Apr 22, 2019

MIXED MEDIA ASSEMBLAGE/COLLAGE PROJECT – DUE DATE- 5/1 + 5/2, 2019

Purpose
Create two mixed-media abstracted portraits or still life on Bristol board or other surface. Think about communicating the essence of your subject's persona and style. think of concept and how you will approach the project. This is not about traditional portraiture or just creating a typical still life, it's an interpretation as well, it's your original, unique vision, but it gives you the freedom to find creative solutions to challenge traditional perceptions. Think abstract, deconstruction, mixed media, collaging, material, overlapping, LAYERING and weaving in your elements in creating a strong compositional solution. use your creative mind and create an affective integrated, cohesive series of TWO works of art that challenge the norm. Intergrate! don't treat your materials as seperates. they all must work together. INTEGRATION, NOT SEPARATION.

Two interpretive pieces either alternative portraiture or still life. Through the process, you will begin to explore additive technique in two-dimensional art. In particular, you will experiment with integrating collaging with traditional painting and drawing techniques. MUST BE VISUALLY PLEASING (good aesthetics please). Think and analyze your process, method of execution and explore creative solutions. Be experimental.

Attention will be given to the design principles we covered first semester. Namely: (framing, Scale, Hierarchy (points of interest/focal areas/emphasis), asymmetry, cropping techniques,  Textural look or feel, F/G relationship, balance, composition, value, contrast and color theory/relationships), color palette, asymmetry. All that we have studied thus far is crucial in creating a cohesive unified solution. How will everything tie in together to create a balanced composition. 

This project is treated as an abstraction and interpretive. Not to be literal. All elements must work together to create a cohesive (unified), resolved, and finished work. Really think about your approach as in theme, style, be selective with materials and how to work them into your composition. Integrate the materials thinking of overlapping, layering, creating transparency in your finished piece. That can be done with different methods of layering mediums. You really need to analyze your piece and be visually aware of your AESTHETICS.

Due Dates (Critiques)
Mon/Wed Class: Wednesday, May 16th. 
Tues/Thurs Class: Tuesday, May 15th. 

Rubric
You will be assessed on your application of the design principles mentioned above, your creative solution, integration of materials, craftsmanship, composition, execution, sketches, and your creativity. 
Note: All projects turned in after the due-date will be reduced by one letter grade. 

Materials

  • Two Sheets of Bristol board or  other surfaces 9" x 12" 
  • Paint, markers, colored pencils, charcoal, watercolors, etc.
  • Fabric scraps, tissue paper, magazine cutouts, string, yarn, newspaper, etc.
  • Appropriate adhesive (white glue, rubber cement, gel medium, sewing kit)

Process

Step 1
In your sketchbook, create 3 different contours (silhouettes) or whatever subject matter you choose that you will use as a reference for your collage. Themes can be a deconstructed portraiture, figurative, still life, abstract environment. BUT ALL ELEMENTS OF MEDIUMS AND MATERIALS MUST BE INTEGRATEAD, WEAVED INTO EACHOTHER, OVERLAPPING, INTERSECTING. MAKE IT A UNIFIED COMPOSITION. NOT COMPARMENTALISED. ELEMENTS MUST BE INTERGRATED NOT SEPERATED. MUST ALL WORK AS A WHOLE! THE SOME OF ALL PARTS. TOGETHER. FLOW, UNITY, COHESIVE. MUST WORK AS A PAIR.

PLEASE STUDY THE LINKS AND ARTIST LISTED. GIVES YOU IDEAS AND RESEARCH MATERIALS. POINTS OF REFERENCE. PLEASE!!!!

Begin by mapping out a theme/concept, think about materials, color palette, MAIN MATERIALS, your layout for both pieces, their relationships. what will crossover be? what is the common ground of your visuals, etc... Pay close attention to details, such as facial features or objects for still life. framing is important! and their relative size and position to one another. Be sure to map all these elements out correctly. Use cropping, scale and position on paper to create a dynamic composition.

Draw a silhouette of the head, then include neck and shoulders, add hair, include ears... Think about what you could add/remove to make it unique (pencil behind ear, sunglasses in hair, specific earring, etc). of course this also applies to a still life and all of its accents. whats the environment? look at Braque and Picasso JOSEPH CORNELL ASSEMBLAGES/collages. 

Process to consider when creating your mixed media composition. Think abstract. Think creative. deconstruct. think of creating focal areas and how your eye travels through the piece. WHAT ARE THE FOCAL AREAS? MAIN SUBJECT, SECONDARY TERTIARY FOCAL AREAS. Must have emphasis. things can't have equal importance on your canvas. there will always be a main subject. can't have everything same size, same value, same anyting. have to keep it DYNAMIC!

