Apr 30, 2014

Project: Atmospheric Perspective. Due In-Class.

Project Description

Create a painting of a landscape/cityscape that gives the illusion of depth, using both linear and atmospheric perspective. You composition will be drawn from life. You may shoot a photo of the composition to use as a reference for determining value (light/shadow). 

The goal of this project is to apply what you have learned throughout the year regarding color theory, the basic design components, composition, and painting technique to create a convincing landscape that shows depth.  


Schedule

Studio Day 1- color schemes

Work on color schemes in your sketchbook. You must reference the color wheel when deciding on your colors. Have notes written in your sketchbook to answer the following questions:
  1. Which paints did you use to mix your colors? 
  2. What color schemes will you use, and where?(analogous in background, triad in middle ground, split compliment in foreground, etc) 
  3. How will you reduce the intensity/saturation as you move from foreground, through middle ground, to background? 
  4. How will you create more contrast in the foreground, and less in the background?

Homework- 3 detailed sketches and 9x12 composition

Draw three detailed sketches of different landscapes, and from different viewpoints. These will be graded.

Choose the best composition and redraw it on 9x12 bristol board. Be sure to address the following compositional concerns:
  1. What will my main focal point(s) be? How can I use line, shape and color to direct the viewer there?
  2. How is my eye moving around the page? Is the composition 'broken'- meaning, does your eye get stuck anywhere? If so, how can I fix the composition?
  3. Do the lines, shapes, and colors work together to create a sense of depth?

Studio Day 2- Painting

You will have 2 hours to paint your composition. Be sure to have your sketchbook notes and composition with you. 
1:10pm- set up paints, etc. while I review the assignment. 
1:30pm- painting session
3:30pm- clean up
3:45pm- dismissal

Rubric

You will be assessed on both your process (time-management, being prepared, following all steps), and your finished project. 

Project will be graded according to: composition, your ability to create a sense of depth, craftsmanship/technique, and creativity. 

What is Atmospheric Perspective?

http://www.arthints.com/what-is-atmospheric-perspective/






Student Samples

These are all original scans of student work, followed by digitally altered images of the same pieces. The adjustments were made to show the potential for improvements in creating atmospheric perspective. Improvements were made by increasing changes in contrast,  saturation, and value as you move from foreground to background. ie. most contrast, and saturation in the foreground. least contrast and saturation in the background. Value was also increased (made lighter) in the background. 






















Apr 21, 2014

Project: Proportional Color Inventory. Due in-class.

Description

There are colors everywhere- nature, architecture, artwork, design, etc. The goal of this exercise is to train your eye to pick out and recreate colors from the visual world around you.

Starting with a found image, you will generate a color inventory based on the 8-10 most used colors in the composition. These will be arranged in order from least-used, to most-used (and proportional).  

After making the inventory, you will create an abstract composition using the same colors, and in the same proportion, as the source image.  In addition to learning how to see, and duplicate color, this exercise will help you find color combinations that you might not otherwise consider, and aid in your ability to represent the countless tones of a visual source.


Materials
• Bristol 9x12" format (2)


Process
Choose one image from the auction catalogues in class. Be sure to pick an image with somewhere between 8-10 various hues/colors. 

Try to find an image with color combinations that you usually don't use. You will use this to create your proportional color inventory. A proportional inventory will show the approximate measurement of colors present from dominant (greatest amount) to least dominant (smallest amount). 

PROPORTIONAL INVENTORY
Make a proportional inventory with countable number of tones (primed textiles, woodcuts, or silkscreen prints are good sources.)
Create a color palette (about 6 X 3 inches) that matches colors and estimates proportions. Design a composition of your own using the colors and proportions of the inventory.


Demonstration



Students' samples



*This project is taken from David Hornung's Color: A workshop for artists and designers

Apr 10, 2014

Joseph Albers- In-Class Assignments

Interaction of Color

Link to Josef Albers, Interaction of Color, Chapter VII Gestalt

The Relativity of Color