The document discusses different types of artists and classifications of art based on medium. It describes visual artists who use visual arts like painting and sculpture, creative artists who write and compose music, and performing artists who express art through live performances. Arts are further classified as visual arts perceived by sight, auditory or time-based arts heard over time like music and literature, and combined arts using both sight and sound such as dance and film. The document then focuses on media used in visual arts like drawing, painting, mosaic, collage, printmaking and sculpture. Famous artworks are cited as examples.
The document discusses different types of artists and classifications of art based on medium. It describes visual artists who use visual arts like painting and sculpture, creative artists who write and compose music, and performing artists who express art through live performances. Arts are further classified as visual arts perceived by sight, auditory or time-based arts heard over time like music and literature, and combined arts using both sight and sound such as dance and film. The document then focuses on media used in visual arts like drawing, painting, mosaic, collage, printmaking and sculpture. Famous artworks are cited as examples.
The document discusses different types of artists and classifications of art based on medium. It describes visual artists who use visual arts like painting and sculpture, creative artists who write and compose music, and performing artists who express art through live performances. Arts are further classified as visual arts perceived by sight, auditory or time-based arts heard over time like music and literature, and combined arts using both sight and sound such as dance and film. The document then focuses on media used in visual arts like drawing, painting, mosaic, collage, printmaking and sculpture. Famous artworks are cited as examples.
The document discusses different types of artists and classifications of art based on medium. It describes visual artists who use visual arts like painting and sculpture, creative artists who write and compose music, and performing artists who express art through live performances. Arts are further classified as visual arts perceived by sight, auditory or time-based arts heard over time like music and literature, and combined arts using both sight and sound such as dance and film. The document then focuses on media used in visual arts like drawing, painting, mosaic, collage, printmaking and sculpture. Famous artworks are cited as examples.
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ART APPRECIATION: MODULE 2
THE ARTIST AND HIS MEDIUM
The kinds of artists involved in creating an artwork vary depending on the type of art form they use for expressions. Although all art involves creation and imagination, artists are still further subdivided: A. VISUAL ARTIST - use the visual arts as their venue of expression. These includes the painters, the sculptors, and the architects. They are also composed of the film makers and graphic arts. B. CREATIVE ARTIST - are more adept at writing works and arranging musical notes to entice the imagination and evoke emotions. These includes the writers, poets, playwrights, novelists, and composers. Their works ranges from novels, poetry, plays to beautiful musical pieces. C. PERFORMING ARTIST - express their art through execution infront of an audience. These artists are the dancers, singers, stage performers, actors, musicians, and choreographers., they hone their skills through countless hours of training and rehearsals.
ARTS CAN FURTHER BE CLASSIFIED INTO THE FOLLOWING
BASED ON MEDIUM: A.VISUAL ARTS - this art form can be perceive by the eyes. Its medium are those materials that can be seen and occupy space and these are: A.1. Graphics or two-dimensional arts which includes, drawing, painting, mosaics, collage, and printmaking. A. 2. Plastic or three-dimensional arts which includes sculpture, architecture, and installations. B. AUDITORY OR TIME ARTS - the medium for this art classification are those that the viewers can hear and which are expressed in time. Belonging to these are music and literature. C. COMBINED ARTS - - the medium for these art forms are those that the viewers can see and hear which considers both time and space. These includes dance, drama, and cinema.
THE DIFFERENT MEDIA OF THE VISUAL ARTS:
A.GRAPHIC OR TWO-DIMENSIONAL ARTS A.1. DRAWING – THIS IS THE FUNDAMENTAL SKILL NEEDED IN THE VISUAL ART These are the different media for drawing: 1. PENCILS - pencils, regardless of the brand are usually labelled 2B, 4B, and 6B which indicates the softness of the lead. The higher the B number, the softer the lead and the darker is the tone and line it can create. 2. INK - this is one of the oldest material for drawing that is still in use. Pen and ink drawings are characterized by controlled and uniform lines. 3. PASTEL - this is composed of dry pigment held together by a gum binder and compressed into sticks. There are 3 kinds of pastels: soft pastel, hard pastel, and oil pastel. The difference between the soft and hard pastel is the amount of binder in the material. For oil pastel, the binder is oil. When the pastel work is finished, the drawing must be sprayed with a fixative to prevent the pigment from rubbing off and destroying the work.