Step 2
Focus on other areas of your body as an option- hands, feet, legs, and entire figure. Repeat the steps above, to create 5 more contours from these observational drawings. 

Step 3
Tape the composition to a wall, take a step back, and examine all contours area of composition and theme. Examine the positive/negative space, and composition, of each contour. What is successful. SQUINT.

Now, look at the compositions alongside each other. Pay attention to the different ways the compositions interact with each other. How do they inform (relate and influence) each other? What combinations of compositions are particularly successful? WHAT IS THE FOCAL AREAS? MAIN SUBJECT, SECONDARY TERTIARY FOCAL AREAS. 

Step 4
Based on the observations in Step 3, choose one (or more) compositions to use as a starting point. Find ways to make the composition stronger, by overlapping, intersecting, combining, cutting, cropping, sewing stitching, glueing, etc.  Continue to refine the composition by rearranging, adding, and deleting elements.

Step 5
Explore with different materials (paint, collage, markers, fabric, metal, etc), continuing to refine the composition. Use color, texture, and value to tie everything together. 

NOTE: THIS IS NOT A 3-D PROJECT; KEEP THE WORK 2-D.It can have lots of texture,  alittle relief 1/8" and some depth, but the base board must be able to physically support all the materials you have incorporated. 

Research the words: Assemblage, Mixed-Media, Collage. below are other references.

Art-Historical Examples




Students Samples


 





 



Apr 11, 2019

Project 6: PROPORTIONAL/NON-PROPORTIONAL COLOR INVENTORY COMPOSITIONS - Due 4/15 and 4/16 2018

Your goal is to create a well balanced abstraction (non-representaitonal) composition based on the proportional color inventory of found colors you manage to isolate, mix and color match from the reference art you selected. Break away from the colors you like and start training the eye to assess color objectively. Find color combinations that you might not otherwise consider and get the ability to represent the countless tones of a visual source.

make a selection from more flat, solid, graphic artwork with a defined color amount that you can seperate and reproduce by mixing and matching that color palette.
you must consider the dominant areas and less dominant colors when you do your sketches. make a list of colors, measure out the color proportions on the 3"x 9" strip with ruler of course (straight lines) and figure out the larger areas, medium, smaller color areas. You will have to determine approximate visual percentages when breaking down the colors of your chosen piece of artwork. (10-15 chosen colors on your palette strip).

Design FOUR Sketches (showing color distribution and proportions) creating and mapping out a well balanced, creative abstract composition. Analyze and start applying colored areas in your sketches as a visual reference. use color pencils, watercolor etc on your drafts in your sketchbook. figure out the division of your color strip.

Materials
• Bristol board, 9x12"
• reference painting (from art books in closet)
• 9"x3" bristol strip for swatch of colors
• All 3 pieces to be (Reference Painting, color swatch palette, Final Composition)

Process
Find several pages from art magazines, art reproductions, Paintings with color combinations that you usually don't use. You are going to create a proportional color inventory, Meaning, taking a careful visual inventory of the colors used in the painting and mixing each color to match the original color and measure out on the swatch strip the dominant colors, less dominant and least dominant colors. Examine, analyze and map out the colors as well as thinking of your composition. you will create four sketches of ideas for composition. be very aware of the larger areas (break it up if you need) and smaller areas. You need use your imagination for color placement, separate them if you think it's to heavy in one area. again. check hierarchy, composition, color relations, ID and list the colors and where they will be placed for painting. You should do a draft in your sketchbook and also practice mixing the colors and creating little swatches if you have a challenging palette. It is helpful.

PROPORTIONAL INVENTORY
Make a proportional inventory with countable number of tones (select more graphic artwork or paintings where you can visually seperate different hues of the painting, or (textiles, woodcuts, or silkscreen prints are good sources.)

Create a color palette with the strip you are given (about 9" X 3") that matches colors and visually estimate proportions. Design a composition of your own using the colors and proportions of the inventory.



Students' samples




















Comp B NON-PROPORTIONAL INVENTORY
Make a non-proportional inventory with uncountable number of tones (images taken from the natural world are good sources).

This is different from Proportional inventory because the source images has so many colors and tones you must summerize the main colors that really create the essence of the piece of artwork you chose.

Begin the inventory with a square of flat color, (about 5 X 5 inches) use a background color directly from the image. Try to match the colors you observe precisely (the best you can), create between ten and 15 different dots. Design a composition of your own using tones drawn from the non-proportional inventory.




Students' samples