Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Assignment #6

ALL STUDENTS (Sophomores, Juniors, AND Seniors):

Email (or deliver by hand to me) the NAME and ARTIST of ONE song that you know ALL of the words to.
Do NOT tell anyone what you have decided on!!!  Once a song name & artist has been received from every student, there will be a matching quiz to match the student names to the songs they know. Extra credit points will go to the top-scoring student!




Sophomores:
DUE: Wednesday 10/30


Make a drawing in your sketchbook that shows:
-Atmospheric Perspective (objects getting lighter, bluer and fuzzier as they get further away)
-one example of Linear Perspective (one point, two point or three point perspective)
-use whatever medium you want! (pencil, watercolor, charcoal, ink, etc.)


John Frederick Kensett "Lake George" 1869



W. Turner "St. Peter's from the South"


Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot "The Bridge at Narni" 1826.



Juniors:
DUE: Tuesday 10/29
Continue to work on creating small thumbnails of patterns that range in value. (See last weeks assignment, Assignment #5)



Seniors:
Due: Your next class.
Continue to bring in all materials for working in class. If you need to project something on the Smart Board or if you need to print something out, make sure you have emailed it to yourself.

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Assignment #5

ALL STUDENTS (Sophomores, Juniors, AND Seniors):

Email (or deliver by hand to me) the NAME and ARTIST of ONE song that you know ALL of the words to.
Do NOT tell anyone what you have decided on!!!  Once a song name & artist has been received from every student, there will be a matching quiz to match the student names to the songs they know. Extra credit points will go to the top-scoring student!


Sophomores:
DUE: Monday 10-21

Make a drawing of a road using one point perspective. Include the following elements in your drawing:
-vanishing point
-horizon line
-a repeating object that recedes into the distance (ie: trees, telephone poles, bushes, buildings)
-chiaroscuro (shading from light to dark, including drop shadow)



Baldassare Peruzzi, One-point perspective of a Roman street (1515)


Tom Bauer, photograph

 Chris Gregory, pencil, watercolor



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Juniors:
DUE: Thursday 10/24

Make 15 squares on a page in your sketchbook. Make each square 1 inch by 1 inch. Fill in each individual square with a different pattern or series of marks. Use a Black pen. The objective is to use texture and pattern in different ways that produce different values. When you are done, hold the paper away from you to see the difference in value.


 
(my sketchbook from HS)


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Seniors:
For Class 10/21 or 10/22
Bring in all materials to work on your individual projects. 

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Assignment #4

Sophomores
DUE: Monday 10-7

Make a drawing of a road using one point perspective. Include the following elements in your drawing:
-vanishing point
-horizon line
-a repeating object that recedes into the distance (ie: trees, telephone poles, bushes, buildings)
-chiaroscuro (shading from light to dark, including drop shadow)



Baldassare Peruzzi, One-point perspective of a Roman street (1515)


Tom Bauer, photograph

 Chris Gregory, pencil, watercolor


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Juniors:
DUE : Tuesday, 10/10
Find a black and white photograph. Print it out on 8.5x11" paper. Use a ruler to draw a 1/4 inch grid over the picture. OR impose a 1/4 inch grid over the picture digitally before you print it. On a gridded piece of paper, recreate the image by filling in each square with the corresponding value. You can label the grids with letters or numbers on the y and x axis to make each square easier to locate. The end aesthetic should look like a highly pixelated version of the photograph.
 Chuck Close

1973 cover of "Scientific American"

1973 cover of “Scientific American” on the left and Leon Harmon’s “Abraham Lincoln” (1973) on the right.




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Seniors
DUE: (Kappa) Monday 10/14
DUE: (Omega) Tuesday 10/15

Make art in the style of the artist who you wrote your journal entry on. You can recreate a work by them, or create a totally original piece.  If you create something totally original, you must be able to relate your project to your artist. 
When relating to your artist, think about:
Their style/technique: what materials do they use? How do they use them?
Their concept/meaning: what are they trying to say? what conclusions do you come to about the meaning of their work? what was their intention in creating their work?
Their subject matter: What are they depicting (figures, objects, landscapes, abstraction)? 
What stands out to you? What element of their work do you respond to most? 
How were they representative of the time period they made work in? How would you represent your own time and culture?

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Assignment #3

Sophomores:
DUE: Monday, 9/30
Make an observational drawing using ebony pencil. You can make a still life of your choice (bowl of fruit, stack of books, shoes, chair with a jacket on it, etc), draw a corner of a room, or draw yourself using a mirror. 
-Use one strong light source. 
-Make sure to include a full range of value. Include all the parts of chiaroscuro: (highlight, halftone, deep-shadow, reflected light, cast shadow). 
-Make sure there is a foreground and background. 
-Draw what you see! Do not include outlines! They do not exist!

