The designer created several iterations of a sign to promote participation in a neighborhood association. The first sign used a green background, short message, and pictures representing the community. Based on feedback, subsequent designs rearranged the pictures and added questions. Later versions experimented with different color schemes and fonts to improve readability and grab more attention. The final sign incorporated a neighborhood name, darker blue background, and loosened image layout.
This document provides an overview of the Minimalist art movement, including its key characteristics, social context, and notable artists such as Donald Judd, Robert Morris, Carl Andre, Sol Lewitt, and Dan Flavin. Minimalist art featured geometric forms made from industrial materials and lacked color, with the goal of having the artwork and viewer be part of the same experience. It emerged in the 1960s as a reaction to Abstract Expressionism and was influenced by mass production and media at the time.
Minimalism emerged in the 1960s as an reaction against Abstract Expressionism. It emphasized geometric forms, industrial materials, hard edges, and a reduced palette of solid colors. Key influences included the Bauhaus, De Stijl, and Russian Constructivism movements. Notable minimalist artists included Carl Andre, Robert Morris, Sol LeWitt, Frank Stella, Dan Flavin, and Donald Judd, who created sculptures and installations focusing on the essence of materials and forms.
Sculpture involves shaping or combining materials in three dimensions. It can involve carving material away or adding material. Anish Kapoor is known for creating large-scale sculptures, including Orbit, the tallest sculpture in the UK at 115 meters tall. Michael Salter also works in sculpture, using recycled foam to create robotic forms. In a classroom, students worked on sculptural lessons using cardboard and foamcore, constructing pieces through slots and painting them with bright colors.
The document provides instructions for a museum paper assignment on Minimalism due on December 3rd, reminding students to include a museum visit receipt and follow formatting guidelines. It also gives an overview of Minimalism as an artistic movement that emerged in the 1960s focused on reducing forms to their basic elements and using industrial materials, with examples of works by Donald Judd, Frank Stella, and Richard Serra.
Yuko Takada Keller - Paper Sculpture in the SpaceYukoTakadaKeller
Yuko Takada Keller is a paper sculptor whose work has been exhibited since 1988. The document lists the titles of 22 of her paper sculpture works created between 1988-2011, along with the photographer for each piece. It also includes 3 videos showing her works from 2008-2011 accompanied by music from the Makiko Hirabayashi Trio.
The document discusses identifying different types of lines on playground equipment. It lists common line types like horizontal, vertical, diagonal, curved, and zig-zag. Students will then make a paper sculpture of a playground using strips of paper folded and glued to represent these different lines. Proper use of glue and scissors will also be taught.
The designer created several iterations of a sign to promote participation in a neighborhood association. The first sign used a green background, short message, and pictures representing the community. Based on feedback, subsequent designs rearranged the pictures and added questions. Later versions experimented with different color schemes and fonts to improve readability and grab more attention. The final sign incorporated a neighborhood name, darker blue background, and loosened image layout.
This document provides an overview of the Minimalist art movement, including its key characteristics, social context, and notable artists such as Donald Judd, Robert Morris, Carl Andre, Sol Lewitt, and Dan Flavin. Minimalist art featured geometric forms made from industrial materials and lacked color, with the goal of having the artwork and viewer be part of the same experience. It emerged in the 1960s as a reaction to Abstract Expressionism and was influenced by mass production and media at the time.
Minimalism emerged in the 1960s as an reaction against Abstract Expressionism. It emphasized geometric forms, industrial materials, hard edges, and a reduced palette of solid colors. Key influences included the Bauhaus, De Stijl, and Russian Constructivism movements. Notable minimalist artists included Carl Andre, Robert Morris, Sol LeWitt, Frank Stella, Dan Flavin, and Donald Judd, who created sculptures and installations focusing on the essence of materials and forms.
Sculpture involves shaping or combining materials in three dimensions. It can involve carving material away or adding material. Anish Kapoor is known for creating large-scale sculptures, including Orbit, the tallest sculpture in the UK at 115 meters tall. Michael Salter also works in sculpture, using recycled foam to create robotic forms. In a classroom, students worked on sculptural lessons using cardboard and foamcore, constructing pieces through slots and painting them with bright colors.
The document provides instructions for a museum paper assignment on Minimalism due on December 3rd, reminding students to include a museum visit receipt and follow formatting guidelines. It also gives an overview of Minimalism as an artistic movement that emerged in the 1960s focused on reducing forms to their basic elements and using industrial materials, with examples of works by Donald Judd, Frank Stella, and Richard Serra.
