Monday, 24 October 2011

18 sketches

ART MOVEMENT USED: POINTILLISM


TOPIC : COMMUNICATION




1ST 


Language x communication  




2nd


Comm tools:Social Networks



3rd
Global Communication




 4th
Intrapersonal Communication




5th



6th
Interpersonal



 7th
Family Interaction

8th

Tele-Communication 




 9th
Social Communication




10th
Isolation Group 


11th
Non-Verbal Communication


12th

13th
Animal Communication






14th
Communication Elements





 15th
Class Interaction



Pointillism


                      









  • Was coined by JOHN ROY 
  • He continued to paint until his death in 2001.
  • His work included pointillism and photorealism and he created a remarkable and highly original body of work that represents an important contribution to the history of late twentieth century American painting.

  • Pointillism is a technique of painting in which small, distinct dots of pure color are applied in patterns to form an image.
  • Georges Seuratdeveloped the technique in 1886, branching from Impressionism. The term Pointillism was first coined by art critics in the late 1880s to ridicule the works of these artists, and is now used without its earlier mocking connotation.
  •  Neo-impressionism and Divisionism are also terms used to describe this technique of painting.



Additional

Balance
~Balance is arranging elements so that no one part of a work overpowers, or seems heavier than any other part.
~The three different kinds of balance are symmetrical, asymmetrical, and radial.
~Symmetrical (or formal) balance is when both sides of an artwork, if split down the middle, appear to be the same. ~The asymmetrical balance is the balance that does not weigh equally on both sides.
~Radial balance is equal in length from the middle.


Contrast
~Contrast is created by using elements that conflict with one another. 
~Created using complementary colors or extremely light and dark values.
~Creates interest in a piece and often draws the eye to certain areas.
~Used to make a painting look interesting


Proportion
~Proportion is a measurement of the size and quantity of elements within a composition.
~In ancient arts, proportions of forms were enlarged to show importance.
~The ancient Greeks found fame with their accurately-proportioned sculptures of the human form.
~Beginning with the Renaissance, artists recognized the connection between proportion and the illusion of 3-dimensional space.


Pattern
~Pattern and rhythm = repetition
~Show consistency with colors or lines.
~Putting a red spiral at the bottom left and top right, for example, will cause the eye to move from one spiral, to the other, and everything in between.
~It is indicating movement by the repetition of elements.
~Rhythm can make an artwork seem active.