A.2. PAINTING - it has been described as the art of creating
beautiful effects on flat surface. It is the process of applying paint onto smooth surface like paper, cloth, canvas, wood or plaster. The following are the different media used for painting. 1. Water color 2. Gouache - this is the paint in which the pigment has been mixed with water and added with a chalk – like material to give it an opaque effect. 3. Oil paint - the pigments are mixed with oil as the binder. The ideal surface for oil paints are canvas and wood. The painter can apply oil paint on thin glazes of smooth subtle strokes or thick impasto to produce a rough surface which gives the work the element of texture. The Spoliarium is a painting by Filipino painter Juan Luna. Luna, working on canvas, spent eight months completing the painting which depicts dying gladiators. The painting was submitted by Luna to the Exposición Nacional de Bellas Artes in 1884 in Madrid, where it garnered the first gold medal. DISADVANTAGES OF OIL PAINT: 1. The oil in the paint tends to rise to the surface and forms a film that makes the colors dull and yellow as the painting ages. 2. Time also causes the oil paint to crack.
4,Tempera - this is a pigment mixed with egg yolk, sometimes
with the white as binder. Sometimes gums or glue is used in place of egg. Tempera is difficult to spread in large areas. It can not be easily moved around the surface and needs a firm, rigid, support. 5.Fresco - this is a pigment mixed with water and applied on a portion of the wall with wet plaster. The wet plaster allows the color to stick to the surface and becomes part of the wall. Fresco is used for mural paintings. A mural refers to the massive paintings on walls or ceilings. It may be purely decorative or maybe commissioned for religious and historical themes. MichaelAngelo’s Sistine chapel paintings in Rome and Leonardo da Vinci’s Last Super in Milan, Italy are examples of famous frescoes. The foremost disadvantage of frescoes is the wall on which it is painted. The painting can not be moved and when the wall is destroyed, so too will the painting. The Sistine Chapel ceiling, painted by Michelangelo between 1508 and 1512, is a cornerstone work of High Renaissance art. The Last Supper is a late 15th-century mural painting by Italian artist Leonardo da Vinci housed by the refectory of the Convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan, Italy. It is one of the Western world's most recognizable paintings. 6. Acrylic - the modern medium of synthetic paint using acrylic emulsion as a binder. Acrylic has the quick, drying, quality of watercolor and is as flexible as oil paints. The versatility of acrylic allows it to be applied to almost any type of surface.
A.3. MOSAIC - are wall or floor decorations made of small tiles
or irregularly cut pieces of stones or glass called TESSERAE. These are meticulously fitted together to form a pattern and glued with plaster or cement. The most beautiful mosaic are found in churches and public buildings. For classroom arts craft, mosaic art can be done on paper or cardboard using seeds, eggshells, punched art paper and beads glued or pasted to a pattern or drawing.
Art in the Heart
Handmade glass and pebbles trees mosaic picture
A.4. COLLAGE - is derived from a French word “COLLER”
which means to stick . A collage is a technique of making an artwork by gluing or painting on a firm support materials or objects. How the pieces are arranged reflects the message that the artist wants to convey. The artists presentation maybe purely aesthetics or sentimental. Examples of materials or found objects are pieces of cloth, buttons, old photographs, dry leaves or flowers, twigs, shells, stones, sand and anything and everything the artist could think of. Collage as a graphic art was introduced by Picasso and Bracque,, both cubist artist.
