Post on 29-Dec-2015
transcript
Foundations Studio ArtBarbara Gronefeld, St. Cecilia Academy, Visual Arts Program
What is aesthetics? Aesthetics is the study of the nature of beauty and art.
What is beautiful?
Is this piece of art beautiful? Why or why not?
Hill, South Truro, Edward Hooper
Taste is a personal matter. The clothing you like may differ from the clothing that your parents like. This doesn’t make anyone wrong or right. It is simply differences in taste.
When we talk about art, we refer to different “aesthetic views” to talk about these differences in taste. An aesthetic view is an idea or school of thought on what is most important in a work of art.
What do you think is most important in creating a good work of art?
Making it look real, or lifelike?
Successfully using the elements and principles of art?
Having an important idea to communicate?
Subject:
When the most important goal in creating an artwork is to make it look very real and convincing, we call that having a subject view. A work’s subject is an image viewers can easily identify.
Now look at the following painting:
Edward Hopper, Haskell's House,1924, watercolor,34.3 x 49.5 cm, Gift of Herbert A. Goldstone. © 1998 Board of Trustees, National Gallery of Art, Washington
Composition:
A second aesthetic view of art is the composition view. In this view, the most important factor in an artwork is its composition. The composition is the way the principles are used to organize the elements of art.
Now look at the following painting:
Wassily Kandinsky's Composition VII, 1913. The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow. Painted in 1913 when Kandinsky lived in Munich, Germany.
Content:
A third aesthetic view is the content view. Content in an artwork refers to the message, idea, or feeling expressed by a work of art. If you believe that expression is most important in an artwork, then you are taking the content view.
Elements of Art: the basic components, or building blocks artists use to express their ideas
Shape and Form, Value, Color (Hue, Intensity and Value with Color and Non-Color), Unity, Line, Axis Line, Texture, Space
Shape is one of the elements of art. When lines meet, shapes are formed.
Shapes are flat. Some shapes are geometric, such as squares, circles, triangles, rectangles, and ovals. Other shapes are organic or irregular.
Value: the term refers to the term lightness or darkness this can also include color as well
Lange's 1936, Migrant Mother, Florence Owens Thompson
Color: hue, intensity and value
Hue, the name of the color
Intensity, quality or purity of a color
Value, the color’s lightness of darkness
Texture
TextureA rough texture attracts the viewer’s eye more easily than a smooth, even surface does.
Principles of Art
Balance is one of the principles of art which describes how artists to create visual weight.
Artists think about how to make their works balanced by using elements such as line, shape and color. There are several ways to balance an artwork:
Principle of Art : Balance
Asymmetrical (informal) balance means each side of an imaginary line are different yet equal.
Radial balance means lines or shapes grow from a center point.
Symmetrical (formal) balance means both sides of an imaginary line are the same.
Gradation
The Calling of Saint Matthew (1599-1600). Contarelli Chapel, San Luigi dei Francesi, Rome.