The document describes a scavenger hunt through Paris using landmarks featured in illustrations from the book "Madeline" by Ludwig Bemelmans. It lists famous Parisian landmarks like the Eiffel Tower, Notre Dame Cathedral, Luxembourg Gardens, and the Louvre that appear in the book's illustrations and can be found by readers exploring the city.
Eiko Ishioka es una directora de arte japonesa galardonada con un Oscar por su diseño de vestuario para la película Drácula de Francis Ford Coppola. Ha trabajado en diversas áreas como vestuario, impresos, publicidad y dirección para películas como Drácula, The Cell y The Fall, así como para Cirque du Soleil.
MakeBeliefsComix.com allows people of all ages to create comic strips online. It provides characters, backgrounds, objects and tools to design each panel. Users can choose a character, add expressions and props, then insert speech or thought bubbles. The finished comic can be printed, emailed or saved as an image. The tutorial walks through each step, from naming the comic to publishing the final version.
The document provides information about pastels including their origins in the 15th century and early use by artists like Leonardo da Vinci and Federico Barocci. It notes that Rosalba Carriera was the first artist renowned for her pastel portraits in the 1700s. Later, artists like Degas championed pastel, raising it to the brilliance of oil paint. The document also describes the composition of pastels, types including soft and hard pastels, techniques for working with them, and surfaces used.
This document defines key concepts in art related to shape, space, and composition. It explains that space is the area around objects, positive space is the objects or forms, and negative space is the empty area between objects. It then defines composition as the arrangement of positive space and discusses the Japanese concept of Notan, which emphasizes balance between positive and negative space. The document concludes by explaining an exercise called Expansion of the Square that applies these concepts of balance, positive space, and negative space.
How to Make Money With Your Photoshop Editing SkillsFiverr
This document discusses various ways that someone with Photoshop editing skills can make money, including editing wedding and professional photos, creating social media graphics and banner ads for businesses, designing logos, and working with marketing agencies or independently on freelance platforms like Fiverr. It recommends developing a specialty and finding a copywriting partner to take on bigger projects and act as a virtual agency. The overall message is that while freelancing takes perseverance, experienced Photoshop editors can succeed financially by leveraging their skills.
The document provides instructions for students to create a mosaic artwork project based on Roman mosaics. It discusses how Romans made mosaics by first planning a design and then laying small tiles according to the design. It outlines the steps students will take to plan and design their own mosaic by drawing the design, choosing colors, cutting out cardboard tiles, and gluing them onto a backing board. Once complete, the mosaics will be displayed throughout the school as part of an art gallery project.
- When drawing a portrait, the width of the head is two-thirds of its height when viewed straight on and seven-eighths of the height when viewed in profile.
- The face can be divided into four equal sections with features falling along these lines, such as the eyes in the middle section.
- Details like eye shape, placement of features, and use of values to render light and shadow are important for accurate portrayal.
The document describes a scavenger hunt through Paris using landmarks featured in illustrations from the book "Madeline" by Ludwig Bemelmans. It lists famous Parisian landmarks like the Eiffel Tower, Notre Dame Cathedral, Luxembourg Gardens, and the Louvre that appear in the book's illustrations and can be found by readers exploring the city.
Eiko Ishioka es una directora de arte japonesa galardonada con un Oscar por su diseño de vestuario para la película Drácula de Francis Ford Coppola. Ha trabajado en diversas áreas como vestuario, impresos, publicidad y dirección para películas como Drácula, The Cell y The Fall, así como para Cirque du Soleil.
MakeBeliefsComix.com allows people of all ages to create comic strips online. It provides characters, backgrounds, objects and tools to design each panel. Users can choose a character, add expressions and props, then insert speech or thought bubbles. The finished comic can be printed, emailed or saved as an image. The tutorial walks through each step, from naming the comic to publishing the final version.
The document provides information about pastels including their origins in the 15th century and early use by artists like Leonardo da Vinci and Federico Barocci. It notes that Rosalba Carriera was the first artist renowned for her pastel portraits in the 1700s. Later, artists like Degas championed pastel, raising it to the brilliance of oil paint. The document also describes the composition of pastels, types including soft and hard pastels, techniques for working with them, and surfaces used.