A.5. PRINTMAKING - This is a process used for making
reproductions of graphic works. Printmaking allows for the repeated transfer of a master image from a printing plate (matrix) onto a surface. The result is an impression created by the plate on the surface which is called a PRINT. Printmaking may use any of the following techniques: 1. Relief Printing (Raised) - this is the oldest method of printmaking. The technique involves cutting away (using knife or gouges) certain parts of the surface, usually a block of wood and leaving the “raised” parts to produce the image. Woodcut and wood engraving uses this technique. 2. Intaglio Printing (Depressed) - this technique is the opposite of relief printing, instead of using the surface of the plate for the image, the lines of the image are cut or incised to a metal plate. The “incised” or “depressed” part is the image. Examples of Intaglio printing are the drypoint and etching.
3. Surface Printing (Flat) - these includes all processes in
which printing is done from a flat surface (plane). Examples of this type is serigraphy or silkscreen printing.
B. PLASTIC OR THREE- DIMENSIONAL ART
B.1. SCULPTURE -- the word sculpture has originated from the Latin word “sculpere” which means to curve. It is defined as the art or practice of creating three- dimension forms or figures. It is the art form that is described as having, length, width and volume. Sculpture are of three kinds: (Free standing, Relief, Kinetic (mobile). 1. FREESTANDING – (in the round). These are sculptures which can be viewed from all sides.
2. RELIEF – These are sculptures in which the figures project
from a background. There are two variations of relief sculptures A. Low relief (bas relief) - the figures are slightly raised /projected from its background, less shadows are created. B.High relief - almost half of the figures project from its background, more shadows are created. 3. KINETIC (MOBILES) - a sculpture that is capable of movement by wind, water, or other form of energy.
DIFFERENT MEDIA OF SCULPTURE:
Through the centuries. Sculptors have experimented on materials to be used for their sculptures. They have discovered that they can use natural and man-made materials to achieve expression in a three-dimensional form. Some popular medium used by sculptors up to the present: 1. STONE - is a natural medium. It is hard and relatively permanent. Marble is deemed by sculptors as the most beautiful stone for sculpture. DAVID by Michelangelo is the famous statue, made of white marble and is 17 feet tall. David is a masterpiece of Renaissance sculpture, created in marble between 1501 and 1504 by the Italian artist Michelangelo. David is a 5.17-metre marble statue of the Biblical figure David, a favoured subject in the art of Florence. 2. WOOD - is also a natural medium. Wood varies in hardness and durability depending on the kind of tree it came from. In the Philippines, the best woods for sculpture are Molave, Acacia, Langka wood, Ipil wood, Kamagong, Palm wood and bamboo. Narra is a Philippine hard wood, but its use is restricted by the local government. The major weaknesses of wood is moisture that causes it to rot, fore and termites. Different techniques are being used to protect the wood (staining and waxing) to make it last for a long time.
3. METAL - this medium is used for sculpture because of its
three unique qualities: (strength, ductility, and malleability). The two ways by which metal can turn into beautiful sculptures is through assembling (welding ) and casting. The ideal metals for sculptures are alloys which is a combination of two elements. Some examples of these are the following: A.Stainless steel - also known as Inox steel. This medium does not rust or stain when exposed to moisture and water. B.Bronze - it is an alloy of two elements tin and copper. Its color is reddish brown and will corrode if constantly exposed to water and moisture. C.Brass - is an alloy of copper and zinc that gives it a yellowish golden color. Brass is more malleable than bronze and has a lower melting point.
4. PLASTER, specifically PLASTER OF PARIS. It is finely ground
gypsum mixed with water and poured into mold. The material dries quickly depending on the size of the mold. After it has dried it can be painted colors. 5. TERRA COTTA (COOKED EARTH) - this is a baked clay or clay fired in kiln at relatively high temperature. Firing the clay causes the moisture to evaporate hardening the clay. Clay can be molded into any form before it is baked. The major weakness of clay is its fragility, it breaks easily.