Yuko Takada Keller - Paper Sculpture in the SpaceYukoTakadaKeller
Yuko Takada Keller is a paper sculptor whose work has been exhibited since 1988. The document lists the titles of 22 of her paper sculpture works created between 1988-2011, along with the photographer for each piece. It also includes 3 videos showing her works from 2008-2011 accompanied by music from the Makiko Hirabayashi Trio.
The document discusses identifying different types of lines on playground equipment. It lists common line types like horizontal, vertical, diagonal, curved, and zig-zag. Students will then make a paper sculpture of a playground using strips of paper folded and glued to represent these different lines. Proper use of glue and scissors will also be taught.
The document does not contain any substantive information to summarize. It consists of a single word with no context provided. A meaningful summary cannot be generated from this limited input.
This slideshow was created as a brief introduction to a Year 11 unit on Sculpture in Victoria Australia, it was designed to inspire further research and to encourage different ways of considering sculpture, it requires some editing
Negative space refers to the shapes that exist between objects. By observing the negative spaces between a chair's legs, tree branches, or plants, unique silhouettes emerge. Practicing drawing these negative shapes helps one better see and establish the positive foreground shapes when returning to regular drawing. The document encourages tracing negative spaces from contour drawings and filling them with patterns using graphite pencils to discover the world of negative shapes, as illustrated by Henri Matisse's paintings.
Sculpture is a 3D art form that can take many forms, including: sculpture in the round (freestanding), relief (projecting from a background), modeling (building up material), carving (subtracting material), casting (reproducing in another material), construction/assemblage (multiple parts), and kinetic (moving) sculptures. Sculptures can also incorporate mixed media, installations, and site-specific works. Common sculptural materials include stone, metal, wood, clay, wax, and new plastics or resins.
Positive space refers to the area occupied by an object, while negative space is the space around the object. The document discusses how artists use positive and negative space, giving examples of bottles where the positive space is what the bottles occupy and the negative space is the area around them. Artists can manipulate objects by deliberately leaving certain spaces white or adding patterns to trick the viewer's eyes.
The document discusses the key elements of design used in visual art - line, shape, space, value, color, and texture. It provides detailed descriptions and examples of each element:
- Line can be actual, implied, or contour lines that define boundaries and suggest movement. Different types include horizontal, vertical, diagonal, wavy, zigzag lines.
- Shape is defined by lines or edges and can be geometric or organic. Positive and negative space are used to manipulate shapes.
- Space can be two-dimensional or three-dimensional. Techniques like overlapping shapes, linear perspective, and size variation create a sense of depth and space.
- Value refers to lightness and darkness used through sh
Sculptures are three-dimensional objects that take up real space and have mass. Sculptures employ various techniques like modeling, carving, and casting to represent subjects like the human figure, animals, and portraits in diverse materials from wood and marble to modern mixed media. Modern trends in sculpture include kinetic sculptures that move, installations that transform entire spaces, and land art that uses earthworks to create site-specific sculptures in nature.
The document discusses the history and key figures of the minimalist art and music movements from the 1960s onward. It began as a rejection of abstract expressionism in New York art galleries and spread to other mediums like architecture, design, fashion and music. Key musical figures mentioned are La Monte Young, Terry Riley, Steve Reich, Philip Glass and John Adams, who helped pioneer the minimalist style of repetitive, trance-like compositions focusing on patterns with little variation. The movement aimed to portray extreme simplicity and literal meaning.
Minimalism was an art movement that emphasized simplicity and industrial materials. It opposed the emotional expression of abstract expressionism and focused on basic geometric forms and repetition. Key artists included Frank Stella, Sol LeWitt, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, and Carl Andre. Their work used materials like steel, concrete, and light to create simple sculptures and installations. Minimalist music also featured repetition and long durations. The movement sparked criticism for being too simple but influenced later art and design.
Minimalism arose in the 1960s as a reaction against Abstract Expressionism. It is characterized by simple geometric forms, industrial materials, repetition, and an emphasis on the basic elements of art. Key artists of the movement included Frank Stella, Donald Judd, Sol LeWitt, and Dan Flavin. They created reductive sculptures and installations using materials like steel, Plexiglas, and fluorescent lights to draw attention to form and the viewer's experience. Though criticized as too simplistic, Minimalism had a significant influence on later movements like Post-Minimalism and remains influential today in design and architecture.