This document defines key concepts in art related to shape, space, and composition. It explains that space is the area around objects, positive space is the objects or forms, and negative space is the empty area between objects. It then defines composition as the arrangement of positive space and discusses the Japanese concept of Notan, which emphasizes balance between positive and negative space. The document concludes by explaining an exercise called Expansion of the Square that applies these concepts of balance, positive space, and negative space.
How to Make Money With Your Photoshop Editing SkillsFiverr
This document discusses various ways that someone with Photoshop editing skills can make money, including editing wedding and professional photos, creating social media graphics and banner ads for businesses, designing logos, and working with marketing agencies or independently on freelance platforms like Fiverr. It recommends developing a specialty and finding a copywriting partner to take on bigger projects and act as a virtual agency. The overall message is that while freelancing takes perseverance, experienced Photoshop editors can succeed financially by leveraging their skills.
The document provides instructions for students to create a mosaic artwork project based on Roman mosaics. It discusses how Romans made mosaics by first planning a design and then laying small tiles according to the design. It outlines the steps students will take to plan and design their own mosaic by drawing the design, choosing colors, cutting out cardboard tiles, and gluing them onto a backing board. Once complete, the mosaics will be displayed throughout the school as part of an art gallery project.
- When drawing a portrait, the width of the head is two-thirds of its height when viewed straight on and seven-eighths of the height when viewed in profile.
- The face can be divided into four equal sections with features falling along these lines, such as the eyes in the middle section.
- Details like eye shape, placement of features, and use of values to render light and shadow are important for accurate portrayal.
Pop Art was an art movement that emerged in the late 1950s in both Europe and the United States. It reflected popular and commercial culture, using imagery from advertisements, comic strips, and everyday mass-produced objects. Notable Pop Artists like Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein took images from popular culture and reproduced them in an aesthetic manner using techniques like silkscreening. Their work blurred the lines between fine art and commercial art. Pop Art commented on consumer culture and mass media through the use of everyday imagery and objects. It challenged notions of what art could be and helped expand definitions of art.
This Photoshop training document covers techniques for editing and enhancing photos including removing redeye, blemishes and objects using the cut out tool, applying stamps, brightening images, straightening, using the liquefy tool to adjust features, and cropping photos with perspective.
This document provides an overview of the topics that will be covered in a photography course, including basic concepts, digital photography techniques, composition, digital editing, and other requested topics. It emphasizes that amazing photos are about composition and light rather than technical camera properties, and it provides tips on exposure, lighting, and leading the viewer's eye through an image with effective composition. Homework assignments involve learning exposure adjustment on one's camera and analyzing lighting in photographs.
Robert Indiana is an American pop artist known for his iconic LOVE series. He was born in 1928 in Indiana and changed his last name to his home state. Indiana became famous for creating simple images and words in bold styles and colors. His most famous work is the LOVE series, which began with a Christmas card design in 1964. The US Postal Service later featured his LOVE design on a stamp in 1973. Indiana went on to create LOVE sculptures in different languages. In 2008, he created a HOPE image and prints to support Barack Obama's presidential campaign, as well as HOPE sculptures.
Mark Rothko was a modern abstract painter born in 1903 in Russia and lived in both Russia and the United States. He was influenced by artists such as Pablo Picasso and Antonio Miró and known for his use of bold colors and shapes in his paintings. Rothko sought to evoke emotion and contemplation through large, color-field paintings without clearly discernible forms or subjects.
Salvador Dali was a surrealist artist known for his strange and dreamlike paintings that combined abstract and unexpected images. He claimed his ideas came from his vivid dreams as a child and that he received messages from aliens through his mustache. His most famous work, "The Persistence of Memory", depicts melting clocks in a surreal landscape and exemplifies his dreamlike style of combining unexpected objects and images.
The document provides details on several famous self-portraits by notable artists: Gustave Courbet's 1845 self-portrait depicting despair; Egon Schiele's 1912 self-portrait showing him as self-confident and fragile; M.C. Escher's 1935 lithograph reflecting his interest in unusual perspectives; Frida Kahlo's 1939 painting symbolizing her cultural duality and divorce pain; David Hockney's 1954 teenage self-portrait against a newspaper backdrop; Lucian Freud's 1965 unsettling portrait with his tiny children; and Pablo Picasso's 1972 last self-portrait facing his mortality.
