The presentation describes the differences between an artist and an artisan, and medium and technique. It also identifies the key persons in the art market.
7. artist
artisan
any person who performs any of
the creative arts
paint, watercolor, pen and ink,
illustration and sculpture etc.
painter, sculptor, choreographer,
dancer, writer, poet, musicians
skilled worker who makes
things by hand
jewelry, glasswork, pottery,
weaving, etc.
carpenter, carver, plumber,
blacksmith, weaver,
embroiderer etc.
8. medium
materials used by an artist to interpret his
feelings and thoughts
architect - wood, bamboo, bricks, stone etc.
painter - pigments on wood or canvas
musician - instrumenents
literary writer - words
technique
the manner in which an artist controls his
medium to achieve the desired effect
fulfillment of the technical requirements
the way an artist manipulates his medium
to express his ideas in his artwork
9. whose mediums can be heard
and expressed in time
music and literature
Combined Arts
primarily visual in
nature; whose mediums
can be seen and occupy
space
dimensional or two-
dimensional arts
three-dimensional arts
1.
2.
Visual Arts Auditory Arts
whose mediums can be
BOTH seen and heard
which exist in both space
and time
dance, opera, drama, film
18. Curator Conservator
manage a collection of
artworks or artifacts
other roles: acquire, care
for and develop a collection
represents the museum -
they answer questions
about the history of an art
piece or artifact
directly responsible for the
pjysical well-being of the
actual piece
decides which
painting/artifact needs
special handling, repair, or
restoration
work less with the public
19.
20. Art Buyer Art Dealer
main job: purchase art
commonly works for
galleries or museums
must understand the
prevailing market and have
an eye for popular trends
middleman between the
artists and people or
institutions looking to
acquire works of art
trained eye- spot potential
emerging artists
more than sales persons -
they act as consultants
21. Private Collection
personally-owned collection
of works -usually a
collection of art
on loan from an individual
or organization
source: school, church
organization, bank or other
private companies or
institutions
22. Stage 1: Germination
"burst of energy"
initial stages of excitement,
keen interest, and freshness
The feeling cannot be
sustained.
-> time for generating action
Stage 2: Assimilation Stage 3: Completion
finishing your creation;
bringing it to full fruition
self-sabotage
"learning to live withyour
new creation"
acknowledge your creation
and let it go and flourish
in the world
most crucial stage
also called"the stage of growth
and development"
internalising the vision,
making it a part of yourself
Where you can become easily
discouraged