This document provides an overview of minimalism in art from the late 1950s to the early 1970s. It discusses the main artistic influences on minimalism including abstract expressionism, constructivism, and Marcel Duchamp. The leading minimalist artists of the movement are identified as Frank Stella, Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Robert Morris, and Sol LeWitt. Their key characteristics and works are described, focusing on reduction, industrial materials, and viewer interaction. Minimalism aimed to strip down art to its basic forms and reject metaphorical interpretations.
This document lists works by several minimalist artists including Donald Judd, Sol LeWitt, Dan Flavin, Carl Andre, and Robert Morris. It describes the materials, dimensions, and years of numerous untitled sculptures, paintings, prints and installations created between 1961-1996. These works employ simple geometric forms and industrial materials to reduce forms to their basic essentials.
Minimalism emerged in the 1960s as a reaction against abstract expressionism. Minimalist artists aimed to eliminate composition from their work and create purely visual, non-representational pieces. Key minimalist artists included Frank Stella, Sol LeWitt, Donald Judd, and Dan Flavin. They used industrial materials and geometric forms to create ordered and simplistic sculptures and installations. Their goal was for the works to be seen as literal objects rather than symbolic representations.
This document discusses the benefits of minimalism, which include peace, focus, contentment, and more time for important things. It provides steps to achieve minimalism, such as decluttering your home and digital life, sorting out finances, and setting and sticking to standards. The first step suggested is to get rid of everything that is not useful, beautiful, necessary, or appealing. Items should be sorted into boxes for giving away, throwing away, keeping, or relocating. Additional blogs on creative decluttering and de-owning are recommended for further inspiration.
"MINIMALISM" is an art movement started in 1960's and early 70's post world war-2.
the art form derived from reductive aspects of "post modernism" and is subjected to reduce to necessary elements only.
shows the trend in design, architecture and art during the movement and work of the various artist related to the movement.
Minimalism originated in the 1960s as a reaction to abstract expressionism. It emphasizes simplicity, absence of emotion and ornamentation. Key artists include Donald Judd, Frank Stella and Agnes Martin. Minimalist architecture by designers like Tadao Ando focuses on essential materials and relationships with nature. Minimalist design applies clean lines, neutral colors and open spaces to interiors, furniture and products. Photography strives for simplicity while retaining significance, and minimalist music uses repetition and gradual transformation.
So trendy, so hot topic. Pity many misunderstand minimalist design basics, don't get the core of the subject. I tried to show the roots and influences, shed the light by decomposing minimalist design principles one by one
Minimalism emerged in the 1960s as a reaction to Abstract Expressionism. Minimalist artists aimed to eliminate emotion, allusion, and meaning from their work by creating simple geometric objects and structures. Key minimalist artists included Frank Stella, Donald Judd, Carl Andre, Sol LeWitt, Robert Morris, and Dan Flavin. Their work used basic forms and industrial materials to focus attention on the objects themselves rather than on symbolism or expression.
This document provides guidance on public speaking and creating effective multimedia presentations. It discusses that public speaking involves speaking in front of others, which scares many people. To prepare, one should figure out the thesis, structure, and content before practicing their presentation out loud multiple times. When presenting, one should know their topic and audience well, find an engaging hook, stay on topic, avoid repetition, and project confidence. The document also provides tips for multimedia presentations, such as keeping a consistent background design, using sufficient color contrast, adding animation sparingly, making text and images large and easy to see, limiting wordiness, and including relevant images.
Liane is sharing tips for improving presentation skills based on her experience overcoming a childhood trauma of failing at a school presentation. She discusses practicing presentations at her job, where being a great presenter is essential. Some of her tips include standing up instead of sitting, keeping slides simple, making presentations interactive by asking questions, and using personal stories to connect with audiences. She recommends practicing presentations internally at work and reviewing books, speeches, and slides to continue improving skills.
The document does not contain any substantive information to summarize. It consists of a single word with no context provided. A meaningful summary cannot be generated from this limited input.
This slideshow was created as a brief introduction to a Year 11 unit on Sculpture in Victoria Australia, it was designed to inspire further research and to encourage different ways of considering sculpture, it requires some editing
Negative space refers to the shapes that exist between objects. By observing the negative spaces between a chair's legs, tree branches, or plants, unique silhouettes emerge. Practicing drawing these negative shapes helps one better see and establish the positive foreground shapes when returning to regular drawing. The document encourages tracing negative spaces from contour drawings and filling them with patterns using graphite pencils to discover the world of negative shapes, as illustrated by Henri Matisse's paintings.