The document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint presentations, including following the 10/20/30 rule of 10 slides, 20 minutes, and 30 point font. It suggests keeping presentations organized with clear learning objectives and formatting strategies like the 6x6 rule. The document also offers ideas for incorporating active learning strategies into presentations every 10 minutes through activities like discussion questions, polls, and small group work.
Surrealism began in the 1920s as a cultural movement encompassing various art forms including painting, sculpture, music and film. It aimed to depict the unconscious mind and what lies beyond realism according to writer Guillaume Apollinaire. Salvador Dali described it as the symbolic language of the subconscious. Some surrealist art techniques included collage, decalcomania, and frottage. Prominent surrealist artists were Joan Miro, Max Ernst, and Salvador Dali, whose photography with Philippe Halsman required 26 attempts to capture. Surrealism continues to influence various creative fields like web design today.
This document provides an overview of the pop art movement in America during the 1950s and 1960s. It summarizes key pop art styles and techniques like clear lines, bright colors, and representations of popular culture symbols. Several prominent pop artists are discussed, including Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, and their works featuring everyday objects depicted at a large scale or in multiple pieces. The document concludes by outlining a ceramics assignment asking students to create a realistic life-sized sculpture of a food container using pop art techniques.
Josef Hoffmann and Koloman Moser were Austrian artists active in the early 20th century. They were influential figures in the Vienna Secession movement and known for their work in architecture, furniture design, metalwork, and graphic arts. Together they helped establish the Wiener Werkstätte workshops that produced and sold works in a distinctive Secessionist style.
The document discusses different types of rhythm and pattern in art. There are four main types of rhythm: random, regular, flowing, and alternating. Random rhythm repeats motifs in no apparent order, while regular rhythm uses identical motifs in regular spacing. Flowing rhythm uses repeated wavy or curved lines with no breaks. Alternating rhythm changes the motif, its placement, or the space between motifs each time. Progressive rhythm gradually changes the motif with each repetition. Pattern refers to two-dimensional visual repetition, and motifs are the individual repeated units that make up patterns or rhythms.
The document discusses Leonardo da Vinci's expertise in facial proportions and self-portraits. It provides instructions for students to create a self-portrait using face mapping techniques. Key points include drawing guide lines for symmetry, eye level, and positioning features so they are proportionate, such as eyes being five eyes wide and mouth corners lining up under pupils. Students are advised to carefully observe their own features in a mirror and draw what they see.
This document is a presentation about designing effective PowerPoint slides. It provides tips over several slides on how to design slides with a killer title and opening slide, use of color schemes and images, getting the text right, using the principles of contrast, repetition, alignment and proximity (CRAP), incorporating video, sharing the presentation online, and recapping the key tips. The presentation emphasizes the importance of visual design over text-heavy slides and using techniques like strong images and video to engage the audience in a way words alone cannot. It provides examples throughout to illustrate its tips.
Cubism was an influential early 20th century avant-garde art movement that revolutionized European painting and sculpture. Developed by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque between 1907-1914 in Paris, Cubism featured geometric shapes and multiple perspectives to depict subjects from a multitude of angles. Cubist works were characterized by the fragmentation of forms, abstract color, and the fusion of subject matter. The movement had two phases - analytical cubism focused on geometric abstraction while synthetic cubism incorporated collage materials into paintings. Major cubist artists included Picasso, Braque, Juan Gris, Fernand Léger, Jean Metzinger, Albert Gleizes, Marcel Duchamp, and sculptors Alexander Archipenko and Raymond D
With the explosion of the maker movement, schools are beginning to embrace creativity. However, what does this mean for assessment? Should we assess the creative process? Should we assess the finished product? Does assessing creativity actually make kids more risk-averse? In this workshop we explore what it means to assess both the creative process and the creative product without leading to risk aversion.
This document lists 12 image credit URLs from various websites providing photographs and information about art history, printmaking techniques, and specific artists. It includes Flickr photo URLs and links to blogs and articles about prehistoric art, Leonardo Da Vinci's landscapes, printmaking history and techniques, and Chinese and Japanese artworks.
