Elements and Priciples of The Arts
Elements and Priciples of The Arts
Elements and Priciples of The Arts
PRINCIPLES OF ART
ELEMENTS OF ART
Click icon to add picture
LINE
LINE
A path made by a moving point, a series of dots, a prolongation of points
An intended mark made by the artist to convey meaning beyond it physical description
Kinds of Lines
Straight lines are called rectilinear; geometric and impersonal and differ in the direction that they take.
Curved lines are called curvilinear; found in nature and living organisms and suggest grace, movement, and flexibility
indicative of life and energy.
EXERCISE
Identify the kind of lines present in the following art work
Click icon to add picture
COLOR
COLOR
A property of light.
A series of wavelengths which strike the retina of the eye
Any object has a color quality called pigmentation.
Gray is described as impure white and is created by the partial reflection of all
wavelengths of color.
Black, white and gray have no pigmentation.
They are called neutrals:
COLOR
2 color systems:
Lights are additive in the sense that when these colors are combined, the result will
be white.
Pigments/paints are subtractive that when combined, the result will be the
cancellation of he brightness of the other. Combination of all colors of pigments
results in black.
PROPERTIES OF COLOR
1. Hue. The name given to a color.
PROPERTIES OF COLOR
2. Value. Refers to lightness or darkness of a color.
When black is combined with a hue, a shade is produced, when white is added to it,
a tint results.
PROPERTIES OF COLOR
3. Intensity. Denotes the brightness and dullness of a color.
Hues become less intense (dull) when white is added because the color becomes
lighter in value.
When black is added, the intensity diminishes, as the value darkens.
When gray is added, the result will be a variation in intensity without any change in
value. The color becomes less bright, but neither lighter nor darker in its tone.
CREATING COLOR HARMONY
Monochromatic harmony. When a single color in the composition is varied in
intensity and value by adding white or black.
CREATING COLOR HARMONY
Complementary Harmony. When two colors that are opposite in the color wheel are
placed side by side.
CREATING COLOR HARMONY
Analogous Harmony. When hues that are adjacent or beside each other in the color
wheel is used in the composition.
CREATING COLOR HARMONY
Color Temperature. Refers to the relative warmth or coolness of a color.
Click icon to add picture
SHAPE
SHAPE
Is formed when two ends of a line meet to enclose an area.
Two-dimensional. Flat
Three dimensional. Solid identified by either mass and volume.
Picture plane. Any flat surface onto which the artwork is created.
SHAPE
Negative shapes. Areas that are not occupied by any form between the shapes of
figures.
CLASSIFICATION OF SHAPES
CLASSIFICATION OF SHAPES
Abstract shapes are those that have little or no resemblance to natural objects.
They have a recognizable form, but are not real. They are stylized or simplified versions of
organic shapes.
CLASSIFICATION OF SHAPES
Non-objective or Biomorphic shapes seldom have reference to recognizable objects, but
most often show a similarity to some organic forms.
ACTIVITY
Make your own mandala using different kinds of lines (straight:
horizontal, vertical, diagonal and zigzag; curved lines) and shapes
Color it using either of the three: monochromatic, complimentary,
or analogous.
At the back of your artwork, identify and explain the elements of
art you used.
EXAMPLE:
EXAMPLE:
EXAMPLE:
EXAMPLE:
EXAMPLE:
Click icon to add picture
TEXTURE
TEXTURE
is the feel or tactile quality of the surface of
an object.
SPACE
SPACE
An illusion in the graphic arts created by
techniques that adds depth and distance to
two-dimensional art.
It can be positive or negative, open or closed,
shallow or deep, and two-dimensional or
three-dimensional.
METHODS OF CREATING
SPACE
Overlapping planes (interposition) occurs
when objects that are closer to the viewer
prevent the view of objects that are behind
them.
METHODS OF CREATING
SPACE
Relative Size. Objects that appear
large/big indicate nearness and
small sized objects as distant.
METHODS OF CREATING
SPACE
Position on the picture plane
(Relative Height). Objects found
at the bottom of the frame will
appear closer to the viewer.
Farther distances are indicated by
the positions of the objects higher
on the picture plane.
METHODS OF CREATING
SPACE
Horizon line. The line at the eye level which becomes the point of
reference.
A picture plane can be divided into 3 parts:
Foreground (bottom)
Middle ground (where the horizon is)
Background (topmost part)
Distance is perceived by the spatial position of objects on the
picture plane.
METHODS OF CREATING
SPACE
Perspective deals with effect of distance on the appearance of objects.
Linear Perspective gives the perception distance by means of converging lines.
Aerial Perspective (gradient) is the effect of haze, mist or atmosphere on the object.
MOVEMENT
MOVEMENT
1. Actual movement. Results in kinetic art. It may be achieved
naturally using wind and water or mechanically through some
energy source (batteries or electricity).
Mobiles. Sculptures that are never stationary and looks different
every time it moves.
2. Implied movement. Results when a variety of lines are used
together, repeated, changed in position, or decreased/increased in
size. This gives an impression of movement in a stationary two-
dimensional art.
MOVEMENT
ACTIVITY
Draw a scene and try to create spaces using any of
the mentioned methods.
In the scene, include an object that implies
movement.
ELEMENTS OF THE
COMBINED ARTS
ELEMENTS OF MUSIC
Rhythm is a movement or pattern with uniform recurrence of accented and
unaccented beat.
Melody is the succession of tones arranged in such a way as to give it a
musical sense.
Harmony is the sounding of a series or group of tones at the same time.
Concordance results when the combination of sounds are in agreement which make it
sound good.
Dissonance results when the combination of sounds are not pleasant to hear (e.g. noise).
Setting is the locale and period in which the story takes place.
ELEMENTS OF DRAMA
Characters are the persons involved in the story.
Protagonist is the central character or the character around which the story
revolves.
Antagonist is the character that challenge the role of the protagonist.