( elements ) - principles of design.pptx

carreecatahay358 5 views 49 slides Mar 12, 2025
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About This Presentation

Elements


Slide Content

Elements and Principles of Design
Elements:
Line
Shape
Form
Color
Value
Texture
Space
Principles:
Balance
Emphasis & Focal Point
Contrast
Movement
Variety
Pattern & Repetition
Unity
Harmony/Gestalt

Line
A line is defined as a mark with length and direction, created by a
point that moves across a surface. A line can vary in length, width,
direction, curvature, and color.
Contour, Diagonal, Broken, Curved, Outline, Implied, Vertical, zigzag,
Horizontal, Wavy, Slanted, Continuous, Solid, Narrow, Bold
Jasper Johns, 0-9 (continuous line) Gesture drawing

line
Jackson Pollock, Autumn Rhythm

Andy Goldsworthy
LINE

Keith Haring

Shape
Shape is an enclosed space defined by other
elements of art. Shape is 2-Dimensional
Shape can be:
Geometric: Angular, man-made concept
Organic: curvilinear - found in nature
Fernana Leger, The City
Matisse, from the series “Jazz”

Picasso, Three Musicians

FORM
3 Dimensional Shape. Volume

MC Escher, Self Portrait

Tamara de Lempicka
Portrait of Ira P. 1925
Vincent Van Gogh, Shoes

Value
An element of art that refers to luminance or luminosity – the
lightness or darkness of a color.
Value is an especially important element in works of art
when color is absent. This is particularly likely with drawings,
printmaking, and photographs
Kathe Kollwitz,
Self portrait

Value
Chuck Close
(made w/ thumbprints!)
Edward Weston,
Pepper
(photograph)

Texture
Texture refers to the surface quality or "feel" of an object, such as
roughness, smoothness, or softness. Actual texture can be felt while
simulated textures are implied by the way the artist renders the
surface area
Oppenheim
Fur-lined cup

Texture
Actual and Implied
Golsdworthy
Albrecht Durer
Rhinocerus

Color
  Is an element of art with three properties
1) Hue, the name of the color, e.g. red, yellow, etc. 2)
Intensity or the purity and strength of the color 3) Value,
or the lightness or darkness of the color
Delauney
Jasper Johns,
Target
(primary colors)

Primary Colors

Piet Mondrian
Wassily Kandinsky

Warm Colors
•Colors that are often described as being
higher in temperature
•Reds, oranges, yellows
•Associated with fire and sun
•Optically, appear to advance
•Stimulating and passionate

Ex. Warm

Cool
•Colors that are often described as being
lower in temperature
• Greens, Blues, and Violet
•Associated with water, sky, and spring
•Optically, they appear to recede
•Calming and depressing

Ex. Cool

Color and Mood
Picasso, the Old Guitarist
Van Gogh, the Night Cafe

Space
Space is the empty or open area between, around, above, below, or
within objects. Shapes and forms are made by the space around and
within them. Space is often called three-dimensional or two-
dimensional.
MC Escher

Space
Positive space is filled by a shape or form. Negative space
surrounds a shape or form.

Space/Depth
May be created by overlapping, change in scale,
perspective placement, color theory, or projection toward the
viewer.
David Hockney
Place Furstenberg, Paris, August 7,8,9, 1985 -#11985

Balance
Balance is a sense of stability in the body of work.
Balance can be symmetrical (formal) or assymmetrical (informal)
Wayne Thiebaud, Around the Cake (formal balance)

Diane Arbus, Twins
Symmetrical/Formal Balance

Leonardo da Vinci, The Last Supper 1495-1498
Symmetrical Balance

Asymmetrical Balance
Edgar Degas (informal balance)

Asymmetrical Balance

Variety
When elements are changed in scale, color, or form.
Andy Warhol
Stuart Davis

Movement
Movement adds excitement to your work by showing action and directing
the viewers eye throughout the picture plane.
Edward Munch, the Scream

Movement
Marcel Duchamp, Nude Descending Staircase
Umberto Boccioni,
Unique forms of continuity in space

Dominance & Subordination
The part of a composition that is emphasized, has the
greatest visual weight, the most important, powerful, or
has the most influence.

Emphasis & Focal Point
Emphasis - Any forcefulness that gives importance to some feature or
features of an artwork; something singled out, stressed, or drawn attention
to by means of contrast, anomaly, or counterpoint
Focal Point = portion of an artwork's composition on which interest or
attention centers
David Hockney

Emphasis & Focal Point
Barbara Kruger
Rene Magritte

Pattern & Repetition
Involves multiples of the same element. Repeated elements can vary in size,
color, or axis placement. Repeated elements can create a pattern. The use of
repetition may be applied to all Visual Elements. Motion can be created by
repetition.
William Morris
Arts and Crafts Movement

Pattern & Repetition
Chuck Close, Self Portrait, detail

Contrast
A large difference between two things,
such as light and shadow, color and black/white
Andy Warhol

Contrast
David, the Death of Marat

Economy

Unity & Harmony
The quality of wholeness or oneness (Gestalt) that is achieved through the
effective use of the elements and principles of design.
Claude Monet
Haystacks

Unity
Cezanne
Wayne Theibaud

Unity
Van Gogh “Starry Night”

What Elements and Principles stand out?

What Elements and Principles stand out?
Goya, “The 5
th
of May”

Gauguin
What Elements and Principles stand out?

What Elements and Principles stand out?
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