Sculpture is a 3D art form that can take many forms, including: sculpture in the round (freestanding), relief (projecting from a background), modeling (building up material), carving (subtracting material), casting (reproducing in another material), construction/assemblage (multiple parts), and kinetic (moving) sculptures. Sculptures can also incorporate mixed media, installations, and site-specific works. Common sculptural materials include stone, metal, wood, clay, wax, and new plastics or resins.
Positive space refers to the area occupied by an object, while negative space is the space around the object. The document discusses how artists use positive and negative space, giving examples of bottles where the positive space is what the bottles occupy and the negative space is the area around them. Artists can manipulate objects by deliberately leaving certain spaces white or adding patterns to trick the viewer's eyes.
The document discusses the key elements of design used in visual art - line, shape, space, value, color, and texture. It provides detailed descriptions and examples of each element:
- Line can be actual, implied, or contour lines that define boundaries and suggest movement. Different types include horizontal, vertical, diagonal, wavy, zigzag lines.
- Shape is defined by lines or edges and can be geometric or organic. Positive and negative space are used to manipulate shapes.
- Space can be two-dimensional or three-dimensional. Techniques like overlapping shapes, linear perspective, and size variation create a sense of depth and space.
- Value refers to lightness and darkness used through sh
Sculptures are three-dimensional objects that take up real space and have mass. Sculptures employ various techniques like modeling, carving, and casting to represent subjects like the human figure, animals, and portraits in diverse materials from wood and marble to modern mixed media. Modern trends in sculpture include kinetic sculptures that move, installations that transform entire spaces, and land art that uses earthworks to create site-specific sculptures in nature.
The document discusses the history and key figures of the minimalist art and music movements from the 1960s onward. It began as a rejection of abstract expressionism in New York art galleries and spread to other mediums like architecture, design, fashion and music. Key musical figures mentioned are La Monte Young, Terry Riley, Steve Reich, Philip Glass and John Adams, who helped pioneer the minimalist style of repetitive, trance-like compositions focusing on patterns with little variation. The movement aimed to portray extreme simplicity and literal meaning.
Minimalism was an art movement that emphasized simplicity and industrial materials. It opposed the emotional expression of abstract expressionism and focused on basic geometric forms and repetition. Key artists included Frank Stella, Sol LeWitt, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, and Carl Andre. Their work used materials like steel, concrete, and light to create simple sculptures and installations. Minimalist music also featured repetition and long durations. The movement sparked criticism for being too simple but influenced later art and design.
Minimalism arose in the 1960s as a reaction against Abstract Expressionism. It is characterized by simple geometric forms, industrial materials, repetition, and an emphasis on the basic elements of art. Key artists of the movement included Frank Stella, Donald Judd, Sol LeWitt, and Dan Flavin. They created reductive sculptures and installations using materials like steel, Plexiglas, and fluorescent lights to draw attention to form and the viewer's experience. Though criticized as too simplistic, Minimalism had a significant influence on later movements like Post-Minimalism and remains influential today in design and architecture.
This document provides an overview of minimalism in art from the late 1950s to the early 1970s. It discusses the main artistic influences on minimalism including abstract expressionism, constructivism, and Marcel Duchamp. The leading minimalist artists of the movement are identified as Frank Stella, Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Robert Morris, and Sol LeWitt. Their key characteristics and works are described, focusing on reduction, industrial materials, and viewer interaction. Minimalism aimed to strip down art to its basic forms and reject metaphorical interpretations.
This document lists works by several minimalist artists including Donald Judd, Sol LeWitt, Dan Flavin, Carl Andre, and Robert Morris. It describes the materials, dimensions, and years of numerous untitled sculptures, paintings, prints and installations created between 1961-1996. These works employ simple geometric forms and industrial materials to reduce forms to their basic essentials.
Minimalism emerged in the 1960s as a reaction against abstract expressionism. Minimalist artists aimed to eliminate composition from their work and create purely visual, non-representational pieces. Key minimalist artists included Frank Stella, Sol LeWitt, Donald Judd, and Dan Flavin. They used industrial materials and geometric forms to create ordered and simplistic sculptures and installations. Their goal was for the works to be seen as literal objects rather than symbolic representations.