6. GLASS - this is made by heating and cooling a combination of
sand and soda lime. Glass maybe transparent, translucent, or opaque. It can be molded into various shapes and colors. Sculptures of glass can be made using the following techniques: Glassblowing is a glassforming technique that involves inflating molten glass into a bubble with the aid of a blowpipe. A person who blows glass is called a glassblower, glassmith, or gaffer. 1.Hot sculpting - using a metal rod to gather the molten glass from the furnace and shapes it using another tool. 1. Cold working - using cold hardened glass. This involves sandblasting, engraving and polishing, and grinding, to create the sculpture of glass. 2. Glass blowing - is gathering the molten glass from the furnace using a blowpipe. Air is blown into the pipe and shapes the glass before it cools down. 7. PLASTIC OR SYNTHETIC MEDIUM MADE FROM ORGANIC POLYMERS. While plastic is soft, it can be molded into a form. Sculptures using plastic are usually reproductions of the original work.
C. ARCHITECTURE - is the art of designing buildings and other
structures which will serve a definite function. Structures would range from the simplest shelter to high rise structures that meet the demand of modern cities and the growing population. CONSTRUCTION PRINCIPLES : 1. Post and Lintel - most houses are built on this principle. It is the oldest construction system that makes use of two vertical support (post) spanned by a horizontal beam. (lintel).this structures was invented by the Greeks. 2. Arch - this is a Roman invention that consist of separate pieces of wedge-shaped blocks called VOUSSOIRS arranged in a semi-circle. The most important part of the arch is the keystone which is the stone at the top center that locks the pieces together into a single curved structure. From the principles of the arch, the following structures can be built: 1. Barrel Vault - is a succession of arches, one place directly behind another to produce a structure similar to a tunnel. It has two openings, one on each end. 2. Groin Vault - structure that is formed by intersecting arches resulting in four openings. The area at the center of the groin vault is called a BAY.
3. Dome - structure with the shape of an inverted cup. It is
formed by a series of arches rising from consecutive points on a base called the DRUM. 3.Truss - a system of triangular forms assembled to form a rigid framework. Trusses are used in bridges, theaters, and roofs.
4. Cantilever - structure that makes use of a beam or slab
that extends horizontally into space beyond its supporting post. It is constructed to be strong enough to support floors and walls. 5. Buttress - structure that is built as a support for the wall. In most European churches buttress built to support the dome are called flying buttresses. MEDIA OF ARCHITECTURE 1. STONES AND BRICKS - stones are favored over other materials for its durability, adaptability, in sculptural treatment and its use for building simple structures in its natural state. Stones weakness in tension limits its use for beams, lintels and floor support. BRICKS - are fire and water resistant, easy to produce, transport and use. The size of bricks is limited by the need for efficient drying, firing and handling. Special shapes can be produced by molding to meet particular structural or expressive requirements. 2. LUMBER (WOOD) - all parts of a building can be constructed using wood except the foundations. Its major disadvantages are susceptibility to fire, mold, and termites. 3. IRON AND STEEL - these methods provide for stronger and taller structures with less use of material when compared to stone or wood. 4. CONCRETE - mixture of cement and water, with aggregates of sand and gravel, which hardens rapidly resulting in a fire resisting solid of great compressive strength. Concrete can be poured into forms while wet to produce a great variety of structural elements. Concrete also provides an economical substitute for traditional materials and it has the ability to fuse with other materials making the structure stronger.