Painting Using a Monochromatic Color Schemeglennhirsch
This document discusses monochromatic color schemes, which use variations of a single hue. It provides examples of monochromatic schemes in artworks such as Picasso's Blue Period paintings and scenes from Close Encounters of the Third Kind. The document also notes that landscapes and night scenes are natural examples of monochromatic color schemes and advises students to do a thumbnail sketch using blocks of light and shadow before beginning a painting with a monochromatic palette.
Value painting assignments- posterized or monochromatic Joe Turek
These are my value assignments, they are purposefully easy, as they are the first real paintings my students complete. They practice making mixtures of color at different values, projecting images, tracing, using a grid, and free-handing. A good simple first set of assignments that they can choose between.
Pop Art was an art movement that emerged in the late 1950s in both Europe and the United States. It reflected popular and commercial culture, using imagery from advertisements, comic strips, and everyday mass-produced objects. Notable Pop Artists like Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein took images from popular culture and reproduced them in an aesthetic manner using techniques like silkscreening. Their work blurred the lines between fine art and commercial art. Pop Art commented on consumer culture and mass media through the use of everyday imagery and objects. It challenged notions of what art could be and helped expand definitions of art.
This Photoshop training document covers techniques for editing and enhancing photos including removing redeye, blemishes and objects using the cut out tool, applying stamps, brightening images, straightening, using the liquefy tool to adjust features, and cropping photos with perspective.
This document provides an overview of the topics that will be covered in a photography course, including basic concepts, digital photography techniques, composition, digital editing, and other requested topics. It emphasizes that amazing photos are about composition and light rather than technical camera properties, and it provides tips on exposure, lighting, and leading the viewer's eye through an image with effective composition. Homework assignments involve learning exposure adjustment on one's camera and analyzing lighting in photographs.
Robert Indiana is an American pop artist known for his iconic LOVE series. He was born in 1928 in Indiana and changed his last name to his home state. Indiana became famous for creating simple images and words in bold styles and colors. His most famous work is the LOVE series, which began with a Christmas card design in 1964. The US Postal Service later featured his LOVE design on a stamp in 1973. Indiana went on to create LOVE sculptures in different languages. In 2008, he created a HOPE image and prints to support Barack Obama's presidential campaign, as well as HOPE sculptures.
Mark Rothko was a modern abstract painter born in 1903 in Russia and lived in both Russia and the United States. He was influenced by artists such as Pablo Picasso and Antonio Miró and known for his use of bold colors and shapes in his paintings. Rothko sought to evoke emotion and contemplation through large, color-field paintings without clearly discernible forms or subjects.
Salvador Dali was a surrealist artist known for his strange and dreamlike paintings that combined abstract and unexpected images. He claimed his ideas came from his vivid dreams as a child and that he received messages from aliens through his mustache. His most famous work, "The Persistence of Memory", depicts melting clocks in a surreal landscape and exemplifies his dreamlike style of combining unexpected objects and images.
The document provides details on several famous self-portraits by notable artists: Gustave Courbet's 1845 self-portrait depicting despair; Egon Schiele's 1912 self-portrait showing him as self-confident and fragile; M.C. Escher's 1935 lithograph reflecting his interest in unusual perspectives; Frida Kahlo's 1939 painting symbolizing her cultural duality and divorce pain; David Hockney's 1954 teenage self-portrait against a newspaper backdrop; Lucian Freud's 1965 unsettling portrait with his tiny children; and Pablo Picasso's 1972 last self-portrait facing his mortality.
The document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint presentations, including following the 10/20/30 rule of 10 slides, 20 minutes, and 30 point font. It suggests keeping presentations organized with clear learning objectives and formatting strategies like the 6x6 rule. The document also offers ideas for incorporating active learning strategies into presentations every 10 minutes through activities like discussion questions, polls, and small group work.
Surrealism began in the 1920s as a cultural movement encompassing various art forms including painting, sculpture, music and film. It aimed to depict the unconscious mind and what lies beyond realism according to writer Guillaume Apollinaire. Salvador Dali described it as the symbolic language of the subconscious. Some surrealist art techniques included collage, decalcomania, and frottage. Prominent surrealist artists were Joan Miro, Max Ernst, and Salvador Dali, whose photography with Philippe Halsman required 26 attempts to capture. Surrealism continues to influence various creative fields like web design today.