This document discusses the benefits of minimalism, which include peace, focus, contentment, and more time for important things. It provides steps to achieve minimalism, such as decluttering your home and digital life, sorting out finances, and setting and sticking to standards. The first step suggested is to get rid of everything that is not useful, beautiful, necessary, or appealing. Items should be sorted into boxes for giving away, throwing away, keeping, or relocating. Additional blogs on creative decluttering and de-owning are recommended for further inspiration.
"MINIMALISM" is an art movement started in 1960's and early 70's post world war-2.
the art form derived from reductive aspects of "post modernism" and is subjected to reduce to necessary elements only.
shows the trend in design, architecture and art during the movement and work of the various artist related to the movement.
Minimalism originated in the 1960s as a reaction to abstract expressionism. It emphasizes simplicity, absence of emotion and ornamentation. Key artists include Donald Judd, Frank Stella and Agnes Martin. Minimalist architecture by designers like Tadao Ando focuses on essential materials and relationships with nature. Minimalist design applies clean lines, neutral colors and open spaces to interiors, furniture and products. Photography strives for simplicity while retaining significance, and minimalist music uses repetition and gradual transformation.
So trendy, so hot topic. Pity many misunderstand minimalist design basics, don't get the core of the subject. I tried to show the roots and influences, shed the light by decomposing minimalist design principles one by one
Minimalism emerged in the 1960s as a reaction to Abstract Expressionism. Minimalist artists aimed to eliminate emotion, allusion, and meaning from their work by creating simple geometric objects and structures. Key minimalist artists included Frank Stella, Donald Judd, Carl Andre, Sol LeWitt, Robert Morris, and Dan Flavin. Their work used basic forms and industrial materials to focus attention on the objects themselves rather than on symbolism or expression.
This document provides guidance on public speaking and creating effective multimedia presentations. It discusses that public speaking involves speaking in front of others, which scares many people. To prepare, one should figure out the thesis, structure, and content before practicing their presentation out loud multiple times. When presenting, one should know their topic and audience well, find an engaging hook, stay on topic, avoid repetition, and project confidence. The document also provides tips for multimedia presentations, such as keeping a consistent background design, using sufficient color contrast, adding animation sparingly, making text and images large and easy to see, limiting wordiness, and including relevant images.
Liane is sharing tips for improving presentation skills based on her experience overcoming a childhood trauma of failing at a school presentation. She discusses practicing presentations at her job, where being a great presenter is essential. Some of her tips include standing up instead of sitting, keeping slides simple, making presentations interactive by asking questions, and using personal stories to connect with audiences. She recommends practicing presentations internally at work and reviewing books, speeches, and slides to continue improving skills.
This document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint presentations. It discusses general strategies like making the presentation about the presenter, not just content. It recommends organizing text into manageable chunks, using photos appropriately, and guiding the audience's flow from slide to slide. Composition guidelines include using a single focal point and a double pane layout. The document also offers tips on using color effectively and limited transitions. It emphasizes starting early and comparing slides to other visually appealing examples.
This PPT is made for those who have low confidence in there presentation either in making of PPT or its delivery. In the very simple one can learn for here. Cheers!
This document provides tips for creating an effective visual aid for a presentation using PowerPoint. It recommends keeping slides simple with only the essential information, knowing the content and audience, using consistent formatting, and using notes to expand on the slides rather than reading slides verbatim. The visual aid should enhance the presentation by visually representing the key ideas in a way that helps the audience understand and remember the content.
We all have to learn from Du Lala,a modern women who can deal well with the affairs happing around her. Here is my learning of the book. Hope u would like it!
2. Minimalism is a modern way to express yourself.
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3. With few words, comfortable colors, minimalism provides
a easy way to get and present.
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4. Now minimalism is widely used in the web design.
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5. And also in some other fields, such as furniture.
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6. And it can also be used in your slides.
Yes, your PPT!
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7. As you can see, a good PPT does not contain a lot.
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8. His name is Garr Reynolds, who wrote the book
Presentation Zen.
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9. In the book, he said that
Bullet points and related pictures can make a PPT
distinguished with so many others.
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10. His main points are the same as minimalism.
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11. So next time, if you don’t have enough to put in your slides,
You can just make it simple.
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12. Now you know that you can make a simple slide.
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13. But remember, you have to digest the presentation.
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14. And choose the best pictures you can find.
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minimalism More to tell