C .LITERATURE AND THE COMBINED ARTS
A. LITERATURE - is the art of combining spoken or written words and their meanings into forms which have artistic and emotional appeal. Language is the medium of literature. The writer uses words to build up his compositions. Not all writings which uses language, however can be called literature. The term only refers to works that exploit the suggestive power of language. Any type of writing in any subject maybe considered a form of literature as long as it is emotionally done , thus making the work worth remembering. In literature, there are 4 main genres. 1. POETRY - all poems share similar characteristics which makes it easy for the reader to recognize them. For instance, poems are written in lines and not in sentences or paragraph form. Poems used to follow strict rules as to the number and length of lines and stanzas, but in recent years they have become more free-flowing. Poetry is characterized by abundance of figurative language and poets use devices like, simile, metaphor, hyperbole, rhyme and others. Poetry’s emphasis is on imagination, emotions and ideas. Poetry is shorter than other genres but a type known as epic poetry is quite long. 2. FICTION - this is any written work that is not real and which uses elaborate figurative language. Fiction however, is more structured than poetry. Fiction is divided into chapters. Since fiction is based on writer’s creativity and imagination, the subject matter can be anything. It can be based on fantasy or ideas of everyday life and some examples are legends, folk tales, fairy tales, short stories, romance and horrors. 3. NON- FICTION - this is the opposite of fiction because the subject matter comes from real living. Non fiction works are all based on real people and real world experience. This includes biographies, autobiographies, and essays. The purpose of informative non fiction is to explain or inform the readers about a concept or a situation. 4. DRAMA - this genre includes all plays or any written works that are meant to be performed. Famous examples are the plays of Shakespeare like Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, Midsummer Nights and Florante at Laura of Francisco Balagtas. GENRES OF DRAMA: 1. Tragedy - one of literature’s greatest dramatic genre. It is drama that presents life as solemn and serious. The central character the hero or heroine who is admired at the first part, later becomes arrogant and not worthy at all. The audience leaves the theater not feeling sad or confused but relieved and satisfied. 2. Melodrama - a type of drama that emphasizes the never ending battle between good and evil wherein good always wins. The audience can usually predict the flow of the story that the villain is punished and the hero is saved and lives happily with the heroine. 3. Comedy - a drama that is exact opposite of a tragedy. Tragedies and comedies have similar components but differ in the characteristics of each. For instance, in tragedy, the hero is wealthy, handsome and educated, in comedy the hero could be anybody who is poor, ordinary and average. Tragedies portray power and abuse of power while comedies portray human weaknesses and limitation. There are 2 kinds of comedies ( satire and romantic) 3.1. Satire comedy - portrays human weaknesses and criticizes human behavior to pave the path to some form of salvation for human actions. 3.2. Romantic comedy portray human weaknesses in a subtle way. It is more accepting in the adversities of human behavior. Romantic comedies are more entertaining, enlightening, and favorable to the taste of the audience. 4. Farce - is a light harmonious play in which the emphasis Is on jokes, humorous physical action exaggerated situations and improbable characters. The aim of this drama is to make people laugh for the sake of laughing.
B. MUSIC - is defined as combining and regulating sounds of
varying pitch to produce composition that express various ideas and feelings. Music particularly appeals to the emotions. MEDIA IN MUSIC: 1. Vocal Medium - the oldest and the most popular medium for music is the human voice. The sounds projected by the human voice is the most natural form of music. The human voice has been classified as: a) Suprano - highest female singing voice b) Contra Alto - female singing voice that is low and rich in quality c) Tenor - highest adult male singing voice. d)Bass - a male singing voice that is low and rich in quality e)Baritone - male singing voice that is between tenor and bass 2. Instrumental Medium - musical instruments produce sound by blowing, bearing, plucking, or through the use of a bow. The following are the traditional instruments of music: a. String instruments - provides the basic orchestral sounds. They produce tones by means of the vibration of the stretched string. These are of 2 kinds: a.1. Bowed strings produce tones by means of a bow of horse hair. Violin, viola, violoncello, and the double bass are examples. a.2. Plucked strings produce tones by plucking the strings with a finger or with a plectrum held in one hand. Guitar, ukulele, banjo and the kudyapi of Maranao and Manobo are some examples. b. Woodwind instruments - create sounds by blowing into them. The air blown causes vibration which can be altered by shortening or lengthening the column of air inside the instrument. The