This document provides an overview of the pop art movement in America during the 1950s and 1960s. It summarizes key pop art styles and techniques like clear lines, bright colors, and representations of popular culture symbols. Several prominent pop artists are discussed, including Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, and their works featuring everyday objects depicted at a large scale or in multiple pieces. The document concludes by outlining a ceramics assignment asking students to create a realistic life-sized sculpture of a food container using pop art techniques.
Josef Hoffmann and Koloman Moser were Austrian artists active in the early 20th century. They were influential figures in the Vienna Secession movement and known for their work in architecture, furniture design, metalwork, and graphic arts. Together they helped establish the Wiener Werkstätte workshops that produced and sold works in a distinctive Secessionist style.
The document discusses different types of rhythm and pattern in art. There are four main types of rhythm: random, regular, flowing, and alternating. Random rhythm repeats motifs in no apparent order, while regular rhythm uses identical motifs in regular spacing. Flowing rhythm uses repeated wavy or curved lines with no breaks. Alternating rhythm changes the motif, its placement, or the space between motifs each time. Progressive rhythm gradually changes the motif with each repetition. Pattern refers to two-dimensional visual repetition, and motifs are the individual repeated units that make up patterns or rhythms.
The document discusses Leonardo da Vinci's expertise in facial proportions and self-portraits. It provides instructions for students to create a self-portrait using face mapping techniques. Key points include drawing guide lines for symmetry, eye level, and positioning features so they are proportionate, such as eyes being five eyes wide and mouth corners lining up under pupils. Students are advised to carefully observe their own features in a mirror and draw what they see.
This document is a presentation about designing effective PowerPoint slides. It provides tips over several slides on how to design slides with a killer title and opening slide, use of color schemes and images, getting the text right, using the principles of contrast, repetition, alignment and proximity (CRAP), incorporating video, sharing the presentation online, and recapping the key tips. The presentation emphasizes the importance of visual design over text-heavy slides and using techniques like strong images and video to engage the audience in a way words alone cannot. It provides examples throughout to illustrate its tips.
Cubism was an influential early 20th century avant-garde art movement that revolutionized European painting and sculpture. Developed by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque between 1907-1914 in Paris, Cubism featured geometric shapes and multiple perspectives to depict subjects from a multitude of angles. Cubist works were characterized by the fragmentation of forms, abstract color, and the fusion of subject matter. The movement had two phases - analytical cubism focused on geometric abstraction while synthetic cubism incorporated collage materials into paintings. Major cubist artists included Picasso, Braque, Juan Gris, Fernand Léger, Jean Metzinger, Albert Gleizes, Marcel Duchamp, and sculptors Alexander Archipenko and Raymond D
With the explosion of the maker movement, schools are beginning to embrace creativity. However, what does this mean for assessment? Should we assess the creative process? Should we assess the finished product? Does assessing creativity actually make kids more risk-averse? In this workshop we explore what it means to assess both the creative process and the creative product without leading to risk aversion.
This document lists 12 image credit URLs from various websites providing photographs and information about art history, printmaking techniques, and specific artists. It includes Flickr photo URLs and links to blogs and articles about prehistoric art, Leonardo Da Vinci's landscapes, printmaking history and techniques, and Chinese and Japanese artworks.
Painting Using a Monochromatic Color Schemeglennhirsch
This document discusses monochromatic color schemes, which use variations of a single hue. It provides examples of monochromatic schemes in artworks such as Picasso's Blue Period paintings and scenes from Close Encounters of the Third Kind. The document also notes that landscapes and night scenes are natural examples of monochromatic color schemes and advises students to do a thumbnail sketch using blocks of light and shadow before beginning a painting with a monochromatic palette.
Value painting assignments- posterized or monochromatic Joe Turek
These are my value assignments, they are purposefully easy, as they are the first real paintings my students complete. They practice making mixtures of color at different values, projecting images, tracing, using a grid, and free-handing. A good simple first set of assignments that they can choose between.
Presentation grade-6-tonal-value-imagesPaula Street
1) The document discusses how artists use tonal values of light and dark to create different moods in their artwork.
