dimensional geometrical figure
- Space - the empty or open area between, around, above, below and within objects.
- Value – lightness or darkness of a color
• Principles of Design
- Emphasis – something that stands out/ Arranged to create focal points or areas that are seen before other
- Balance (symmetry-same on both sides & asymmetry- arranging unlike or different)
- Pattern – repeated elements of art
- Movement- a way of combining elements of art to produce the look of action or to cause the viewer’s eye to travel over the artwork in a certain way.
- Rhythm- repetition of a particular element(s) that suggests a motion by patterns of recurrent elements.
- Contrast – stresses the difference or “unlikeness” of elements compared; closely related to emphasis.
- Variety- creates complexity and interest through changing, contrasting, diversifying, or opposing elements in a composition
- Unity - togetherness
• Color Scheme
- Monochromatic-“Having only one color” and refers to the complete range of that color from black to white.
- Complementary - color that are directly opposite on the color wheel. When mixed together, they make a neutral gray or brown.
- Analogous/related - another name for related color. Color that appear next to each other on the color wheel.
- Cool color – the hues of blue, green, and purple.
- Warm color - the hues of yellow, red and orange
• Other
- Composition - the ways elements of art (lines and shapes) are positioned within the edges of the paper.
- Tint – a color that has white added to it.
- Shade – a color that has black added to it.
- still-life - An arrangement or composition of inanimate objects such as fruit, flowers and bottles or tools, used by the artist as subject matter for a work of art
- Op Art - false visual perception
- Abstract Art - It is an art in which shapes, form and colors have been extracted and distorted from the design of nature
- Design - An ordered aesthetic arrangement or organization of one or more of the elements of art
- Gradation - Shading that show a smooth change from dark to light.
- Thumbnails – small sketches before final product
- Critique – a review of someone’s work
Feldman’s Method for Critiquing Art
1. Description
2. Analysis
3. Interpretation
4. Judgment/Evaluation
1. Description
- Describe the visual and literal qualities of the work including: subject matter, media, and elements of art.
- What is it? What do you see?
2. Analysis
-Analyze the formal and organizational qualities of the work including: how does the artist visually organized the composition?
-What are the principles of design?
3. Interpretation
-Interpret what the artist is trying to communicate. Why did the artist make the choices he/she did about the material, composition, subject matter, etc.?
-What is he/she trying to express visually? What is the meaning?
4. Judgment/Evaluation
From the examples on the screen, pick a master’s artwork that’s similar to the style of your own artwork.
- How does this artwork compare with other works?
-Is the artist successful with their message?
-Is the work of good quality?
-Does it appeal to or interest you? Why?
- Line - a long narrow mark or stroke made on or in a surface
- Shape-it is an enclosed space
- Color - the element of art produced when a wavelength of light strikes an object and reflects back to the eyes.
- Texture- the surface quality of how something feels
- Form – a three-dimensional geometrical figure
- Space - the empty or open area between, around, above, below and within objects.
- Value – lightness or darkness of a color
• Principles of Design
- Emphasis – something that stands out/ Arranged to create focal points or areas that are seen before other
- Balance (symmetry-same on both sides & asymmetry- arranging unlike or different)
- Pattern – repeated elements of art
- Movement- a way of combining elements of art to produce the look of action or to cause the viewer’s eye to travel over the artwork in a certain way.
- Rhythm- repetition of a particular element(s) that suggests a motion by patterns of recurrent elements.
- Contrast – stresses the difference or “unlikeness” of elements compared; closely related to emphasis.
- Variety- creates complexity and interest through changing, contrasting, diversifying, or opposing elements in a composition
- Unity - togetherness
• Color Scheme
- Monochromatic-“Having only one color” and refers to the complete range of that color from black to white.
- Complementary - color that are directly opposite on the color wheel. When mixed together, they make a neutral gray or brown.
- Analogous/related - another name for related color. Color that appear next to each other on the color wheel.
- Cool color – the hues of blue, green, and purple.
- Warm color - the hues of yellow, red and orange
• Other
- Composition - the ways elements of art (lines and shapes) are positioned within the edges of the paper.
- Tint – a color that has white added to it.
- Shade – a color that has black added to it.
- still-life - An arrangement or composition of inanimate objects such as fruit, flowers and bottles or tools, used by the artist as subject matter for a work of art
- Op Art - false visual perception
- Abstract Art - It is an art in which shapes, form and colors have been extracted and distorted from the design of nature
- Design - An ordered aesthetic arrangement or organization of one or more of the elements of art
- Gradation - Shading that show a smooth change from dark to light.
- Thumbnails – small sketches before final product
- Critique – a review of someone’s work
Feldman’s Method for Critiquing Art
1. Description
2. Analysis
3. Interpretation
4. Judgment/Evaluation
1. Description
- Describe the visual and literal qualities of the work including: subject matter, media, and elements of art.
- What is it? What do you see?
2. Analysis
-Analyze the formal and organizational qualities of the work including: how does the artist visually organized the composition?
-What are the principles of design?
3. Interpretation
-Interpret what the artist is trying to communicate. Why did the artist make the choices he/she did about the material, composition, subject matter, etc.?
-What is he/she trying to express visually? What is the meaning?
4. Judgment/Evaluation
From the examples on the screen, pick a master’s artwork that’s similar to the style of your own artwork.
- How does this artwork compare with other works?
-Is the artist successful with their message?
-Is the work of good quality?
-Does it appeal to or interest you? Why?
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