piccolo, flute, oboe, English horn, clarinet, bass clarinet, bassoon, double bassoon, and saxophone fall under this category. c. Brass instrument - have cup-shaped mouthpiece and expands into a bell-shaped end. Sound is produced by blowing into the mouthpiece. The sound can be altered depending on the tension of the lips. The trumpet, French horn, trombone and tuba belong to this category. d. Percussion instruments - make sound by hitting them with the hands, special sticks or by striking, or shaking their parts together. Kettledrums, chimes, xylophone, tambourine, castanets, cymbals, and maracas fall under this category. e. Keyboard instruments - make sound by means of a keyboard which consist of a series of black and white keys. Depression of a key produces sound. The piano, harpschord, celesta and organ belong to this group. SOME GENRES OF MUSIC: 1. Classical music - was written in the European tradition and symphony, concerto and sonata were categorized. 2. Folk music - created by unknown composers and is basically transmitted orally from generation to generation. 3. Pop music - a genre of popular music which began in the 1950’s and is inspired by the rock and roll. 4. Jazz - originated in the African-American communities of New Orleans in the U>S. in the early 20 centuries. 5. Blues - originated in the African-American in the deep south of U.S. in the late 19th century. This musical genre incorporated spiritual, work songs, chants and rhymed simple narrative ballads. 6. Rock music - a form of popular music that evolved from rock and roll and pop music. It became popular in the mid of 1960’s and was characterized by musical experimentation and drug-related / anti- establishment lyrics. 7. Alternative music - style of rock music that emerged from the independent music of the 80’s and gained popularity in the 90’s. The word ”alternative” refers to the genre’s distinction from mainstream rock music. C. DANCE - is the oldest of all arts. Man’s gestures express emotions through rhythmic movements. The medium of dance is the body of the dancer. It is through his body that ideas of feelings are communicated to the audience. Dancing is a personal expression of something within the person that connects him to others. Dancing as a performing art may be telling a story. Dances may vary depending on the place of origin, the music, the reason for the dance and the type of dancers. TYPES OF DANCE: 1. Ethnologic (ethnic) dances - includes folk dances, associated with the national and or cultural group. Examples are Tinikling, pandango sa ilaw and singkil. 2. Social or ballroom - dancing that are generally performed in pairs and some examples are tango, waltz and boogie. This is sometimes called contemporary or interpretative dance. These dances emphasize personal communication of moods and themes and is strongly influenced by societal trends in music.also some examples are hiphop and popular dance craze. 3. Ballet - type of dance which originated royal courts of the medieval era. It may be a solo or concerted performance on stage accompanied by music. Examples are the Nutcracker and Swan Lake. 4. Musical comedy - (musical) refers to those dances performed by one dancer or a group of dancers and it combines various forms of ballet, modern, tap and acrobatics.
D.CINEMA - the cinema can be characterized can be described
as a series of images that are projected onto a screen to create the illusion of motion. This is also called as motion pictures, movies, or films and is considered to be one of the most popular forms of entertainment. GENRES OF MOTION PICTURES: 1. Feature films - are movies most commonly shown in large movie theaters. These films portray fictional stories or stories based on real events but are portrayed by actors. 2. Animated movies - follow the same format as feature films, but use images created by artists / animations. These films create the illusion of movement from a series of two- dimensional drawings, three – dimensional objects or computer generated images. Animated films today are three- dimensional which makes them look so real. 3. Documentary movies - deal primarily with facts, not fiction. Documentaries are not usually shown in theaters, but are broadcast regularly on cable and television. Some well known documentaries are of events that have strong impact on people’s lives. Examples are WW II, THE 911 attack. 4. Experimental films - are sequence of images, literal or abstract, which do not necessarily form a narrative. An experiment film can be animated, live action, computer generated or a combination of the three. 5. Educational film - are specifically intended to facilitate learning at home or in the classroom. Their aim is to provide instruction on various subjects ranging from history to cooking.
PEOPLE BEHIND A MOTION PICTURE
1. Actors - play the roles of the character 2. Producer - handles finances which includes paying for the production, hiring actors and the production team and making arrangements for distributing the finished film to theaters 3. Screenwriter - develops stories and ideas for the screen or adapts interesting written pieces of work. Examples are Star wars, Lord of the Rings, and Harry Potter. 4. Director - studies the script, plans and visualizes how the film should be portrayed and guides the actors and the production crew as they carry out the project.