2) It provides several examples of paintings and photographs that effectively use contrasts in light and dark to depict moods like drama, mystery, and innocence.
3) The document also explores how tonal values can make two-dimensional images appear three-dimensional by creating the illusion of modeling and texture.
Monochromatic Pop Art Celebrity Portraitsrachelt816
Andy Warhol was a founder of Pop Art known for works featuring iconic American products and celebrities screenprinted in multiple repetitions. He used screenprinting to mass produce images on canvas because it allowed for replicating subjects, commenting on consumerism and popular culture. Some of his most famous works included Campbell's Soup cans, Coca-Cola bottles, and celebrity portraits of Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor, and others. Students are assigned a project to create monochromatic celebrity portraits by gridding a photograph, outlining values, and painting shades and tints across a value scale.
Paint Intermediate Strategies to Stage Lightglennhirsch
This document discusses five strategies for using light and color in compositions: 1) Dramatic spotlight, 2) Reflected light, 3) Back light, 4) Cast shadow, and 5) Glowing light. It also discusses using monochromatic color schemes to enhance the illusion of light. Examples are given of artists who effectively used different lighting techniques or monochromatic palettes to set moods or direct attention. The document recommends first blocking in light and shadow with a thumbnail sketch before adding detail in paintings.
The document provides a list of landscape paintings from different eras and artists, including Hunters in the Snow by Pieter Bruegel from 1565, Impression, Sunrise by Claude Monet from 1873, and Blueberry Field by Alex Katz from 1968. The paintings span over 400 years of landscape art history from the 16th century through the 20th century and feature works from European and North American artists working in different styles.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive functioning. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
Weaving introduction paper and kente weaving from ghanaTommyOmani
This document provides an introduction to the craft of weaving. It discusses different types of looms like the strip loom and standing loom. Students will be using a simple cardboard loom for a weaving project. The document shares some YouTube videos demonstrating weaving in Ghana, by a little boy, and the weaving process. It also gives tips for fixing common weaving mistakes. The overall purpose is to educate about weaving techniques and looms.
The document provides instructions and examples for an Islamic star tile project. It discusses key aspects of Islamic tile designs such as their use of geometric patterns and colors. Examples of actual Islamic tiles are shown from locations in Dubai, Portugal, Spain, and Morocco to demonstrate styles and techniques. Students are instructed to design one quadrant of an octagonal tile that can then be rotated to create a full radial design, and examples of student work are presented. Sources for further information on Islamic art styles are also referenced.
A 4th grade class created amazing butterflies out of recycled materials. The teacher found the project idea online from a website that shares creative recycled art projects. The students had fun making butterflies and learning about reducing waste.
Third grade students completed an art project about the unique Banyan tree that introduced the concept of negative space. The Banyan tree is unusual as it has many trunks formed from branches that send roots down to the ground. The students' project used blending techniques to fill the negative spaces within and around the tree with color, anchoring the tree and creating reflections in the water. Their project was based on a book that would provide more ideas for elementary art classes.
The 4th Grade Stomp to the Music Project is a lesson plan from the Fairbanks, Alaska North Star Borough School District that teaches students to stomp and move to music. The lesson plan was shared online with other art teachers globally through a website that provides arts education resources.
The Second Grade students created self portraits by tearing pieces of paper in their homeroom classroom. Their teacher, Mr. Mongardi, complimented one student's self-portrait, saying "You look marvelous darling." The students enjoyed making their portraits using tiny torn pieces of paper.
The Second Grade students created self portraits by tearing pieces of paper in their homeroom classroom. Their teacher, Mr. Mongardi, complimented one student's self-portrait, saying "You look marvelous darling." The students enjoyed making their portraits using tiny torn pieces of paper.
Fourth grade students chose images to draw by creating grids to help them reproduce the drawings. Some examples of the students' drawings from 2010-2011 are shown. The students were inspired by the local artist Stephanie Borg, and her website is provided for more of her work.
Different examples of grade level artwork from the 2010-11 school year are shown, including second grade clay forts, fourth grade Omani style clay bags, second grade Matisse inspired paper cuts, and third grade Aboriginal inspired artwork.