Examples: 
 Vincent Van Gogh, "Still Life of Shoes" oil paint
 
 Brian Duey, pencil

  Rembrandt van Rijn "Self Portrait" 1629

A1 Sauce by Ralph Goings  Ralph Goings "A1 Sauce"




Juniors:
DUE : Tuesday, 10/1
Find a black and white photograph. Print it out on 8.5x11" paper. Use a ruler to draw a 1/4 inch grid over the picture. OR impose a 1/4 inch grid over the picture digitally before you print it. On a gridded piece of paper, recreate the image by filling in each square with the corresponding value. You can label the grids with letters or numbers on the y and x axis to make each square easier to locate. The end aesthetic should look like a highly pixelated version of the photograph.
 Chuck Close

1973 cover of "Scientific American"

1973 cover of “Scientific American” on the left and Leon Harmon’s “Abraham Lincoln” (1973) on the right.





Seniors: 
Kappa: DUE Monday 10/7
Omega: DUE: Tuesday 10/8
Create an image in the style of the artist (or one of the artists) you chose to write your journal entry about. Be prepared to present your image to the class. When creating your image, think about: what materials you chose and why, what your image is depicting and why, how you are relating to the time period the artist is from or the culture they are from (or your own time period and culture), etc. 
(If you do not want to create an image in the style of your artist you may pick another one, but it must be approved by me (Miss D.))

Monday, September 16, 2013

Assignment #2

Sophomores:
DUE: Monday, 9/23
Make an observational drawing using ebony pencil. You can make a still life of your choice (bowl of fruit, stack of books, shoes, chair with a jacket on it, etc), draw a corner of a room, or draw yourself using a mirror. Use one strong light source. Make sure to include a full range of value. Include all the parts of chiaroscuro: (highlight, halftone, deep-shadow, reflected light, cast shadow). Make sure there is a foreground and background. Draw what you see! Do not include outlines! They do not exist!

Examples: 
 Vincent Van Gogh, "Still Life of Shoes" oil paint
 Brian Duey, pencil

  Rembrandt van Rijn "Self Portrait" 1629


Juniors
DUE - Tuesday 9/24
Make a drawing using only line density to create a full range of value. Do not use outlines. You may use a photograph to draw from.

Examples:
   George Seurat: charcoal studies

  Sol Lewitt

 Chuck Close. One layer of multi-layer self portrait.


Seniors
DUE - Monday 9/23 (Kappa) or Tuesday 9/24 (Omega)
For Class: Bring in Shoeboxes and other cardboard, or similar containers. You will be constructing still-lifes.  
Journal Entries:
Research an artist whose work you find interesting. Fill 3 pages (just front) or 1.5 pages (front & back) in your sketchbook of images and text. Fill no more than 50% of the space with images. Have at least 3 different images of work by the artist. Fill the rest of the space with your response to the work.
Questions you can ask yourself can include:
What is my emotional response to the work?
What are some themes I can see throughout the artist's work?
What are the formal qualities of the work (Principles of Art/Elements of Design)
How was the work a reflection of the time period its from?
How does the art reflect the culture of the artist?
How was it made? What was it made with (medium)?
What could be the intention of the artist?
What do I notice first about it?
What does it remind me of? What do I associate with it? What does it reference?
What adjectives would I use to describe it?
(If part of a series) How does it relate to the others? How does it differ?
(If part of a series) What do the pieces do together that they do not do separately?

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Assignment #1

Sophomores:
DUE: Monday, 9/16
Make an observational drawing using ebony pencil. You can make a still life of your choice, or draw a corner of a room, or draw yourself using a mirror. Use one strong light source. Make sure to include a full range of value. Include all the parts of chiaroscuro: (highlight, halftone, deep-shadow, reflected light, cast shadow). Make sure there is a foreground and background.

Examples: 
 Vincent Van Gogh, "Still Life of Shoes" oil paint
 Brian Duey, pencil


Juniors:
DUE : Tuesday 9/17
In your sketchbook, make 2 drawings of words. Pick one word per drawing. Think about the shape of the word, the placement of the word on the page, the size of the word, the word's meaning, etc. Objective: to improve drawing skills, increase comfort with drawing, to be able to make an image that is representational of a concise idea.

Exampes:
 Mel Bochner. "Blah". Monoprint.
 Roy Lichtenstein "Varoom!". Oil on canvas.


Seniors
DUE - Monday 9/23 (Kappa) or Tuesday 9/24 (Omega)
Research an artist whose work you find interesting. Fill 3 pages (just front) or 1.5 pages (front & back) in your sketchbook of images and text. Fill no more than 50% of the space with images. Have at least 3 different images of work by the artist. Fill the rest of the space with your response to the work.
Questions you can ask yourself can include:
What is my emotional response to the work?
What are some themes I can see throughout the artist's work?
What are the formal qualities of the work (Principles of Art/Elements of Design)
How was the work a reflection of the time period its from?
How does the art reflect the culture of the artist?
How was it made? What was it made with (medium)?
What could be the intention of the artist?
What do I notice first about it?
What does it remind me of? What do I associate with it? What does it reference?
What adjectives would I use to describe it?
(If part of a series) How does it relate to the others? How does it differ?
(If part of a series) What do the pieces do together that they do not do separately?