Las Art 9 - Week 1
Las Art 9 - Week 1
Las Art 9 - Week 1
PRINCIPLES OF ART
The “principles of design” are mechanisms of arrangement and organization for the
various elements of design in artwork. Please note that different sources might list
slightly different versions of the “Principles of Design,” but the core fundamentals are
essentially the same.
1. Harmony in art and design is the visually satisfying effect of combining similar,
related elements. For instance: adjacent colors on the color wheel, similar
shapes etc.
2. Balance is a feeling of equality in weight, attention, or attraction of the various
visual elements within the pictorial field as a means of accomplishing organic
unity.
3. Proportion is the comparison of dimensions or distribution of forms. It is the
relationship in scale between one element and another, or between a whole
object and one of its parts. Differing proportions within a composition can relate
to different kinds of balance or symmetry, and can help establish visual weight
and depth
4. Dominance/Emphasis- The principle of visual organization that suggests that
certain elements should assume more importance than others in the same
composition. It contributes to organic unity by emphasizing the fact that there
is one main feature and that other elements are subordinate to it. In the below
examples, notice how the smaller elements seem to recede into the background
while the larger elements come to the front. Pay attention to both scale and
value of the objects that recede and advance.
5. Variety is the complement to unity and harmony, and is needed to create visual
interest. Without unity and harmony, an image is chaotic and “unreadable;”
without variety it is dull and uninteresting. Good design is achieved through the
balance of unity and variety; the elements need to be alike enough so we
perceive them as belonging together and different enough to be interesting.
6. Movement is the path our eyes follow when we look at a work of art, and it is
generally very important to keep a viewer’s eyes engaged in the work. Without
movement, artwork becomes stagnant. A few good strategies to evoke a sense
of movement (among many others) are using diagonal lines, placing shapes so
that the extend beyond the boundaries of the picture plane, and using changing
values.
7. Rhythm - A continuance, a flow, or a feeling of movement achieved by the
repetition of regulated visual information.
Competency:
Objectives:
____________
___
___________
____
___________
___
____________
___
____________
__
____________
https://www.wallpaperflare.com/search?wallpaper
=renaissance
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_art
____________
__
___________
___
____________
__
____________
__
____________
___
____________
___
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Raphael_
Marriage_of_the_Virgin.jpg
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Velazquez-
The_Surrender_of_Breda.jpg
Day 2 Activity 2
Activity 2: IS THAT YOU?
Create your own sculpture, either human,
mythological, or animal figures.
Materials:
Choose your material as to your preference
such as modeling clay, soap, piece of
wood, rock, wire or any usable and pliable
medium. Use knife or cutter in carving-out
your art piece.
Reflection Questions:
1. What is the subject of your artwork?
2. Why did you choose this subject?
3. How did you apply the elements of art as to
lines, form and texture?
4. What did you feel while doing your artwork?
Day 4
Self-check of all activities (guided by parents or
learning facilitators)
References
Prepared by:
Grace G. Dagsa
Teacher 1